Rilpivirine
Failure Linked to High Viral Load and Poor Adherence
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SUMMARY:
High baseline viral load and less-than-optimal adherence help
explain the higher rate of virological failure among people
taking Tibotec's experimental non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitor (NNRTI) rilpivirine
(TMC278) in a pair of recent clinical trials, according
to findings presented at the 50th Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC
2010) last week in Boston. Rilpivirine recipients were
less likely than efavirenz recipients to stop treatment due
to side effects, but more likely to develop drug-resistance
mutations. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
At the XVIII
International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010) this summer in Vienna, researchers
reported 48-week
pooled data from the ECHO and THRIVE trials showing that rilpivirine
was non-inferior to efavirenz
(Sustiva) in terms of efficacy, but rilpivirine caused fewer adverse
events, especially central nervous system side effects.
However, people taking rilpivirine were more likely than efavirenz recipients
to experience virological failure -- defined as never achieving HIV RNA
< 50 copies/mL on 2 consecutive tests, a 0.5 log or more increase from
the lowest-ever level, or 2 consecutive rebound viral loads after suppression
-- and more frequently developed drug-resistance mutations.
ECHO (TMC278-C209) and THRIVE (TMC278-C215) are ongoing international
Phase 3 trials comparing rilpivirine versus efavirenz in treatment-naive
patients with no known NNRTI resistance mutations at baseline. ECHO participants
were randomly assigned to receive 25 mg once-daily rilpivirine or 600
mg once-daily efavirenz in combination with tenofovir/emtricitabine
(the drugs in Truvada). THRIVE participants received the same doses
of rilpivirine or efavirenz, but used different NRTI "backbones":
tenofovir/emtricitabine (60%), zidovudine/lamivudine
(Combivir)(30%), or abacavir/lamivudine
(Epzicom)(10%).
At ICAAC, investigators presented results of an analysis of resistance
among patients failing treatment in the 2 studies. The pooled analysis
included 686 patients randomly assigned to rilpivirine and 682 assigned
to efavirenz.
Results
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As
previously reported, in an intent-to-treat analysis at 48 weeks,
84% of participants taking rilpivirine and 82% taking efavirenz
achieved viral load < 50 copies/mL overall, not a significant
difference. |
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Treatment
response rates were higher among people with low viral load in both
arms, but this effect was greater in the rilpivirine arm compared
with the efavirenz arm: |
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Low
baseline viral load (< 100,00 copies/mL): response
rates of 90% vs 84%. respectively. |
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High
viral load (> 100,000 copies/mL): 77% vs and 81%, respectively. |
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10%
of rilpivirine recipients and 6% of efavirenz recipients met the
definitions of virological failure, a significant difference. |
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Suboptimal
adherence predicted virological failure in both groups, but this
too had a greater effect in the rilpivirine arm. |
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Viral
load and adherence had a combined effect, such that people with
both high viral load and suboptimal adherence were about 3 times
more likely to experience virological failure in the rilpivirine
arm than in the efavirenz arm. |
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Among
participants with virological failure, 62 (86%) and 28 (72%), respectively,
had successful resistance tests. |
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63%
of patients with virological failure in the rilpivirine arm had
genotypic evidence of new NNRTI resistance-associated mutations,
compared with 54% in the efavirenz arm, which did not reach statistical
significance. |
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68%
and 32%, respectively, developed new IAS-USA NRTI resistance-associated
mutations, a significant difference. |
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The
3 most common emerging resistance-associated mutations in the rilpivirine
arm were M184I (n = 29), E138K (n = 28) and M184V (n = 14), with
M184I and E138K usually occurring together. |
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K103N
was the most common resistance mutation in the efavirenz arm (n
= 11). |
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50%
of rilpivirine recipients and 43% of efavirenz recipients with virological
failure showed phenotypic resistance to their NNRTI, or evidence
that the drug did not work against virus in laboratory tests. |
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Fewer
people in the rilpivirine arm (3%) stopped therapy early due to
adverse events compared with the efavirenz arm (8%). |
"These
results confirm that TMC278 [rilpivirine], in combination with a [NRTI]
background regimen, was effective and non inferior to efavirenz,"
the researchers concluded. "Virological failure was more common
in patients with suboptimal adherence and/or high viral load and this
effect was more apparent with TMC278 than with efavirenz."
Tibotec has submitted a New Drug Application for rilpivirine to the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and has requested European Medicines
Agency approval for rilpivirine alone and (in conjunction with Gilead
Sciences) for a single-tablet regimen containing rilpivirine plus tenofovir/emtricitabine.
Investigator
affiliations: Tibotec, Mechelen, Belgium; University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, NC; irsiCaixa Foundation, Barcelona, Spain; Tibotec, Titusville,
NJ.
9/24/10
Reference
L
Rimsky, J Eron, B Clotet, and others. Characterization of the Resistance
Profile of TMC278: 48-week Analysis of the Phase 3 Studies ECHO and
THRIVE. 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
(ICAAC 2010). Boston, September 12-15, 2010. (Abstract
H-1810).
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