Tuberculosis

CROI 2017: Prednisone Reduces Risk of Developing TB-IRIS after Starting Antiretroviral Treatment

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Prednisone reduces the risk of immune restoration inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) in people with HIV after starting tuberculosis (TB) treatment, a randomized trial called PredART has found. The results were presented last month at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Seattle by Graeme Meintjes from the University of Cape Town in South Africa.

[Produced in collaboration with aidsmap.com]

TB-related IRIS is a frequent complication in people with HIV who start TB treatment with low CD4 cell counts. TB-IRIS occurs when the revival of the immune system due to antiretroviral therapy (ART) causes it to react to TB mycobacteria, often with severe effects. Inflammatory symptoms such as severely swollen lymph nodes (lymphadenopathy), fever, and paradoxical worsening of TB symptoms can emerge, and ma

A meta-analysis of cohort studies has shown that TB-IRIS develops in around 1 in 5 HIV-positive people with TB after starting antiretroviral treatment, and while the death rate is low (2%), approximately one-quarter of all people who develop TB-IRIS must be admitted to a hospital for treatment.

Although it is known that its symptoms can be treated with the corticosteroid prednisone, prevention of TB-IRIS has until now depended on starting TB treatment before antiretroviral therapy, in order to reduce the bacterial load before immune reconstitution begins to take place. People starting treatment with low CD4 cell counts (<50 cells/mm3), those with disseminated TB (symptoms in organs other than the lungs), and those who experience very large CD4 cell count increases after starting treatment are known to have a higher risk of developing TB-IRIS.

To test whether TB-IRIS can be prevented by use of prednisone, investigators conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in people at high risk of developing TB-IRIS. People were eligible to take part in the study if they had CD4 cell counts below 100 cells/mm3, had started TB treatment less than 30 days prior to joining the study, and were antiretroviral-naive. People with rifampicin resistance, anyone not taking standard first-line TB treatment, and people with symptoms of neurological TB were excluded from the study, as were people with a poor clinical response to TB treatment. People with Kaposi’s sarcoma were also excluded because prednisone may exacerbate KS.

Everyone entering the study began antiretroviral therapy and was randomized to receive either 40 mg/kg per day of prednisone for 2 weeks followed by 20 mg/kg per day for 2 weeks, or placebo. The primary endpoint of the study was the development of TB-IRIS during the 4-week treatment period and the 12-week follow-up period.

A total of 240 people were randomized to begin treatment in the study; 106 completed treatment and 12-week follow-up in the prednisone arm and 107 in the placebo arm. 5 people in the prednisone arm and 4 people in the placebo arm died during the study, and 9 in each arm were lost to follow-up.

Study participants had very advanced HIV disease; the median CD4 cell count on study entry was 49 cells/mm3 in the prednisone arm and 51 in the placebo arm and viral loads were high (5.5 log and 5.4 log, respectively). Participants began ART a median of 17 days after TB treatment.

The cumulative incidence of TB-IRIS was 46.7% in the placebo group and 32.5% in the prednisone arm, a risk reduction of 30% (relative risk 0.70). There was also a small but significant delay in the onset of TB-IRIS in the prednisone arm (10 days vs 8 days in the placebo arm).

Significantly more people who developed TB-IRIS in the placebo arm required corticosteroid treatment to manage their symptoms when compared to the prednisone arm (28.3% vs 13.3%, RR 0.47), a potential indication that prednisone moderated the severity of TB-IRIS symptoms even if it did develop. However, people in the placebo group were no more likely than people in the prednisone group to be hospitalized for TB-IRIS (7.5% vs 4.2%).

Adverse events leading to a change in TB or antiretroviral medication occurred more frequently in the placebo group (15.8% vs 8.3%), but this difference was not statistically significant, although grade 3 adverse events did occur significantly more often in the placebo arm (45.4% vs 29.4). There was no difference in the incidence of grade 3 or 4 laboratory adverse events, nor in viral load or CD4 changes at the end of the study.

CD4 cell counts increased by 150 cells/mm3 in the placebo arm and 164 cells/mm3 in the prednisone arm, showing that the corticosteroid did not impede immune reconstitution.

As a corticosteroid, prednisone might increase the risk of bacterial infections, but these were not seen more frequently in the prednisone arm. The most common AIDS-defining or bacterial events in study participants were oral candidiasis (10) and pneumonia (7). A single new case of Kaposi’s sarcoma occurred, in the placebo arm, in an individual who discontinued ART after 20 weeks on treatment.

Although it did not eliminate TB-IRIS entirely in this high-risk population, prednisone as a preventive treatment did significantly reduce its incidence and also reduced the need for prednisone treatment of TB-IRIS symptoms, Meintjes concluded.

3/8/17

Source

G Meintjes, C Stek, L Blumenthal, et al. Randomised controlled trial of prednisone for the prevention of paradoxical TB-IRIS. Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Seattle, February 13-16, 2017. Abstract 81LB.