A Phase I Evaluation of Azidothymidine (AZT) in Children With Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS Related Complex (ARC)
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Purpose
The study is designed to test the drug zidovudine (AZT) in children, including study of drug levels in various parts of the body fluids, safety of the drug, and its effect on different parts of the body.
The effects of any drug, the way a drug enters the bloodstream, the way it is used by the body, and the way the body eliminates the drug may be very different in children compared with adults. The largest group of children who have AIDS are those who are less than 2 years of age. AIDS is often first identified in infants who are about 6 months old. Studies of AZT show that it might be useful in the treatment of AIDS. Thus it is important to study the effects of the drug in children.
| Condition | Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
|
HIV Infections |
Drug: Zidovudine |
Phase 1 |
| Study Type: | Interventional |
| Study Design: | Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study Masking: Open Label Primary Purpose: Treatment |
| Official Title: | A Phase I Evaluation of Azidothymidine (AZT) in Children With Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS Related Complex (ARC) |
| Estimated Enrollment: | 12 |
| Study Completion Date: | February 1990 |
The effects of any drug, the way a drug enters the bloodstream, the way it is used by the body, and the way the body eliminates the drug may be very different in children compared with adults. The largest group of children who have AIDS are those who are less than 2 years of age. AIDS is often first identified in infants who are about 6 months old. Studies of AZT show that it might be useful in the treatment of AIDS. Thus it is important to study the effects of the drug in children.
Patients are hospitalized for 8 weeks to receive AZT through the intravenous (IV) route at 1 of 2 doses. Patients are then discharged from hospital and take AZT by mouth for 4 more weeks.
Eligibility| Ages Eligible for Study: | 3 Months to 12 Years |
| Genders Eligible for Study: | Both |
| Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
Inclusion Criteria
Concurrent Treatment:
Allowed:
- Nutritional support not exceeding 120 calories/kg/day (hyperalimentation or dietary supplements including vitamin, folate, iron supplements).
Exclusion Criteria
Co-existing Condition:
Children with the following conditions are excluded:
- Asymptomatic with T-lymphocyte deficiency.
- Asymptomatic viremic patients or those not meeting definition criteria of AIDS related complex (ARC) or AIDS.
- Clinical evidence of active infection of acute nature or active significant or clinically apparent opportunistic infection at time of entry into study.
- Hemoglobinopathy including sickle cell anemia.
- Congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the first month after birth or cytomegalovirus infection in the first 6 months after birth.
Children with the following conditions are excluded:
- Asymptomatic with T-lymphocyte deficiency.
- Asymptomatic viremic patients or those not meeting definition criteria of AIDS related complex (ARC) or AIDS.
- Clinical evidence of active infection of acute nature or active significant or clinically apparent opportunistic infection at time of entry into study.
- Hemoglobinopathy including sickle cell anemia.
- Congenital infections such as toxoplasmosis or herpes simplex virus infection in the first month after birth or cytomegalovirus infection in the first 6 months after birth.
Prior Medication:
Excluded:
- Suramin.
- Ribavirin.
- HPA 23.
- Phosphonoformate.
- Ansamycin.
- Interleukin 2.
- Interferon.
- Excluded within 30 days of study entry:
- All cytolytic chemotherapeutic agents, immunomodulating agents including steroids and immunoglobulin preparations.
- Antivirals (acyclovir, ganciclovir).
Prior Treatment:
Excluded within 4 weeks of study entry:
- Lymphocyte transfusions for immune reconstitution.
- Excluded within 3 months of study entry:
- Bone marrow transplant.
Child who is seropositive for HIV antibody or has HIV viremia and presents with one or more of following clinical criteria and at least one of the laboratory criteria may be considered an ARC patient for purpose of study:
- Clinical criteria:
- Persistent oral candidiasis despite appropriate therapy.
- Wasting syndrome characterized by failure to thrive and malnutrition.
- Recurrent or chronic unexplained diarrhea.
- Lymphadenopathy (more than 1 cm) at 2 or more noncontiguous sites.
- Hepatomegaly with or without splenomegaly.
- Encephalopathy with loss of developmental milestones and cortical atrophy present on computed tomography (CT) examination.
- Recurrent bacterial infections (bacteremia, pneumonia, septic arthritis, meningitis).
- Cutaneous anergy as defined by lack of delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity to selected antigens.
- Laboratory criteria:
- Hypergammaglobulinemia (IgG or IgA) defined as immunoglobulin values exceeding the maximum age-adjusted level.
- Decreased number of total T-lymphocytes (2 SD from mean).
- Absolute depression in T-helper cells to less than 500/mm3.
- Depressed (equal to or more than 2 SD from normal mean) in vitro mitogen response to at least one antigen.
- One positive HIV culture within 3 months of study entry into the study or blood obtained and culture pending.
- Life expectancy greater than 6 months.
- Ambulatory and free of opportunistic infection at time of entry.
- Reliably diagnosed disease at least moderately indicative of underlying cellular immunodeficiency and no known cause of underlying cellular immunodeficiency or other reduced resistance reported to be associated with that disease.
- Disease accepted as sufficiently indicative of underlying cellular immunodeficiency by CDC. In absence of these opportunistic diseases, a histologically confirmed diagnosis of chronic lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis will be considered indicative of AIDS unless test(s) for HIV are negative.
Contacts and Locations| United States, Florida | |
| Univ of Miami School of Medicine | |
| Miami, Florida, United States, 331361013 | |
| United States, North Carolina | |
| Duke Univ Med Ctr | |
| Durham, North Carolina, United States, 27710 | |
| Study Chair: | Scott G | |
| Study Chair: | Wilfert C | |
| Study Chair: | Pizzo P |
More Information
Additional Information:
Publications:
| Responsible Party: | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) |
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00000701 History of Changes |
| Other Study ID Numbers: | ACTG 003, Protocol 26,541-004, Project p53, 10979 |
| Study First Received: | November 2, 1999 |
| Last Updated: | March 15, 2012 |
| Health Authority: | United States: Federal Government |
Keywords provided by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID):
|
Drug Evaluation Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome AIDS-Related Complex Zidovudine |
Additional relevant MeSH terms:
|
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome HIV Infections AIDS-Related Complex Lentivirus Infections Retroviridae Infections RNA Virus Infections Virus Diseases Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral Sexually Transmitted Diseases Slow Virus Diseases Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes Immune System Diseases |
Zidovudine Antimetabolites Molecular Mechanisms of Pharmacological Action Pharmacologic Actions Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors Enzyme Inhibitors Anti-Retroviral Agents Antiviral Agents Anti-Infective Agents Therapeutic Uses Anti-HIV Agents |
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on May 19, 2013