IDWeek 2017: Long-Acting Monoclonal Antibody Effective Against Multidrug-Resistant HIV
- Details
- Category: HIV Treatment
- Published on Thursday, 12 October 2017 00:00
- Written by Liz Highleyman

Ibalizumab, a long-acting monoclonal antibody that prevents HIV from entering cells, maintained viral suppression for a year in people with highly resistant HIV and limited treatment options, according to a presentation at the IDWeek 2017 conference last week in San Diego.
Study participants who received ibalizumab infusions every 2 weeks along with an optimized background antiretroviral regimen had a median viral load reduction of at least 2.5 log after 12 months of treatment.
Ibalizumab targets a protein on human cells rather than attacking HIV directly. It binds to the CD4 receptor on the surface of T-cells, but instead of preventing HIV from attaching to these cells, it blocks a shape change that is necessary for the virus to enter them.
Ibalizumab (TMB-355, previously known as TNX-355) has been in development for more than 10 years. Early studies showed that it was active against multiple types of HIV and had no cross-resistance or interactions with existing antiretrovirals, After it demonstrated modest efficacy in a Phase 2 study,the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted it orphan drug status and a breakthrough therapy designation.
At this year's Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Brinda Emu of Yale University presented 24-week findings from a Phase 3 trial evaluating ibalizumab for people who were not able to maintain viral suppression on their current antiretroviral regimen. At IDWeek she presented 48-week follow-up results.
Study TMB-301 (NCT02475629) enrolled 40 highly treatment-experienced participants who were on a failing regimen with resistance to at least 3 antiretroviral drug classes. Most (85%) were men, the median age was 53 years, and they had been HIV-positive for more than 20 years on average. The median CD4 cell count was about 100 cells/mm3 and 10% had a level below 10 cells/mm3, indicating very advanced immune suppression.
The group was heavily treatment-experienced with substantial drug resistance. More than a quarter had used at least 10 previous antiretrovirals, more than half had exhausted 3 or more drug classes, and about 15% were resistant to all approved antiretrovirals. However, they had to have at least 1 active drug available to construct an optimized background regimen (to do this, about 40% had to include the investigational attachment inhibitor fostemsavir).
After a 6-day observation period, all participants received a 2000 mg loading dose of ibalizumab as an intravenous infusion on day 7 while remaining on their failing regimen -- that is, ibalizumab was used as functional monotherapy. On day 14 they added an optimized background regimen selected on the basis of resistance testing. Starting on day 21 they began receiving 800 mg ibalizumab infusions every other week through week 24. Participants who completed the first 24 weeks could then continue on ibalizumab for 24 more weeks as part of an expanded access program (TMB-311).
As reported at last year's IDWeek, 83% of participants saw at least a 0.5 log drop and 60% had at least a 1.0 log drop in viral load from baseline levels at day 14, or 7 days after the first ibalizumab infusion. As Emu reported earlier this year, 55% had at least a 1.0 log decrease and 48% had at least a 2.0 log decrease at 24 weeks, with a mean reduction of 1.6 log. At that point 43% had achieved viral suppression below 50 copies/mL and half were below 200 copies/mL.
Among the 27 participants who entered the expanded access study, the median viral load reduction was 2.5 log at week 24, and this was sustained through week 48. All 15 patients who had undetectable HIV RNA (<50 copies/mL) at week 24 maintained viral suppression at week 48, and an additional individual who had detectable viral load at week 24 fell below this threshold by week 48.
At week 24 the overall average CD4 cell gain was approximately 50 cells/mm3, but participants with less advanced immune suppression saw larger increases. People who started with more than 200 cells/mm3 had a mean gain of 81 cells/mm3, while those with under 50 cells/mm3 at baseline had a mean gain of 7 cells/mm3. CD4 counts were maintained through week 48.
Ibalizumab was generally safe and well-tolerated, and most adverse events were mild or moderate. At 24 weeks 1 person had stopped the study due to a treatment-related serious adverse event (immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome), 4 discontinued for other reasons, and 4 people with advanced immune suppression died. The most common adverse events were diarrhea, dizziness, nausea, and rash; no infusion-related adverse events were reported. No new or unexpected drug-related serious adverse events or safety concerns emerged between weeks 24 and 48.
While ibalizumab is not as potent as some other antiretrovirals, it may provide the additional activity needed to suppress HIV in people with highly resistant HIV and few or no other treatment options.
"The participants enrolled in the Phase 3 study were highly treatment experienced with limited antiretroviral options due to drug resistance," Emu said in a press release issued by Theratechnologies, which is developing ibalizumab in conjunction with TaiMed Biologics.
"As clinicians treating these patients, having access to an agent with a novel mechanism of action was critical," Emu continued. "Seeing sustained virologic response out to 48 weeks is heartening and emphasizes the potential benefit that ibalizumab may bring to HIV patients in need of new treatment options."
The FDA is expected to issue a decision about ibalizumab in early January 2018, according to Theratechnologies. If approved, ibalizumab would be the first antiretroviral with a new mechanism to be introduced in a decade.
10/12/17
Source
B Emu, WJ Fessel, S Schrader, et al. 48-Week Safety and Efficacy On-Treatment Analysis of Ibalizumab in Patients with Multi-Drug Resistant HIV-1. IDWeek. San Diego, October 4-8, 2017. Abstract 1686.