Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00301561

Antiretroviral Treatment Simplified Follow-up Management Assessment (ANRS 12110 STRATALL)

Expanded Access to Antiretroviral Therapy in Africa: Assessment of the Patients' Management in District Hospitals With a Simplified Follow-up Approach (ANRS 12110 STRATALL)

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
459 (actual)
Sponsor
French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is still limited in Africa (11% of patients in immediate need in June 2005). Face to the scope of the need and the constraints (unavailability and cost of viral load and CD4 cell count, lack of physicians…), WHO has developed a follow-up approach based on a simplified monitoring. However, this "simplified" approach which represents a major stake for the expanded access to ART has been little evaluated against the gold standard approach.

Detailed description

Justification Access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is still limited in Africa (11% of patients in immediate need in June 2005). Face to the scope of the need and the constraints (unavailability and cost of viral load and CD4 cell count, lack of physicians…), WHO has developed a follow-up approach based on a simplified monitoring. This "simplified" approach restricting the use of complementary exams including biologic criteria of effectiveness and tolerability, some people consider this approach as dangerous for the patient but also for the community (rapid emergence of resistances) and that it would be preferable to treat less patients and only with the gold standard approach. In practice, this "simplified" approach which represents a major stake for the expanded access to ART has been little evaluated against the gold standard approach. Objectives Main objective: To compare the increase in the CD4 cell count in patients receiving ART with a "simplified" approach and in those treated with the gold standard approach in district hospitals. Secondary objectives: To compare between the two approaches the virologic effectiveness, survival, treatment interruptions, number of patients lost to follow-up, clinical progression, clinical and biologic tolerability, adherence, emergence of drug resistances, impact on patients' daily life, acceptability by the patients and health professionals, and cost-effectiveness performances. Methods Randomised, controlled, multicentre, non inferiority, intervention trial, without blind for approach, in 9 district hospitals of the Province du Centre in Cameroon. 430 adult patients will be randomised in two groups ("simplified" approach or gold standard approach) with a 1:1 ratio and followed for 24 months. In the "simplified" approach, the results of the HIV-1 viral load and CD4 cell count will not be available for the management of patients, the biologic assessment of tolerability will be limited and some clinical consultations will be performed by nurses under the physicians' responsibility; the remainder will be similar to the gold standard approach. Planning The study will start in the first semester of 2006. The full length of the study would be 36 months maximum (12 months for enrolment and 24 months for follow-up). Expected results Advices for increasing access to ART in Africa.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURESimplified follow-up approach of ARV treatmentSimplify treatment follow-up : * some clinical consultations will be performed by nurses under the physicians' responsibility ; * the CD4 cell count and HIV-1 viral load will not be available for the management of patients ; * the biologic assessment for tolerability will be limited
PROCEDUREStandard follow-up approach of ARV treatmentStandard treatment follow-up : * all clinical consultations will be performed by physicians ; * the CD4 cell count and HIV-1 viral load will be available for the patients management routinely ; * the biologic assessment for tolerability will be available as needed

Timeline

Start date
2006-05-01
Primary completion
2010-04-01
Completion
2010-10-01
First posted
2006-03-13
Last updated
2016-07-22

Locations

9 sites across 1 country: Cameroon

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00301561. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.