Houston Chronicle

Study backs early use of drugs for treating HIV patients

Anti-retroviral­s’ effect was so dramatic, trial was ended early

- By Karen Kaplan

An internatio­nal clinical trial involving nearly 5,000 people with HIV confirms that treatment with antiretrov­iral drugs should begin sooner rather than later, the National Institutes of Health announced this week. In fact, the benefits of early therapy were so clear that the study was stopped early so that everyone in the trial could receive the drugs.

Participan­ts in the Strategic Timing of AntiRetrov­iral Treatment, or START, study who initiated treatment when their immune system was still strong were 53 percent less likely to die or develop a serious illness compared with those who delayed treatment until their immune systems had been weakened by the human immunodefi­ciency virus.

Backs U.S. approach

People diagnosed with HIV in the United States already start treatment at an early stage, when their count of CD4(plus) T-cells is still above 500 per cubic millimeter of blood. The CD4(plus) count for a healthy adult ranges from 500 to 1,200 cells/mm3. But doctors had no firm evidence that this approach was better than delaying treatment until a patient’s CD4(plus) count had dropped below 350 cells/ mm3.

“We now have clearcut proof that it is of significan­tly greater health benefit to an HIV-infected person to start antiretrov­iral therapy sooner rather than later,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said in a statement.

When the START trial began in 2011, Fauci and other medical experts were unsure whether the benefits of early treatment would outweigh the risks.

So the Internatio­nal Network for Strategic Initiative­s in Global HIV Trials, a group funded by the NIAID, launched the randomized clinical trial to get a definitive answer.

For the trial, researcher­s recruited 4,685 HIV positive adults from 215 sites in 35 countries. All of these men and women had CD4(plus) counts above 500 cells/mm3 when they joined the study.

Half treated early

About half of these volunteers were randomly assigned to begin treatment right away, and the rest waited until their CD4(plus) count dropped below 350. Researcher­s checked in with study participan­ts once every four months.

Between March 2011 and March 2015, 86 members of the deferred treatment group developed serious AIDS-related complicati­ons, other serious medical problems (such as major cardiovasc­ular disease and cancer), or died. That compared with 41 such cases among study volunteers who began treatment right away.

The study’s independen­t data and safety monitoring board calculated that early treatment reduced the risk of serious health problems or death by 53 percent. Members of the early treatment group were less likely to develop both AIDS-related and non-AIDS-related conditions, though the reduction in risk was greater for complicati­ons related to AIDS, the board found.

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