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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Point-of-Care HIV Testing and Early Dolutegravir Use for Infants


Funder EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CHILD HEALTH & HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Recipient Organization Harvard School of Public Health
Country United States
Start Date Sep 24, 2021
End Date Aug 31, 2026
Duration 1,802 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10914860
Grant Description

Project Summary/Abstract, Point-of-Care HIV Testing and Early Dolutegravir Use for Infants (Project 3) The stakes of delaying HIV diagnosis and treatment in infancy are high. Infants progress to AIDS and die at a higher rate than any other age group, with over 30% of deaths occurring in the first 42 days of life. Even when

treatment is started for infants, the available treatment regimens are limited – current recommendations include drugs such as nevirapine, zidovudine, or lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) that are rarely used in adults – and treatment failure is common. Studies on the use of newer agents in children are lacking, leading to a reluctance to use

newer agents in guidelines even after their approval for infants. Dolutegravir (DTG) was approved for use in infants from 30 days of life in June 2020, but has not become the first-line treatment regimen for infants in any current ART program in Africa. There is therefore an urgent need for implementation research to embed early

infant diagnostics at the time of birth within national treatment programs in Africa, and to begin using modern DTG-based ART regimens for infants from as early in life as possible. With the support of Botswana's Ministry of Health and Wellness and this P01 program, the Botswana–Harvard AIDS Institute Partnership is uniquely positioned to pioneer a research program to support birth diagnosis and

DTG treatment for infants in Botswana. Building on prior research within the Early Infant Treatment (EIT) Study, we will implement targeted birth testing (screening only exposed infants with the highest risk of HIV acquisition) by facility-based point-of-care (POC) testing with the Cepheid Xpert platform. Infants with HIV will be treated

immediately, and referred for enrollment into a cohort that is transitioned to DTG-based ART at four weeks of life and followed for at least 96 weeks. With comparisons to alternate diagnostic approaches and to children who received LPV/r-based ART within the EIT Study, the study design will allow us to 1) evaluate the feasibility of

adding low-cost, targeted early infant diagnosis to the Botswana national treatment program; 2) quantify the number of children identified as HIV infected at birth and determine time from diagnosis to ART initiation when POC testing is deployed; 3) compare the time to suppression and 12-week suppression between DTG-based

and LPV/r-based ART; and 4) compare 96-week outcomes and overall viral suppression between DTG-based and LPV/r-based ART. Results from this study will inform programs that wish to implement birth diagnostics and early infant treatment with DTG-based ART, and will answer critical questions regarding the clinical, virologic,

and immunologic impact of early DTG-based ART.

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Harvard School of Public Health

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