NCT07596888 · University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
IAP-086-1: A Phase 1 Single Ascending Dose First-Time in Human Study
What this study is about
Purpose: To assess the safety and how well patients handle the treatment of a single dose of IAP086 in persons with HIV suppressed on stable ART Participants: 30 people from UNC within 18 to 70years of age. People with HIV on ART with plasma HIV-1 RNA \< 50 copies/mL for 12 months prior to screening.
View original scientific description
Purpose: To assess the safety and tolerability of a single dose of IAP086 in persons with HIV suppressed on stable ART Participants: 30 people from UNC within 18 to 70years of age. People with HIV on ART with plasma HIV-1 RNA \< 50 copies/mL for 12 months prior to screening. Procedures (methods): The participant's standard of care ART regimen is continued throughout the study period. This study requires an overnight stay in a research unit. During the overnight stay, participants will receive a single infusion (medicine given slowly through a vein in their arm) of IAP086 and be monitored for 24 hours. Each later participant receives IAP086 at the same or a higher dose decided in advance. The dose will increase as more participants receive IAP086 without concerning side effects. Study visits also occur 2, 3, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days after the study drug is given. Study procedures include review of the medical history, physical exams, and blood draws.
Interventions
DRUG
IAP086 0.3 mcg/kg
Single dose 0.3 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 1 mcg/kg
Single dose 1 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 3 mcg/kg
Single dose 3 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 6 mcg/kg
Single dose 6 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 10 mcg/kg
Single dose 10 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 15 mcg/kg
Single dose 15 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 25 mcg/kg
Single dose 25 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 32 mcg/kg
Single dose 32 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
DRUG
IAP086 40 mcg/kg
Single dose 40 mcg/kg IAP086 administered IV
Primary outcome measures
Number of Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) that are at least possibly related to study treatment
Time frame: From first dose of study treatment through Day 28/end of study
Serious adverse events (SAEs) will be collected from treatment initiation through Day 28/end of study. SAEs are defined according to standard regulatory criteria (e.g., events that result in death, are life threatening, require or prolong hospitalization, result in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, or are otherwise medically important). This outcome includes only SAEs assessed by the study team as at least possibly related to study treatment (possibly or definitely related). Abnormal laboratory values or vital signs are included only if they meet SAE criteria. Non serious adverse events are summarized separately.
Number of Grade 3 or Greater (Severe) Adverse Events (AEs) that are at least possibly related to study treatment
Time frame: From first dose of study treatment through Day 28/end of study
This outcome measures the number of Grade 3 or Greater (Severe) Adverse Events (AEs) that will be collected from treatment initiation through Day 28/end of study. The DAIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric Adverse Events (The Division of AIDS (DAIDS) AE Grading Table), corrected Version 2.1, July 2017 was used to measure safety where Grade 1 is defined as mild, Grade 2 is defined as moderate, Grade 3 is defined as severe, and Grade 4 is defined as potentially life-threatening.
Number of Adverse Events (AEs) that are at least possibly related to study treatment
Time frame: From first dose of study treatment through Day 28/end of study
Adverse events (AEs) will be collected from treatment initiation through Day 28/end of study. AEs are defined according to standard regulatory criteria (e.g., any unfavorable, unintended medical occurrence (sign, symptom or disease) temporally associated with the use of the investigational product, regardless of whether it is considered related to the treatment. This outcome includes only AEs assessed by the study team at least possibly related to study treatment (possibly or definitely related) Non serious adverse events are summarized under overall safety/AE outcome.
Proportion of participants who prematurely discontinue IAP086 study treatment due to Adverse Events (AEs) or Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) that are at least possibly related to study treatment
Time frame: From first dose of study treatment through Day 28/end of study
Safety data will include signs and symptoms, diagnoses, clinically significant laboratory abnormalities, and clinically significant abnormal vital signs that lead to premature discontinuation of study treatment. Relationship to study treatment will be assessed by the study team using the categories not related, possibly related, or definitely related. This outcome measure assesses the proportion of participants who permanently discontinue IAP086 study treatment due to an adverse event (AE) or serious adverse event (SAE) that is assessed as at least possibly related to study treatment. AEs and SAEs include clinical events, laboratory abnormalities, or abnormal vital signs that result in treatment discontinuation. Relationship to study treatment will be assessed by the study team as not related, possibly related, or definitely related.
Who can participate
This study lists these criteria on ClinicalTrials.gov. A study coordinator reviews eligibility during screening — this page does not determine whether you qualify.
Inclusion criteria
- Able and willing to provide informed consent. Participants must be willing and able to comply with study procedures
- Able and willing to provide adequate locator information
- Able and willing to comply with all study requirements through Day 28
- Agrees not to enroll on another study of an investigational agent during the study period, defined as any unlicensed investigational drug not yet approved for use in humans
- Aged ≥ 18 years and ≤ 70 years of age, at the time of informed consent
- HIV infection documented by any licensed rapid HIV test or HIV enzyme or chemiluminescence immunoassay (E/CIA) test kit at any time prior to study entry and confirmed by a licensed Western blot or a second antibody test by a method other than the initial rapid HIV and/or E/CIA, or by HIV-1 antigen, plasma HIV-1 RNA viral assay. NOTE: The term "licensed" refers to a US FDA-approved kit, which is required for all Investigational New Drug (IND) studies. World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines mandate that confirmation of the initial test result must use a test that is different from the one used for the initial assessment.
- Plasma HIV-1 RNA viral load must meet the following conditions:
- \< 50 copies/mL at 2 time points within 12 months prior to screening
- \< 50 copies/mL at screening
- Not \> 1000 copies/mL at any time within 6 months prior to screening
- On continuous ART for at least 24 months prior to screening and must continue ART throughout the study. Permitted ART regimens include:
- At least 3 ART drugs, one ART drug must include an integrase inhibitor or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), efavirenz excluded (see 5.2) or
- At least 2 ART drugs including injectables, in which one drug is an integrase inhibitor that is FDA approved or recommended by Department of Health and Human Services Treatment Guidelines. NOTE: Other potent fully suppressive antiretroviral combinations will be considered on a case-by-case basis. NOTE: No changes or modifications of ART dosing allowed within 30 days prior to screening.
- CD4 cell count \> 350 cells/mm3 at screening
- Hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody negative or HCV RNA negative at screening
- Hepatitis B surface antigen negative at screening
- Clinical laboratory parameters obtained at screening as follows:
- Platelet count ≥ 125 × 103/µL
- Absolute neutrophil count ≥ 1.5 × 103/µL
- Absolute Lymphocyte levels ≥ 1000 cells/uL
- Hemoglobin ≥ 12 g/dL (male) and ≥ 11 g/dL (females)
- Prothrombin time or international normalized ratio (INR) ≤ 1.1 × upper limit of normal (ULN)
- Serum total bilirubin ≤ 1.5 × ULN. If total bilirubin is elevated, direct bilirubin ≤ 2 × ULN. If ART includes atazanavir, direct bilirubin must be ≤ 1.0 mg/dL
- Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) ≤ 1.5 × ULN
- Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) ≤ 1.5 × ULN
- Serum glucose (fasting or non-fasting) ≤ Grade 1
- Lipase ≤ 1.5 × ULN
- Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≥ 60 mL/min as determined by the 2021 Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration equation (CKD-Epi equation) found at: https://www.mdcalc.com/calc/3939/ckd-epi-equations-glomerular-filtration-rate-gfr
- Negative serum pregnancy test for women of childbearing potential (WOCBP) with a sensitivity of at least 25 milli-International Units (mIU)/mL at screening
- All participants must agree not to participate in a conception process (e.g., active attempt to become pregnant or to impregnate, sperm donation, in vitro fertilization, egg donation) starting with screening visit through 30 days after receiving study drug
- WOCBP, defined as female at birth, is not pregnant, expecting to become pregnant, or breastfeeding or participant assigned male at birth is not expecting to father children, starting with screening visit through 30 days after receiving study product
- WOCBP, not surgically sterilized (hysterectomy, bilateral salpingectomy, and bilateral oophorectomy), and not post-menopausal for at least 24 consecutive months, i.e., have had menses within the preceding 24 months, must have a negative serum pregnancy test performed within 72 hours prior to initiation of study drug
- WOCBP and male participants of reproductive potential with WOCBP partners must agree to consistently use a highly effective method of contraception and a barrier method (condom, diaphragm or cervical cap) for the duration and for 30 days afterwards. Highly effective methods include the following: Highly effective methods include:
- Contraceptive subdermal implant
- Intrauterine device or intrauterine system
- Combined estrogen and progestogen oral contraceptive
- Injectable progestogen
- Contraceptive vaginal ring
- Percutaneous contraceptive patches
- True sexual abstinence (only if it is the participant's consistent lifestyle choice and not just trial-related).
- Sterilization of male partner with documentation of azoospermia prior to the participant's entry into the study, and this individual is the sole partner for the participant. The documentation of partner sterility can come from the site personnel's review of medical records, medical examination and/or semen analysis, or medical history interview provided by the participant or the partner. Self-reported documentation of reproductive potential should be entered in the source documents. Barrier method may include:
- Male or female condoms with or without a cream or gel that kills sperm
- Diaphragm or cervical cap with a cream or gel that kills sperm
- Participants not of reproductive potential are eligible without requiring the use of contraceptives. Acceptable documentation are specified below. NOTE: Men who have sex with men only will not be required to use contraception NOTE: Women who have sex with women only will not be required to use contraception NOTE: Written/oral documentation communicated by clinician/clinician's staff of one of the following:
- Physician report/letter
- Operative report or other source documentation in the patient record (a laboratory report of azoospermia is required to document successful vasectomy)
- Discharge summary
- Follicle stimulating hormone-release factor (FSH) measurement elevated into the menopausal range as established by the reporting laboratory
- Willingness to defer vaccinations, including influenza and Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) vaccines, from 30 days prior to Day -1 through Day 28 post-infusion
- Willingness to abstain from alcohol, illicit drugs and grapefruit juice and limit caffeine intake from 24 hours prior to study treatment through Day 7
- Participants who are overtly healthy as determined by medical evaluation including medical history, physical examination, and laboratory tests
- Body mass index of less than 35
Exclusion criteria
- Current use of moderate or strong CYP3A inhibitors or inducers for any indication including current use of a protease inhibitor, ritonavir, cobicistat, or efavirenz as part of ART regimen (See Section 6.1.1)
- Significant history or presence of respiratory, hepatic, renal, gastrointestinal, endocrine, hematological, neurological disorders, immunodeficiency other than HIV-1, or clinical condition capable of significantly altering the absorption, metabolism, or elimination of drugs; constituting a risk when taking the study intervention or interfering with the interpretation of data
- Unstable asthma (e.g. sudden acute attacks occurring without an obvious trigger) or asthma requiring:
- Daily steroid or long-acting beta-agonist prevention
- Hospitalization in the last two years
- Clinically significant cardiovascular disease within 12 months prior to screening including but not limited to:
- Myocardial infarction or unstable angina
- Cardiac arrhythmias
- Uncontrolled hypertension at screening: systolic blood pressure \> 180 mmHg, diastolic blood pressure \>100 mmHg that is sustained on repeat measurement (without intervention)
- Cerebrovascular accident
- Congestive heart failure, New York Heart Association class II-IV
- QTc \>450 msec at screening NOTE: QTc is the QT interval corrected for heart rate according to Fridericia's formula (QTcF), and/or another method, machine-read or manually over-read
- Diabetes mellitus ≥ Grade 3 per DAIDS criteria (defined as uncontrolled despite treatment modification or hospitalization for immediate glucose control indicated)
- History of malignancy within the last 3 years NOTE: History of non-melanoma skin cancer (e.g., basal cell carcinoma or squamous cell skin cancer) is not exclusionary with documentation of resolution per topical treatment or complete resection as determined by a dermatologist at least 3 months prior to screening
- Evidence of active viral, bacterial, or systemic fungal infection requiring parenteral antibiotic, antiviral, or antifungal treatment within 14 days prior to the initiation of study drug.
- History of coagulopathy or other bleeding disorder or current or anticipated need for chronic anti-coagulation
- An underlying skin disease or disorder including, but not limited to, inflammation, dermatitis, eczema, drug rash, drug allergy, psoriasis, food allergy, urticaria, or tattoo that would interfere with assessment of infusion sites
- History of severe allergic reaction with generalized urticarial, angioedema, or anaphylaxis
- Use of any prescription or non-prescription drugs or dietary supplements that are prohibited (See Section 6.11), within 7 days prior to dosing
- Use of any immunosuppressive, immunomodulatory or cytokine therapy within 90 days prior to entry. Not Exclusionary: \[1\] corticosteroid nasal spray; \[2\] inhaled corticosteroids; \[3\] topical steroids for mild, uncomplicated dermatitis unless it interferes with assessment of infusion site reactions; or \[4\] a single course of oral /parenteral prednisone or equivalent at doses \<20mg/day and length of therapy \<14 days with completion at least 30 days prior to enrollment.
- Use of any other investigational treatment within 6 months prior to enrollment, with the exception of Phase II or higher studies of antiretroviral agents
- Regular use (daily to weekly) of known drugs of abuse within 3 months of enrollment
- Increased alcohol consumption within 6 months prior to screening, defined as an average weekly intake of \>14 units for males or \>7 units for females. One unit is equivalent to 8 g of alcohol: a half-pint (\~240mL) of beer, 1 glass (125 mL) of wine or 1 (25 mL) measure of spirits.
- Current tobacco use or current use of nicotine-containing products (e.g. nicotine patches or vaporizing devices) within 6 months prior to screening
- Known sensitivity to any of the study interventions, or components thereof, or study drug or other allergy that, in the opinion of the investigator or medical monitor, contraindicates participation in the study
- Any other clinical condition, behavior or prior therapy that, in the opinion of the Investigator, would make the participant unsuitable for the study; unable to comply with dosing requirements; or unable to comply with study visits
Where
- Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Related conditions & keywords
Frequently asked questions
What is a clinical trial?
A clinical trial is a research study that tests new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or procedures to determine their safety and effectiveness. Trials are carefully designed and monitored to protect participants while advancing medical knowledge.
Is it safe to participate?
Clinical trials follow strict safety guidelines and ethical standards. Trials must be reviewed and approved, and participants are closely monitored by medical professionals throughout the study. You can withdraw at any time if you choose.
Will I be compensated?
Many clinical trials offer compensation for your time, travel expenses, and inconvenience. The specific compensation varies by study and will be discussed during the screening process. All study-related medical care is typically provided at no cost to participants.
Will I receive a placebo instead of treatment?
When effective treatment exists, participants typically receive either the standard treatment plus the study intervention, or the standard treatment plus placebo. You would not be denied effective care. Placebos are primarily used when no proven treatment is available, or in addition to standard care. Your trial consent form will clearly explain what treatments you may receive.
Can I leave a trial if I change my mind?
Absolutely. Participation in clinical trials is completely voluntary. You have the right to withdraw from the study at any time, for any reason, without penalty or loss of benefits to which you are otherwise entitled.
How long does a clinical trial last?
Trial duration varies widely depending on the study design and purpose. Some trials last just a few weeks, while others may continue for months or years. The study coordinator will provide specific timeline information during your screening call.
Data: ClinicalTrials.gov · synced Jun 24, 2026 · Source of record for eligibility and locations