ViiV Healthcare, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
Hospital Universitario La Paz/IdiPAZ, Madrid, Spain.
Lancet. 2017 Sep 23;390(10101):1499-1510. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31917-7. Epub 2017 Jul 24.
Cabotegravir and rilpivirine are antiretroviral drugs in development as long-acting injectable formulations. The LATTE-2 study evaluated long-acting cabotegravir plus rilpivirine for maintenance of HIV-1 viral suppression through 96 weeks.
In this randomised, phase 2b, open-label study, treatment-naive adults infected with HIV-1 initially received oral cabotegravir 30 mg plus abacavir-lamivudine 600-300 mg once daily. The objective of this study was to select an intramuscular dosing regimen based on a comparison of the antiviral activity, tolerability, and safety of the two intramuscular dosing regimens relative to oral cabotegravir plus abacavir-lamivudine. After a 20-week induction period on oral cabotegravir plus abacavir-lamivudine, patients with viral suppression (plasma HIV-1 RNA <50 copies per mL) were randomly assigned (2:2:1) to intramuscular long-acting cabotegravir plus rilpivirine at 4-week intervals (long-acting cabotegravir 400 mg plus rilpivirine 600 mg; two 2 mL injections) or 8-week intervals (long-acting cabotegravir 600 mg plus rilpivirine 900 mg; two 3 mL injections) or continued oral cabotegravir plus abacavir-lamivudine. Randomisation was computer-generated with stratification by HIV-1 RNA (<50 copies per mL, yes or no) during the first 12 weeks of the induction period. The primary endpoints were the proportion of patients with viral suppression at week 32 (as defined by the US Food and Drug Administration snapshot algorithm), protocol-defined virological failures, and safety events through 96 weeks. All randomly assigned patients who received at least one dose of study drug during the maintenance period were included in the primary efficacy and safety analyses. The primary analysis used a Bayesian approach to evaluate the hypothesis that the proportion with viral suppression for each long-acting regimen is not worse than the oral regimen proportion by more than 10% (denoted comparable) according to a prespecified decision rule (ie, posterior probability for comparability >90%). Difference in proportions and associated 95% CIs were supportive to the primary analysis. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02120352.
Among 309 enrolled patients, 286 were randomly assigned to the maintenance period (115 to each of the 4-week and 8-week groups and 56 to the oral treatment group). This study is currently ongoing. At 32 weeks following randomisation, both long-acting regimens met primary criteria for comparability in viral suppression relative to the oral comparator group. Viral suppression was maintained at 32 weeks in 51 (91%) of 56 patients in the oral treatment group, 108 (94%) of 115 patients in the 4-week group (difference 2·8% [95% CI -5·8 to 11·5] vs oral treatment), and 109 (95%) of 115 patients in the 8-week group (difference 3·7% [-4·8 to 12·2] vs oral treatment). At week 96, viral suppression was maintained in 47 (84%) of 56 patients receiving oral treatment, 100 (87%) of 115 patients in the 4-week group, and 108 (94%) of 115 patients in the 8-week group. Three patients (1%) experienced protocol-defined virological failure (two in the 8-week group; one in the oral treatment group). Injection-site reactions were mild (3648 [84%] of 4360 injections) or moderate (673 [15%] of 4360 injections) in intensity and rarely resulted in discontinuation (two [<1%] of 230 patients); injection-site pain was reported most frequently. Serious adverse events during maintenance were reported in 22 (10%) of 230 patients in the intramuscular groups (4-week and 8-week groups) and seven (13%) of 56 patients in the oral treatment group; none were drug related.
The two-drug combination of all-injectable, long-acting cabotegravir plus rilpivirine every 4 weeks or every 8 weeks was as effective as daily three-drug oral therapy at maintaining HIV-1 viral suppression through 96 weeks and was well accepted and tolerated.
ViiV Healthcare and Janssen R&D.
卡替拉韦和利匹韦林是两种正在开发中的长效注射型抗逆转录病毒药物。LATTE-2 研究评估了长效卡替拉韦联合利匹韦林用于维持 HIV-1 病毒抑制,研究时间长达 96 周。
在这项随机、2b 期、开放性标签研究中,最初感染 HIV-1 的未经治疗的成年人每日一次接受口服卡替拉韦 30mg 联合阿巴卡韦-拉米夫定 600-300mg。本研究的目的是基于两种肌内给药方案与口服卡替拉韦联合阿巴卡韦-拉米夫定的抗病毒活性、耐受性和安全性比较,选择一种肌内给药方案。在口服卡替拉韦联合阿巴卡韦-拉米夫定 20 周诱导期后,病毒抑制(血浆 HIV-1 RNA<50 拷贝/ml)的患者被随机分为 4 周间隔(长效卡替拉韦 400mg 联合利匹韦林 600mg;2 次 2ml 注射)或 8 周间隔(长效卡替拉韦 600mg 联合利匹韦林 900mg;2 次 3ml 注射)或继续口服卡替拉韦联合阿巴卡韦-拉米夫定。随机分组采用计算机生成,按诱导期前 12 周 HIV-1 RNA(<50 拷贝/ml,是或否)分层。主要终点是第 32 周时病毒抑制的患者比例(根据美国食品和药物管理局的快照算法定义)、方案定义的病毒学失败和 96 周时的安全性事件。所有接受维持期至少一剂研究药物的随机分配患者均纳入主要疗效和安全性分析。主要分析采用贝叶斯方法评估假设,即根据预设决策规则(即可比性后验概率>90%),每种长效方案的病毒抑制比例不比口服方案差 10%以上(表示可比)。比例差异及相关 95%CI 对主要分析具有支持作用。该试验在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,编号为 NCT02120352。
在 309 名入组患者中,286 名被随机分配至维持期(4 周组和 8 周组各 115 名,口服治疗组 56 名)。本研究正在进行中。随机分组后 32 周时,两种长效方案在病毒抑制方面均符合与口服对照组相比可比的主要标准。56 名口服治疗组患者中有 51 名(91%)、4 周组 115 名患者中有 108 名(94%)和 8 周组 115 名患者中有 109 名(95%)在 32 周时维持病毒抑制。96 周时,56 名口服治疗组中有 47 名(84%)、115 名 4 周组中有 100 名(87%)和 115 名 8 周组中有 108 名(94%)维持病毒抑制。3 名患者(1%)发生方案定义的病毒学失败(2 例发生在 8 周组,1 例发生在口服治疗组)。注射部位反应的强度为轻度(4360 次注射中有 3648 次[84%])或中度(4360 次注射中有 673 次[15%]),很少导致停药(230 名患者中有 2 名[<1%]);注射部位疼痛最常见。在肌肉内组(4 周组和 8 周组)的 230 名患者中有 22 名(10%)和口服治疗组的 56 名患者中有 7 名(13%)在维持期出现严重不良事件;均与药物无关。
每 4 周或每 8 周注射一次的两种长效药物,卡替拉韦和利匹韦林联合治疗,与每日三药口服治疗一样,能有效维持 HIV-1 病毒抑制,长达 96 周,且被很好地接受和耐受。
ViiV 医疗保健公司和杨森研发公司。