Efficacy and safety of the novel capsid inhibitor lenacapavir to treat multidrug-resistant HIV: week 52 results of a phase 2/3 trial

Lenacapavir, a first-in-class HIV-1 capsid inhibitor, is in development as a long-acting agent for treating and preventing HIV-1. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lenacapavir with an optimised background regimen in adults living with multidrug-resistant HIV-1 up to 52 weeks. This ongo...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet HIV 2023-08, Vol.10 (8), p.e497-e505
Hauptverfasser: Ogbuagu, Onyema, Segal-Maurer, Sorana, Ratanasuwan, Winai, Avihingsanon, Anchalee, Brinson, Cynthia, Workowski, Kimberly, Antinori, Andrea, Yazdanpanah, Yazdan, Trottier, Benoit, Wang, Hui, Margot, Nicolas, Dvory-Sobol, Hadas, Rhee, Martin S, Baeten, Jared M, Molina, Jean-Michel, DeJesus, Edwin, Richmond, Gary J., Berhe, Mezgebe, Ruane, Peter J., Sinclair, Gary Ian, Lichtenstein, Kenneth, Ramgopal, Moti N., Wiznia, Andrew, Sanchez, William, McGowan, Joseph P., Creticos, Catherine M., Berger, Daniel S., Wheeler, David A., Hagins, Debbie, Crofoot, Gordon E., Sims, James, Osiyemi, Olayemi, Hodge, Theo, Zurawski, Christine, Siripassorn, Krittaecho, Chetchotisakd, Ploenchan, Castagna, Antonella, Castelli, Francesco, Ronot-Bregigeon, Sylvie, Brunetta, Jason, Shirasaka, Takuma, Yokomaku, Yoshiyuki, Koenig, Ellen, Mallolas, Josep, Stellbrink, Hans-Jurgen, Hung, Chien-Ching, Rassool, Mohammed
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lenacapavir, a first-in-class HIV-1 capsid inhibitor, is in development as a long-acting agent for treating and preventing HIV-1. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lenacapavir with an optimised background regimen in adults living with multidrug-resistant HIV-1 up to 52 weeks. This ongoing, international, phase 2/3 trial at 42 sites included adults living with multidrug-resistant HIV-1. In cohort 1, 36 participants were randomly assigned (2:1) to add oral lenacapavir (600 mg, days 1 and 2; 300 mg, day 8) or placebo to an existing failing regimen. At day 15, those on oral lenacapavir received subcutaneous lenacapavir 927 mg every 26 weeks; those on placebo started lenacapavir (2-week oral lead-in then subcutaneous). Cohort 1 started an optimised background regimen on day 15. In cohort 2 (non-randomised), 36 participants started an optimised background regimen concurrent with lenacapavir (oral to subcutaneous). Here we report the secondary endpoints of plasma HIV-1 RNA of less than 50 copies per mL or less than 200 copies per mL at week 52 (US Food and Drug Administration snapshot algorithm) in cohort 1 along with results for cohorts 1 and 2 combined. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04150068, and clinicaltrialregister.eu, EudraCT 2019-003814-16 and is ongoing. Of 72 participants, 46 (64%) had CD4 counts of less than 200 cells per μL and 38 (53%) had no more than one fully active antiretroviral drug at baseline. In cohort 1, 30 of 36 participants (83%, 95% CI 67–94) had less than 50 HIV-1 RNA copies per mL and 31 of 36 participants (86%, 71–95) had less than 200 HIV RNA copies per mL, at week 52. In all, nine participants (four in cohort 1, five in cohort 2) had emergent lenacapavir resistance; four resuppressed (HIV-1 RNA
ISSN:2352-3018
2352-3018
DOI:10.1016/S2352-3018(23)00113-3