The company will soon seek U.S. and European approval of a single-tablet regimen contaning bictegravir plus Descovy.
June 13, 2017
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Gilead Sciences has filed a new drug application (NDA) with the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for approval of a fixed-dose,
single-tablet HIV treatment regimen including the investigational
integrase inhibitor bictegravir and the contents of Descovy (emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide).
The
NDA is based on 48-week results from four ongoing Phase III trials of
the triple-drug combination tablet, which all showed that the treatment
was non-inferior, or as effective as, various approved antiretroviral
regimens.
Studies 1489 and 1490 are double-blind trials
each including 600 participants new to HIV treatment. Half of the
participants in each study were randomized to receive bictegravir plus
Descovy. In Study 1489, the other half of the participants were
randomized to receive Triumeq (dolutegravir/abacavir/lamivudine); in
Study 1490, the other half were randomized to receive Tivicay
(dolutegravir) plus Descovy. These studies will remain blinded (meaning
that participants will not know which regimen they received) through
week 144.
In these two studies, the researchers were
primarily looking at whether comparable proportions of participants had
an undetectable (fully suppressed) viral load (less than 50) at week 48
of treatment.
Study 1844 includes 520 individuals who
started the study with a fully suppressed viral load while taking either
Triumeq or Tivicay plus Epzicom (abacavir/lamivudine), which has the
same components as Triumeq. They were evenly randomized in a blinded
manner to stay on their original regimen or switch to bictegravir plus
Descovy.
Study 1878 includes 520 participants who had a
fully suppressed viral load on a regimen including either the boosted
protease inhibitor Prezista (darunavir) or Reyataz (atazanavir) plus a
nucleoside/nucleotide backbone of Epzicom or Truvada (tenofovir
disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine). They were randomized on an
open-label basis (meaning that they knew what they were receiving) to
stay on their current regimen or switch to bictegravir plus Descovy.
After 48 weeks, all participants received bictegravir plus Descovy on an
open-label basis.
In Studies 1844 and 1878, the
researchers were primarily looking at whether comparable proportions of
participants had a detectable viral load at week 48 of treatment.
In
Studies 1844 and 1878, the researchers were primarily looking at
whether comparable proportions of participants had an undetectable viral
load at week 48 of treatment.
In Studies 1489 and
1490, comparable proportions of participants had an undetectable viral
load, while in Studies 1844 and 1878, comparable proportions of
participants had a detectable viral load at week 48 of treatment.
Bictegravir
plus Descovy proved well tolerated in all the studies. No one
discontinued treatment with the regimen because of kidney-related health
problems. No one randomized to receive the regimen developed drug
resistance as a result. One person who was randomized to the protease
inhibitor arm in Study 1878 developed a resistance mutation to Ziagen
(abacavir).
Gilead intends to submit more detailed
results from these studies at scientific conferences this year. The
company also intends to seek European approval of the triple-drug
treatment in the third quarter of 2017.
To read a press release about the research, click here.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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