The RESPOND Outcomes Study
- Conditions
- HIV
- Registration Number
- NCT04090151
- Lead Sponsor
- Rigshospitalet, Denmark
- Brief Summary
The RESPOND Outcomes study is a research study around use of antiretroviral and other relevant drugs and long-term clinical outcomes in patients living with HIV. Data collected in this study will be used to answer key unanswered questions regarding treatment of people living with HIV.
- Detailed Description
The specific objectives, falling into three main categories, are as follows:
1. Monitor the uptake of newer antiretroviral treatment (ART) drugs and drugs for treatment of co-infections and co-morbidities;
2. To evaluate the safety profiles of the newer individual ART drugs when used in routine clinical practice as part of either first-line or subsequent treatment regimens.
3. Investigate long term outcomes and clinical disease progression overall and in specific sub-groups
The Outcomes study is a collaboration between investigators from clinics and cohorts across Europe, Australia and South America with a willingness to share data and to use a common follow-up schedule and assessment. Participating sites have a commitment to continue to follow this large cohort that is heterogeneous in both its demographic profile and in ART prescribing patterns thus resulting in enough power to answer many key clinical questions.
The Outcomes study is a study in the RESPOND International Cohort Consortium of Infectious Diseases. RESPOND is an innovative, flexible and dynamic cohort consortium for the study of infectious diseases, including HIV, built as a generic structure for facilitating multi stakeholder involvement. In RESPOND all collected data is part of a common data repository or 'data lake', which is stored in a database located at CHIP, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark. Data collection in RESPOND is modular with a core data collection module onto which additional modules/studies can be added. Pseudonymised patient data can be entered manually via an online secure platform or be electronically transferred from existing local, regional or national data structures to the data lake.
In the Outcomes study data will be collected at enrolment and at annual follow-up (FU) visits. For patients living with HIV-1 enrolled and under FU, demographic, laboratory, therapeutic and clinical data on HIV and viral hepatitis will be collected once a year. Clinical event data (except AIDS other than AIDS defining malignancies) will be collected in real-time on RESPOND event forms.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 37853
- Signed Informed consent for the Outcomes study, if required by local/national legislation
- Signed informed consent for the RESPOND consortium and data repository, if required by local/national legislation
- Age ≥ 18 years of age
- Confirmed HIV-1 infection
- Persons receiving integrase inhibitor (INSTI) based antiretroviral therapy if have started after the later of 1/1/2012 and local cohort enrolment (i.e., during prospective follow-up in the cohort and after 1/1/2012) and have a CD4 and HIV viral load in the 12 months prior to starting INSTI or within 3 months after starting INSTI.
- ART experienced and ART naïve persons not receiving INSTI if have a CD4 and HIV viral load in the 12 months prior to baseline or within 3 months after baseline (here, the latest of 1/1/2012 or cohort enrolment).
- Persons lost to follow-up or who died before RESPOND enrolment should therefore still be included in the Outcomes study, provided they satisfy the other inclusion criteria.
- Persons receiving INSTI before 1/1/2012 are excluded from the Outcome study
- Persons aged < 18 at baseline are excluded from the Outcome study
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Develop predictive risk-scores for the development of clinical outcomes to enable personalized decisions regarding risk and benefit of specific treatments in different demographic groups From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years After investigating long term clinical outcomes and clinical disease progression overall and in specific sub-groups (e.g. those defined by age, gender, ethnicity, HIV-risk group, viral hepatitis- TB and other co-infections, ongoing viremia and across CD4 count strata): to develop predictive risk-scores for the development and outcomes to enable personalized decisions regarding risk and benefit of specific treatments in different demographic groups
Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment with newer antiretroviral drugs From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment with newer antiretroviral drugs and to describe changes over time in use of specific antiretroviral drugs in individual countries and diverse demographic groups
Evaluate the short- and long-term adverse effects of the newer ARVs when used in routine clinical practice From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Evaluate the short- and long-term adverse effects of the newer ARVs when used in routine clinical practice as part of either first-line or subsequent treatment regimens, and whether adverse effects are reversible on discontinuation of the offending ARVs
Monitor plasma HIV-RNA responses among persons exposed to newer individual ARVs From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Monitor plasma HIV-RNA responses among persons exposed to newer individual ARVs
Investigate if adverse effects are increased in some patient sub-groups in order to assess the risk and benefit for the individual From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Investigate if adverse effects are increased in some patient sub-groups (e.g. those defined by age, gender, ethnicity, HIV-risk group, viral hepatitis- TB and other co-infections, ongoing viremia and across CD4 count strata) in order to assess the risk and benefit for the individual of any antiretroviral or group of antiretrovirals
Investigate long term clinical outcomes and clinical disease progression overall and in specific sub-groups From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Investigate long term clinical outcomes and clinical disease progression overall and in specific sub-groups (e.g. those defined by age, gender, ethnicity, HIV-risk group, viral hepatitis- TB and other co-infections, ongoing viremia and across CD4 count strata)
Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment of co-infections From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment of co-infections and to describe changes over time in individual countries and diverse demographic groups
Investigate if adverse effects are increased in some patient sub-groups in order to build clinical risk prediction scores to aid effective strategies for risk reduction From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Investigate if adverse effects are increased in some patient sub-groups (e.g. those defined by age, gender, ethnicity, HIV-risk group, viral hepatitis- TB and other co-infections, ongoing viremia and across CD4 count strata) in order to build clinical risk prediction scores to aid effective strategies for risk reduction
Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment of co-morbidities From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Proportion of HIV positive persons who initiate treatment of co-morbidities and to describe changes over time in individual countries and diverse demographic groups
Monitor changes in plasma CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts among persons exposed to newer individual ARVs From date of enrolment until the date of progression, lost to follow-up or death, whichever comes first, assessed up to 6 years Monitor changes in plasma CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts among persons exposed to newer individual ARVs
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (18)
The Australian HIV Observational Database (AHOD)
🇦🇺Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Austrian HIV Cohort Study (AHIVCOS), Medizinische Universität Innsbruch
🇦🇹Innsbruck, Austria
Rigshospitalet
🇩🇰Copenhagen, Denmark
The EuroSIDA Study, CHIP, Rigshospitalet
🇩🇰Copenhagen, Denmark
CHU Saint-Pierre Hospital
🇧🇪Brussels, Belgium
Nice HIV Cohort, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice
🇫🇷Nice, France
Georgian National AIDS Health Information System (AIDS HIS), IDACIRC
🇬🇪Tbilisi, Georgia
University Hospital Bonn
🇩🇪Bonn, Germany
University Hospital Cologne
🇩🇪Cologne, Germany
Frankfurt HIV Cohort Study, Goethe-University Frankfurt
🇩🇪Frankfurt, Germany
Italian Cohort Naive Antiretrovirals (ICONA)
🇮🇹Milano, Italy
San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Ospedale San Raffaele
🇮🇹Milan, Italy
Modena HIV Cohort, Università degli Studi di Modena
🇮🇹Modena, Italy
The ATHENA (AIDS Therapy Evaluation in the Netherlands) national observational HIV cohort, Stichting HIV Monitorin, AMC, University of Amsterdam
🇳🇱Amsterdam, Netherlands
PISCIS Cohort Study, Germans Trias i Pujol University Hospital
🇪🇸Badalona, Spain
Swedish InfCare HIV Cohort, Karolinska University Hospital
🇸🇪Stockholm, Sweden
Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS), University Hospital Zurich
🇨ðŸ‡Zurich, Switzerland
Royal Free HIV Cohort Study, Royal Free Hospital
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom