AIDS 2016: Once-Daily Raltegravir Works as Well as Twice-Daily For Initial HIV Treatment

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A new formulation of the integrase inhibitor raltegravir (Isentress) taken once daily suppressed HIV viral load as well as the older formulation taken twice a day in people being treated for the first time, according to findings from the ONCEMRK study presented in a late-breaker session at the 21st International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2016) last week in Durban.

Integrase inhibitors are a potent and well-tolerated class of antiretrovirals. The first one to be approved, Merck's raltegravir, is considered safe and effective, but its twice-daily dosing schedule is a disadvantage in an era of once-daily single-tablet regimens.

In the previous QDMRK trial once-daily dosing of the original approved formulation of raltegravir was found to be less effective than twice-daily dosing for initial HIV suppression in previously untreated patients, though it worked well as maintenance therapy for people who had already achieved undetectable viral load.

At AIDS 2016 Pedro Cahn from Fundacion Huesped in Buenos Aires presented findings from ONCEMRK (NCT02131233), a Phase 3 randomized controlled trial testing an investigational reformulated version of raltegravir designed to maintain adequate concentrations in the body over a longer period.

This analysis included 797 previously untreated participants in Europe, North America, Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Most (85%) were men, a majority were white, the mean age was about 34 years, and 3% were coinfected with hepatitis B or C. The mean CD4 T-cell count was approximately 400 cells/mm3 and the mean plasma HIV RNA level was 4.6 log copies/mL (about 40,000 copies/mL), though 28% had a high viral load above 100,000 copies/mL and about 5% had more than 500,000 copies/mL.

Participants were randomly assigned (2:1) to receive the older raltegravir formulation at 400 mg twice daily or the new formulation at 1200 mg once daily (2 600 mg tablets taken at the same time), both with tenofovir/emtricitabine (the drugs in Truvada) for up to 96 weeks. Cahn noted that the 600 mg tablet is only slightly larger than the 400 mg pill.

Results

"Reformulated once-daily raltegravir may offer a new potent, well tolerated, and convenient option for initial treatment of HIV infection," the investigators concluded. 

Prescribing instructions for the older twice-daily raltegravir formulation call for doubling the dose when co-administered with rifampin, an antibacterial drug used to treat tuberculosis. In response to a question, Cahn said he would "be careful" using 1200mg once-daily raltegravir with rifampin until pharmacokinetic studies are completed.

Based on these findings, the European Medicines Agency has accepted the once-daily formulation of raltegravir for review, and Merck plans to request U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval later this year, the company indicated in a press release.

7/25/16

Reference

P Cahn, R Kaplan, P Sax, et al. Raltegravir (RAL) 1200 mg once daily (QD) is non-inferior to RAL 400 mg twice daily (BID), in combination with tenofovir/emtricitabine, in treatment-naive HIV-1-infected subjects: week 48 results. 21st International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2016). Durban, July 18-22. Abstract FRAB0103LB.

Other Source

Merck. Data for Merck's Investigational Once-Daily Formulation of ISENTRESS (raltegravir) Show That at Week 48, a Regimen Containing the Once-Daily Dosing Formulation Resulted in Non-Inferior Efficacy and Safety to a Regimen Containing the Approved Twice-Daily Formulation. Press release. July 22, 2016.