Early 
        Antiretroviral Therapy during Tuberculosis Treatment Improves Survival
        
        
          
           
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                  | SUMMARY: 
                    Starting 
                    antiretroviral therapy (ART) 2 weeks rather than 2 months 
                    after beginning tuberculosis (TB) treatment led to longer 
                    survival for HIV positive people with severe immune deficiency 
                    in the CAMELIA study, researchers reported at the XVIII International 
                    AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010) last 
                    week in Vienna. Cambodian patients receiving early ART were 
                    more likely to develop immune reconstitution inflammatory 
                    syndrome (IRIS), but this was generally manageable and starting 
                    sooner reduced mortality by more than 30%. |  |  |  | 
           
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        Below 
          is the text of a press release from the National Institute of Allergy 
          and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which partially funded the research, 
          describing the study findings and their implications.
         
          NIH-Funded Study Finds 
          Early HAART during TB Treatment 
          Boosts Survival Rate in People Co-Infected with HIV and TB
         A 
          clinical trial in Cambodia has found it possible to prolong the survival 
          of untreated HIV-infected adults with very weak immune systems and newly 
          diagnosed tuberculosis (TB) by starting anti-HIV therapy two weeks after 
          beginning TB treatment, rather than waiting eight weeks, as has been 
          standard. This finding by scientists co-funded by the National Institute 
          of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes 
          of Health, and the French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral 
          Hepatitis, brings physicians closer to optimizing the treatment of severely 
          immunosuppressed individuals with HIV-TB co-infection. The findings 
          were presented today at the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna 
          by principal investigators Francois-Xavier Blanc, MD, Anne E. Goldfeld, 
          MD, and Sok Thim, MD.
A 
          clinical trial in Cambodia has found it possible to prolong the survival 
          of untreated HIV-infected adults with very weak immune systems and newly 
          diagnosed tuberculosis (TB) by starting anti-HIV therapy two weeks after 
          beginning TB treatment, rather than waiting eight weeks, as has been 
          standard. This finding by scientists co-funded by the National Institute 
          of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes 
          of Health, and the French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral 
          Hepatitis, brings physicians closer to optimizing the treatment of severely 
          immunosuppressed individuals with HIV-TB co-infection. The findings 
          were presented today at the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna 
          by principal investigators Francois-Xavier Blanc, MD, Anne E. Goldfeld, 
          MD, and Sok Thim, MD.
          
          "These results are just one example of how our best science can 
          advance the treatment of an important disease, TB, that exacts a huge 
          toll among HIV-infected individuals," says NIAID Director Anthony 
          S. Fauci, MD. "With an estimated 1.4 million HIV-infected individuals 
          developing TB in 2008 alone, we must continue to pursue 21st-century 
          solutions to the scourge of HIV-TB co-infection, as well as other diseases 
          that afflict HIV-infected people."
          
          Individuals with HIV-TB co-infection in resource-limited countries frequently 
          come to the attention of healthcare professionals for the first time 
          when HIV already has severely damaged their immune systems. Such people 
          often die during the first few months after beginning TB treatment. 
          Clinicians agree that starting anti-HIV therapy during that short window 
          can stave off death for some patients, but data on the best time to 
          start have proven inconclusive and opinions have varied. The dilemma 
          is that starting anti-HIV therapy before the TB infection is under control 
          can cause the patient to become very sick and even die from a condition 
          known as Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome, but starting anti-HIV 
          therapy too late may allow the patient to die from HIV infection. TB 
          accounted for nearly a quarter of HIV-related deaths worldwide in 2008.
          
          The clinical trial, called the Cambodian Early versus Late Introduction 
          of Antiretroviral Drugs (CAMELIA), or ANRS 1295, launched in January 
          2006 at five sites in Cambodia, a country with a high prevalence of 
          TB and HIV. The study staff enrolled 661 volunteers ages 18 and older 
          with newly diagnosed HIV-TB co-infection and very weak immune systems 
          (measured as fewer than 200 CD4+ T cells per cubic millimeter of blood). 
          The participants all began receiving treatment for TB and were assigned 
          at random to begin antiretroviral therapy for HIV either two weeks later 
          or eight weeks later. The volunteers received powerful antiretroviral 
          drug cocktails known as highly active antiretroviral therapy, or HAART. 
          Study staff followed the participants for 50 weeks after the last volunteer 
          had enrolled in the trial, performing clinical exams and biological 
          tests at frequent intervals to monitor participants' health and safety.
          
          By the end of the follow-up period, 59 out of 332 participants who had 
          started HAART two weeks after beginning TB treatment had died, while 
          90 out of 329 participants who started HAART eight weeks after beginning 
          TB treatment had died. This 33 percent difference was statistically 
          significant, leading the principal investigators to conclude that starting 
          HAART two weeks after beginning TB treatment, rather than waiting eight 
          weeks, boosts the chance of survival for people with HIV-TB co-infection 
          and severely damaged immune systems.
          
          CAMELIA was conducted within the research agenda of the Cambodian National 
          Center for HIV/AIDS, Dermatology and STD under the leadership of Dr. 
          Blanc of Bicetre University Hospital, France; Dr. Goldfeld of Harvard 
          Medical School, Boston; and Dr. Sok of the Cambodian Health Committee, 
          Phnom Penh. NIAID provided funding for the study to the Cambodian Health 
          Committee via a grant from the Comprehensive International Program for 
          Research on AIDS.
          
          For more information about CAMELIA, please see Questions 
          and Answers: The CAMELIA Clinical Trial.
        Investigator 
          affiliations: Pneumology Unit, Internal Medicine Department, Bicêtre 
          Hospital, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, 
          Paris, France; Cambodian Health Committee, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; European 
          George Pompidou Hospital, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, 
          Paris, France; Institut Pasteur in Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Agence 
          Nationale de Recherche sur le SIDA et les Hépatites Virales (ANRS), 
          Paris, France; Institut Pasteur, Paris, France; Khmer Soviet Friendship 
          Hospital, Infectious Diseases Department, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Donkeo 
          Provincial Hospital, Takeo, Cambodia; Médecins Sans Frontières, 
          Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Svay Rieng Provincial Hospital, Svay 
          Rieng, Cambodia; Calmette Hospital, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Siem Reap 
          Referral Hospital, Siem Reap, Cambodia; Khmer Soviet Friendship Hospital, 
          Pneumology Department, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; Division of AIDS, NIAID, 
          National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; Harvard Medical School, 
          Boston, MA.
        7/30/10
        Reference
          FX 
          Blanc, T Sok, D Laureillard, and others. Significant enhancement in 
          survival with early (2 weeks) vs. late (8 weeks) initiation of highly 
          active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) in severely immunosuppressed 
          HIV-infected adults with newly diagnosed tuberculosis. XVIII International 
          AIDS Conference. Vienna, July 18-23, 2010. Abstract THLBB106.
        Other 
          Source
          NIAID. 
          NIH-Funded Study Finds Early HAART during TB Treatment Boosts Survival 
          Rate in People Co-Infected with HIV and TB. NIH News. July 22, 2010.