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Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of long-acting injectable cabotegravir in low-risk HIV-uninfected individuals: HPTN 077, a phase 2a randomized controlled trial

Authors :
Beatriz Grinsztejn
Marybeth McCauley
Alex R. Rinehart
Gordon Chau
David Margolis
Jeremy Sugarman
William Spreen
Paul G. Richardson
Myron S. Cohen
Manya Magnus
Albert Y. Liu
Adeola Adeyeye
Leslie Cottle
Ravindre Panchia
Raphael J. Landovitz
Sue Li
David N. Burns
Elizabeth E. Tolley
Susan H. Eshleman
Craig W. Hendrix
Halima Dawood
Ryan Kofron
Mina C. Hosseinipour
Mark A. Marzinke
Yinfeng Zhang
Joseph J. Eron
Newell, Marie-Louise
Source :
PLoS medicine, vol 15, iss 11, PLoS Medicine, PLoS Medicine, Vol 15, Iss 11, p e1002690 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Background Cabotegravir (CAB) is a novel strand-transfer integrase inhibitor being developed for HIV treatment and prevention. CAB is formulated both as an immediate-release oral tablet for daily administration and as a long-acting injectable suspension (long-acting CAB [CAB LA]) for intramuscular (IM) administration, which delivers prolonged plasma exposure to the drug after IM injection. HIV Prevention Trials Network study 077 (HPTN 077) evaluated the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of CAB LA in HIV-uninfected males and females at 8 sites in Brazil, Malawi, South Africa, and the United States. Methods and findings HPTN 077 was a double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2a trial. Healthy individuals age 18–65 years at low HIV risk were randomized (3:1) to receive CAB or placebo (PBO). In the initial oral phase, participants received 1 daily oral tablet (CAB or PBO) for 4 weeks. Those without safety concerns in the oral phase continued and received injections in the injection phase (Cohort 1: 3 injections of CAB LA 800 mg or 0.9% saline as PBO IM every 12 weeks for 3 injection cycles; Cohort 2: CAB LA 600 mg or PBO IM for 5 injection cycles; the first 2 injections in Cohort 2 were separated by 4 weeks, the rest by 8 weeks). The primary analysis included weeks 5 to 41 of study participation, encompassing the injection phase. The cohorts were enrolled sequentially. Primary outcomes were safety and tolerability. Secondary outcomes included pharmacokinetics and events occurring during the oral and injection phases. Between February 9, 2015, and May 27, 2016, the study screened 443 individuals and enrolled 110 participants in Cohort 1 and 89 eligible participants in Cohort 2. Participant population characteristics were as follows: 66% female at birth; median age 31 years; 27% non-Hispanic white, 41% non-Hispanic black, 24% Hispanic/Latino, 3% Asian, and 6% mixed/other; and 6 transgender men and 1 transgender woman. Twenty-two (11%) participants discontinued the oral study product; 6 of these were for clinical or laboratory adverse events (AEs). Of those who received at least 1 CAB LA injection, 80% of Cohort 1 and 92% of Cohort 2 participants completed all injections; injection course completion rates were not different from those in the PBO arm. Injection site reactions (ISRs) were common (92% of Cohort 1 and 88% of Cohort 2 participants who received CAB LA reported any ISR). ISRs were mostly Grade 1 (mild) to Grade 2 (moderate), and 1 ISR event (Cohort 1) led to product discontinuation. Grade 2 or higher ISRs were the only AEs reported more commonly among CAB LA recipients than PBO recipients. Two Grade 3 (severe) ISRs occurred in CAB recipients, 1 in each cohort, but did not lead to product discontinuation in either case. Seven incident sexually transmitted infections were diagnosed in 6 participants. One HIV infection occurred in a participant 48 weeks after last injection of CAB LA: CAB was not detectable in plasma both at the time of first reactive HIV test and at the study visit 12 weeks prior to the first reactive test. Participants in Cohort 2 (unlike Cohort 1) consistently met prespecified pharmacokinetic targets of at least 95% of participants maintaining CAB trough concentrations above PA-IC90, and 80% maintaining trough concentrations above 4× PA-IC90. Study limitations include a modest sample size, a short course of injections, and a low-risk study population. Conclusions In this study, CAB LA was well tolerated at the doses and dosing intervals used. ISRs were common, but infrequently led to product discontinuation. CAB LA 600 mg every 8 weeks met pharmacokinetic targets for both male and female study participants. The safety and pharmacokinetic results observed support the further development of CAB LA, and efficacy studies of CAB LA for HIV treatment and prevention are in progress. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov Trial number: NCT02178800.<br />In a phase 2a trial, Raphael Landovitz and colleagues investigate the safety of injectable cabotegravir in HIV-uninfected people<br />Author summary Why was this study done? Daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine is highly effective in preventing HIV infection when taken as prescribed, but adherence challenges have compromised full effectiveness in some populations. Cabotegravir (CAB) is a novel strand-transfer integrase inhibitor in development as a long-acting injectable preparation for HIV treatment and HIV prevention. HIV Prevention Trials Network study 077 (HPTN 077) aimed to establish the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of 2 dose/interval regimens of long-acting CAB in HIV-uninfected, low-risk individuals globally. What did the researchers do and find? Participants were randomized to active CAB or placebo. All participants received a 4-week daily oral lead-in of CAB or placebo, followed by a series of injections of CAB or placebo. Participants received either 800 mg as a split 2-ml injection every 12 weeks, or 600 mg as a single 3-ml injection every 8 weeks, after receiving 2 injections 4 weeks apart. We observed frequent injection site reactions (mostly injection site pain), and they were more common with CAB than placebo, but only led to discontinuation of injections in rare cases. No other safety concerns were noted. Pharmacokinetics, using target values from nonhuman primate simian/human immunodeficiency virus challenge prevention studies, support the 600 mg every 8 weeks dose, meeting prespecified targets. What do these findings mean? We found that CAB was generally well tolerated in HIV-uninfected males and females in diverse geographic locations. Injection site reactions, although frequent, did not deter continued dosing, albeit with short courses. Studies are ongoing to evaluate efficacy in at-risk populations and to further evaluate the safety of the 600 mg every 8 weeks dose.

Subjects

Subjects :
Male
Malawi
HIV Infections
Drug research and development
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Biochemistry
law.invention
0302 clinical medicine
Immunodeficiency Viruses
Medicine
education.field_of_study
General Medicine
3. Good health
Medical Microbiology
Viral Pathogens
Creatinine
Cohort
Infectious diseases
HIV/AIDS
Intramuscular injection
Infection
medicine.medical_specialty
Pyridones
HIV prevention
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Placebo
Microbiology
Risk Assessment
Drug Administration Schedule
03 medical and health sciences
Clinical Research
Humans
education
Microbial Pathogens
Aged
Pharmacology
Preventive medicine
Prevention
lcsh:R
Organisms
Biology and Life Sciences
United States
Discontinuation
030104 developmental biology
Public and occupational health
chemistry
Clinical medicine
Delayed-Action Preparations
Biomarkers
0301 basic medicine
RNA viruses
lcsh:Medicine
Medical and Health Sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
South Africa
Cabotegravir
Clinical trials
Randomized controlled trial
law
Risk Factors
Medicine and Health Sciences
030212 general & internal medicine
Intramuscular
Middle Aged
Clinical Laboratory Sciences
Phase III clinical investigation
Clinical Laboratories
Treatment Outcome
Infectious Diseases
Tolerability
Research Design
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Viruses
Female
Pathogens
Drug Monitoring
Brazil
Research Article
Adult
Adolescent
Clinical Research Design
Anti-HIV Agents
Population
Viral diseases
Injections, Intramuscular
Injections
Young Adult
Double-Blind Method
Diagnostic Medicine
Internal medicine
General & Internal Medicine
Retroviruses
Pharmacokinetics
business.industry
Lentivirus
HIV
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Research and analysis methods
Adverse Events
business

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS medicine, vol 15, iss 11, PLoS Medicine, PLoS Medicine, Vol 15, Iss 11, p e1002690 (2018)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df09787df3a169f82685a29c16ba7e4d