HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a proven HIV prevention strategy in which HIV negative persons use antiretroviral therapy prior to potential HIV exposure. Several clinical trial have shown that truvada(r) is effective; however, there has been substantial variation in observed effectiveness across the studies - a difference that seems to be explained by varying adherence. These differences in adherence across studies have complicated the interpretation of HIV efficacy and safety (e.g. measures of bone mineral density and renal function) and the PrEP field needs objective measures to assess adherence and an approach to estimate the effect of truvada if taken daily. Pharmacologic measures of truvada dosing offer a promising, objective assessment of adherence assessment; however, there are several possible measures. To date, it is unclear which of these is the most powerful in predicting adherence. We propose a series of analyses utilizing two kinds of available datasets - (i) iPrEx OLE which has clinical outcomes including HIV infection, renal function, and bone mineral density in 1225 PrEP users with the full spectrum of drug level measured and (ii) three pharmacology datasets of directly observed truvada therapy. The pharmacology studies assigned volunteers to take truvada or tenofovir under prescribed schedules (e.g., daily, 4 pills/week, 2 pills/week) with directly observed dosing and measured various types of drug levels. We plan to compare how drug levels, of various types, vary across dosing patterns in the pharmacology studies. We will assess which types appear to be best in differentiating between dosing scheduled and develop an approach to predicting dosing patterns based on drug levels. We will then apply these classifications to the clinical dataset (iPrEx OLE). With this classification, we will estimate the risk of HIV infection, the changes in bone density and kidney function across potential dosing patterns (e.g., if truvada were taking daily, or as 2 or 4 pills/week). This work will establish the drug test or tests that are the strongest correlates of truvada use and estimate the clinical impacts of truvada under a variety of potential dosing patterns.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
5R03AI122908-02
Application #
9203043
Study Section
AIDS Clinical Studies and Epidemiology Study Section (ACE)
Program Officer
Mckaig, Rosemary G
Project Start
2016-01-10
Project End
2018-12-31
Budget Start
2017-01-01
Budget End
2018-12-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94118
Glidden, David V; Mulligan, Kathleen; McMahan, Vanessa et al. (2018) Metabolic Effects of Preexposure Prophylaxis With Coformulated Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate and Emtricitabine. Clin Infect Dis 67:411-419
Dunn, David T; Glidden, David V; Stirrup, Oliver T et al. (2018) The averted infections ratio: a novel measure of effectiveness of experimental HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis agents. Lancet HIV 5:e329-e334
Meyers, Kathrine; Wu, Yumeng; Qian, Haoyu et al. (2018) Interest in Long-Acting Injectable PrEP in a Cohort of Men Who have Sex with Men in China. AIDS Behav 22:1217-1227
Glidden, David V; Mayer, Kenneth; Grant, Robert M (2017) Response to: A double-edged sword: does highly active antiretroviral therapy contribute to syphilis incidence by impairing immunity to Treponema pallidum? Sex Transm Infect 93:313
Glidden, David V; Mulligan, Kathleen; McMahan, Vanessa et al. (2017) Brief Report: Recovery of Bone Mineral Density After Discontinuation of Tenofovir-Based HIV Pre-exposure Prophylaxis. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 76:177-182
Glidden, David V; Anderson, Peter L; Grant, Robert M (2016) Pharmacology supports on-demand PrEP. Lancet HIV 3:e405-e406
Gandhi, Monica; Glidden, David V; Mayer, Kenneth et al. (2016) Association of age, baseline kidney function, and medication exposure with declines in creatinine clearance on pre-exposure prophylaxis: an observational cohort study. Lancet HIV 3:e521-e528
Glidden, David V; Amico, K Rivet; Liu, Albert Y et al. (2016) Symptoms, Side Effects and Adherence in the iPrEx Open-Label Extension. Clin Infect Dis 62:1172-7