| Literature DB >> 22347806 |
Janice Soo Fern Lee1, Alexandra Calmy, Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer, Nathan Ford.
Abstract
Integrase inhibitors represent an important new class of antiretroviral drugs. Elvitegravir, the second available integrase inhibitor to be submitted for regulatory approval appears to be a promising once-daily agent when combined with other antiretroviral drugs. Elvitegravir has demonstrated good efficacy and safety, with minimal side effects and no specific requirements in terms of laboratory monitoring. In addition, elvitegravir is available as a fixed-dose combination. However, the drug requires boosting and this leads to a number of drug-drug interactions and necessary dose adjustment when dosing with certain drugs, including dose reduction in the presence of atazanavir, lopinavir, rifabutin, and ketoconazole, and dose increase for ethinyl estradiol when co-administered with boosted elvitegravir. The main advantage of elvitegravir lies in its potential to be administered as a once-daily, single pill. Limitations include dose adjustment requirements, a relatively low genetic barrier to resistance, high price, and lack of data for use in children. Clinical trials addressing specific challenges encountered in resources-limited settings should be encouraged.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy; elvitegravir; resistance; resource-limited settings; safety
Year: 2012 PMID: 22347806 PMCID: PMC3280623 DOI: 10.2147/HIV.S20993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HIV AIDS (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-1373
Interactions between elvitegravir ± ritonavir and other drugs
| Co-administered drug | Participants (completed study) | Duration | Dose | PK elvitegravir in % change | PK co-administered drug in % change | Comments | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elvitegravir ± ritonavir | Co-administered drug | Cmax | AUCτ | Cτ | Cmax | AUCτ | Cτ | ||||
| Zidovudine | 28 healthy subjects | 27 days | 200 mg + 100 mg QD day 8–27 | 300 mg BID day 1–7, 8–17 | ↑5% | ↑5% | ↑15% | ↓12% | ↓14% | NA | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Didanosine | 32 healthy subjects | 17 days | 200 mg + 100 mg QD day 5, 14–17 | 400 mg (EC capsule) QD day 1, 15 | ↓5% | ↓3% | ↑6% | ↓16% | ↓14% | NA | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Stavudine | 32 healthy subjects | 17 days | 200 mg + 100 mg QD day 5, 14–17 | 40 mg QD day 3, 17 | ↓4% | ↓2% | ↑24% | ↓0.4% | ↑7% | NA | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Abacavir | 26 healthy subjects | 15 days | 200 mg + 100 mg QD day 5–15 | 600 mg day 1, 15 | ↓5% | ↓3% | ↑6% | ↓12% | ↓17% | NA | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Rifabutin | 19 healthy volunteers | 53 days | 300 mg + 100 mg QD | 150 mg EOD | ↓8% | ↓4% | ↓6% | Rifabutin: ↓8% | Rifabutin: ↓6% | Rifabutin: ↑16% | Dose adjustment of rifabutin 150 mg EOD recommended with monitoring of adverse events |
| Atazanavir (boosted) | 53 healthy subjects | Study 1: 14 days, Study 2: 10 days | Study 1: 200 mg | 300 mg + ritonavir 100 mg QD | Study 1: ↑85 | Study 1: ↑100 | Study 1: ↑188 | Study 1: ↓16 | Study 1: ↓21 | Study 1: ↓35% | Dose adjustment of EVG 85 mg recommended when co-administered with ATV/r 300/100 mg |
| Atazanavir (unboosted) | 15 healthy subjects | 20 days | 300 mg | 400 mg | ↑8% | ↑7% | ↓10% | 3680 ng/mL | 16300 ng·h/mL | 74.5 ng/mL | Atazanavir exposures are lower than historical values |
| Darunavir | 20 healthy subjects | 42 days | 125 mg QD | 600 mg + ritonavir 100 mg BID | ↑13% | ↑10% | ↑18% | ↓11% | ↓11% | ↓17% | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Tipranavir | 26 healthy subjects | 42 days | 200 mg QD | 500 mg + ritonavir 200 mg BID | ↑4% | ↓8% | ↓10% | ↓8% | ↓11% | ↓11% | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Fosamprenavir | 31 healthy subjects | 28 days | 125 mg QD | 700 mg + ritonavir 100 mg BID | No change | ↓7% | ↓4% | ↓2% | ↓1% | ↑1% | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Lopinavir | 27 healthy subjects | 14 days | 125 mg QD | 400 mg + ritonavir 100 mg BID | ↑52% | ↑75% | ↑139% | ↓1% | ↓3% | ↓8% | Dose reduction of elvitegravir to 85 mg is recommended |
| Maraviroc | 28 healthy subjects | 20 days | 150 mg + 100 mg QD | 150 mg BID | ↑1% | ↑7% | ↑9% | ↑115% | ↑186% | ↑323% | Dose adjustment of maraviroc 150 mg BID recommended |
| Etravirine | 31 healthy volunteers | 20 days | 150 mg + 100 mg QD | 200 mg BID | ↑7% | ↑6% | ↑6% | ↑2% | ↓2% | ↓10% | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Antacid | 62 healthy subjects | Study 1: 11 days | 50 mg + 100 mg QD | 20 mL together, 2 hours before, 2 hours after, 4 hours before, 4 hours after elvitegravir | Together with antacid: ↓47% | Together with antacid: ↓45% | Together with antacid: ↓41% | NA | NA | NA | Administration of antacid and EVG should be separated by at least 2 hours |
| Omeprazole | 62 healthy subjects | 15 days | 50 mg + 100 mg QD | 40 mg QD | ↓7% | ↓1% | ↓6% | NA | NA | NA | No dosage adjustment needed |
| Ketoconazole | 18 healthy subjects | 15 days | 150 mg + 100 mg QD | 200 mg BID | ↑17% | ↑48% | ↑67% | NA | NA | NA | Maximum recommended daily dose of ketoconazole is 200 mg |
| Norgestimate and ethinyl estradiol | 15 healthy subjects | 56 days | 150 mg + cobicistat | Combination oral contraceptive pill containing norgestimate (NGM) 0.180 mg, 0.215 mg, 0.250 mg and ethinyl estradiol (EE) 25 μg | NA | NA | NA | EE: ↓6% | EE: ↓25% | EE: ↓41% | Recommended ethinyl estradiol dose of the oral contraceptive is 30 μg |
Notes: Pharmacokinetic study of both didanosine and stavudine with elvitegravir was carried out in the same subjects;
pharmacokinetic study of both darunavir and tipranavir with elvitegravir was carried out in crossover design in the same subjects;
pharmacokinetic study of both antacid and omeprazole with elvitegravir was carried out in one study design.
Abbreviations: PK, pharmacokinetic; GMR, geometric mean ratio; Cmax, maximum concentration; AUCτ, area under the curve from time 0 to tau, where tau is the length of dosing interval; Cτ, tau concentration; NA, not available; QD, once a day; BID, twice a day; EOD, every other day; EC, enteric coated; EE, ethinyl estradiol; NGM, norgestimate; NGMN, norelgestromin (metabolite of norgestimate).
Summary of published data on the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of elvitegravir (EVG)
| Study | Design | EVG formulation | Sample size | Comparator | Outcomes | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DeJesus et al | Randomized dose-ranging monotherapy trial | 200 mg, 400 mg, or 800 mg twice daily, or 50 mg once daily | 40 HIV-positive treatment-naïve and experienced patients | Placebo | Significant reductions in HIV RNA in both treatment-naïve and experienced patients | |
| Zolopa et al | Phase II randomized, controlled, 48-week study. Partial blinding (to dose) | 20 mg, 50 mg and 125 mg | 278 treatment-experienced subjects | Ritonavir-boosted PI | Lowest dose arm stopped early due to inferiority. | |
| Cohen et al | Phase II, 48-week randomized double-blinded trial | QUAD (EVG, cobicistat, emtricitabine and tenofovir) | 71 treatment-naïve, HIV-positive patients | EFV/FTC/TDF | 90% of the patients taking Quad and 83% of patients taking atripla achieved virological suppression | Quad associated with more rapid achievement of virological suppression |
| Molina et al | Phase III multicenter, randomized, double-blind study | Ritonavir-boosted once-daily elvitegravir 150 mg (or 85 mg in patients receiving a background protease inhibitor of either atazanavir or lopinavir) | 351 receiving ritonavir-boosted twice-daily raltegravir 400 mg | 59% of elvitegravir-treated patients achieved virological suppression vs 58% for raltegravir-treated patients (intention-to-treat population; | Preliminary results did not show greater barrier to resistance compared with raltegravir | |
| Zolopa et al | Phase II randomized trial | Virological suppression | Virological suppression | Ritonavir-boosted PIs | Occurrence of adverse events and grade 3 or 4 laboratory toxicity similar across treatment groups | No dose-dependent increase in type of adverse event observed |
| Cohen et al | Phase II randomized trial | Quad | 71 treatment-naïve, HIV-positive patients | EFV/FTC/TDF | Lower percentage of drug-related adverse events compared with EFV/FTC/TDF (35% vs 57%) | Incidence of laboratory abnormalities. |
Abbreviations: EVG, elvitegravir; EFV/FTC/TBF, efavirenz/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; PI, protease inhibitors.