A combination of antiretroviral drugs in long-acting nanosuspension formulations achieved adequate blood levels and appeared safe in HIV negative study volunteers, offering the potential for a maintenance or PrEP option that could be taken once monthly, researchers reported at the 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2013) this week in Kuala Lumpur.
While modern antiretroviral therapy is highly safe and effective, agents that could be administered less frequently would improve convenience for people with HIV. A long-acting option could prove especially attractive for maintenance therapy once viral load is suppressed, or for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in HIV negative people.
William Spreen from GlaxoSmithKline and colleagues evaluated the safety and pharmacokinetics of a nanosuspension formulation of GSK1265477 -- an investigational HIV integrase inhibitor similar to dolutegravir -- plus TMC278-LA, a long-acting formulation of Janssen's approved non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor rilpivirine. GSK1265744 has shown good antiviral activity in a 10-day monotherapy study and is now in Phase 2b development.
A nanosuspension refers to tiny drug crystals suspended in a liquid, enabling it to remain active longer in the body. Decreasing particle size increases the total drug surface area, allowing for a manageable injection volume, Spreen explained.
This Phase 1 trial enrolled 47 healthy, HIV negative volunteers, 40 of whom received at least 1 injection. Just over half were women, most were white, and the mean age was 40 years.
Participants were randomly allocated to 4 treatment cohorts. Due to limited safety data, all participants received a 14-day lead-in of 30 mg/day oral GSK1265744to assess its safety and tolerability. Following a 7-day wash-out period, they then got a single 800 mg "loading dose" via intramuscular (IM) injection. After this they received:
There were 7 participants who withdrew prematurely from the study for any reason during the oral lead-in phase, and 3 who did so during the injection phase.
Results
"Co-administration of injectable long-acting nanosuspensions of [GSK1265744] and TMC278 was safe and generally well tolerated in healthy adults," the researchers concluded.
"Monthly or quarterly dosing regimens achieved clinically relevant plasma concentrations" of GSK1265744and TMC278, they continued, adding that these data support evaluationin longer-term clinical studies.
Spreen noted that a dosing-ranging study is pending, and researchers plan to look at various strategies involving oral lead-in or induction therapy with both drugs for up to 6 months before proceeding to long-acting injections.
7/9/13
Reference
W Spreen, P Williams, D Margolis, et al. First study of repeat dose co-administration of GSK1265744 and TMC278 long-acting parenteral nanosuspensions: pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability in healthy adults.7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. Kuala Lumpur, June 30-July 3, 2013. Abstract WEAB0103.