| Literature DB >> 25134686 |
Dorothy E Dow1,2,3, John A Bartlett4,5,6.
Abstract
The integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) are the newest antiretroviral class in the HIV treatment armamentarium. Dolutegravir (DTG) is the only second-generation INSTI with FDA approval (2013). It has potential advantages in comparison to first-generation INSTI's, including unboosted daily dosing, limited cross resistance with raltegravir and elvitegravir, and a high barrier to resistance. Clinical trials have evaluated DTG as a 50-mg daily dose in both treatment-naïve and treatment-experienced, INSTI-naïve participants. In those treatment-naïve participants with baseline viral load <100,000 copies/mL, DTG combined with abacavir and lamivudine was non-inferior and superior to fixed-dose combination emtricitabine/tenofovir/efavirenz. DTG was also superior to the protease inhibitor regimen darunavir/ritonavir in treatment-naïve participants regardless of baseline viral load. Among treatment-experienced patients naïve to INSTI, DTG (50 mg daily) demonstrated both non-inferiority and superiority when compared to the first-generation INSTI raltegravir (400 mg twice daily) regardless of the background regimen. No phenotypically significant DTG resistance has been demonstrated in INSTI-naïve participant trials. The VIKING trials evaluated DTG's ability to treat persons with HIV with prior INSTI exposure. VIKING demonstrated twice-daily DTG was more efficacious than daily dosing when treating participants receiving and failing first-generation INSTI regimens. DTG maintained potency against single mutations from any of the three major INSTI pathways (Y143, H155, Q148); however, the Q148 mutation with two or more additional mutations significantly reduced its potency. The long-acting formulation of DTG, GSK1265744LA, is the next innovation in this second-generation INSTI class, holding promise for the future of HIV prevention and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy (ART); Dolutegravir (DTG); GSK1265744LA; HIV; Integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI); Nanoparticle formulation
Year: 2014 PMID: 25134686 PMCID: PMC4269626 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-014-0029-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
Comparison of currently available and future integrase inhibitors
| Drug | Raltegravir | Elvitegravir | Dolutegravir | GSK1265744LA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Merck & Co | Gilead Sciences | ViiV & GSK | ViiV |
| Generation | First | First | Second | Second |
| FDA approved | 2007 | 2012 | 2013 | N/A |
| Tolerability | Good | Good | Good | N/A |
| Food requirement | No | Yes | No | No |
| Metabolism | UGT1A1 | Cytochrome P450 CYP3A4 major; UGT1A1/3 minor | Glucuronidation UGT1A1 major; CYP3A4 minor | |
| Half-life: | 9 h | 3 h alone; 9 h with cobicistat boost | 12–15 h (average 14 h) | 21–50 days (nanosuspension) |
| Renal/biliary | Competitive use of UGT1A1a to metabolize drug and unconjugated bilirubin | Inhibitor of OCT2b, inhibiting creatinine secretion, no effect on GFR; small rise in bilirubina | ||
| Adult dosing | 400 mg twice daily | Daily combination pill | 50 mg daily in INSTI-naïve; 50 mg twice daily in INSTI-experienced | Treatment: 600-mg bimonthly injection (under investigation) PrEP: 800-mg quarterly injection (under investigation) |
| Pediatric dosing | Chewable tabs 100 and 25 mg | Not available | 50 mg once daily in 12 years and older and weighing at least 40 kg; pediatric granule formulation in process | Not available |
| Co-treatment for tuberculosis | Rifampin: decreases AUC, induces UGT1A1, increase dose by 100%; rifabutin: no dose adjustment | Avoid with rifabutin due to drug/drug interactions | Rifampin: dose adjust 50 mg twice daily; rifabutin: no need to dose adjust | |
| Cross-resistant | Yes | Yes | No; exception may be Q148 + ≥2 additional mutations | No |
AUC area under curve, GFR glomerular filtration rate, GSK GlaxoSmithKline, INSTI integrase strand transfer inhibitor, PrEP pre-exposure prophylaxis, t half-life
aUGT1A1 is the same metabolic enzyme that processes unconjugated bilirubin setting up a competitive use
bHuman organic cation transporter
Fig. 1INSTI pathways of HIV-1 resistance with associated dissociative t 1/2 and fold change in EC50 [19] compared to wild-type virus. Diss t dissociative values previously reported [20, 21]. Major integrase mutations are denoted in black bold: E92Q/V; Y143C/H/R; Q148H/K/R; N155H. Accessory mutations are denoted in gray: E138A/K; G140A/C/S [25]. DTG dolutegravir, EC half-maximal effective concentration, EVG elvitegravir, FC fold change, INSTI integrase strand transfer inhibitor, ND not determined, RAL raltegravir, t half-life
Fig. 2Phase 3 clinical trials of DTG and comparator antiretroviral therapy evaluating PDVF criteria versus discontinuation due to adverse events. PDVF defined by study endpoint (>50 copies/mL) including those who never suppressed or those who rebounded; *FLAMINGO study endpoint (>200 copies/mL); +SPRING-2 study endpoint (>50 copies/mL × 2 from week 24–48; then up to 200 copies/mL after week 48). DRV/r darunavir/ritonavir, DTG dolutegravir, EFV efavirenz, PDVF protocol-derived virologic failure, RAL raltegravir
Important clinical trials for dolutegravir
| Study design and funding | Setting and demographics | Results | Conclusion | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Dose-finding [ R, DB, PC Funding: GSK | S: USA D: single dose: 75% Caucasian; 83% male ( Multiple dose: 85% Caucasian; 90% male | IC: healthy adults R: single dose study: Results: daily dose of 50 mg maintained levels 25-fold higher than the IC90; | Daily dose of 50 mg will achieve therapeutic levels |
IMPAACT P1093 I/II OL Cohort 1 [ Cohort 2 [ Funding: IMPAACT as funded by NIH, NIAID, NICHD, NIMH and ViiV Healthcare | S: USA D:
| IC: meeting the cohort age designation; failing ART regimen (HIV-1 RNA >1,000 c/mL) OL: DTG ~1 mg/kg daily was added to the failing regimen for intensive PK evaluation on days 5–10. Then OBR with at least one fully active drug (30% received FTC/TDF/DRV/r) 1°EP: HIV-1 RNA <400 c/mL or >1 log10 decline at 24 weeks; 2°EP HIV-1 RNA <400 c/mL or >1 log10 decline at 48 weeks Results: Pending Cohort 3: 2 to <6 years; Cohort 4: 6 months to <2 years; Cohort 5: >6 weeks to <6 months | Weight band of 1 mg/kg appears a safe and efficacious dose among children and adolescents in this clinical study | |
| Phase 2 | PK/PD (2a) R, DB, dose-finding [ Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: USA D: 80% Caucasian; 100% males; | IC: ≥18 years old, HIV-infected, INSTI naïve; not receiving ART R: placebo ( Results: significant reduction in HIV-1 RNA in all treatment groups when compared to placebo ( | DTG demonstrated potency, tolerability, and predictable PK/PD relationships |
SPRING-1 (2b) R, PB (dose-masked) OL 48 weeks [ 96 weeks [ Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: USA and Europe (Spain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia) D: 80% Caucasian; 86% male; | IC: ≥18 years, naïve to ART, VL >1,000 c/mL; CD4+ >200 c/μL R (1:1:1:1): DTG 10, 25, 50 mg versus EFV 600 mg with investigator-selected NRTI backbone ABC/3TC or TDF/FTC 1°EP: VL <50 c/mL at week 16 2°EP: VL <50 c/mL at 24 and 48 weeks Results: at 16 weeks, rate of viral decay was robust such that 96, 92, and 90% of 50, 25, 10 mg doses respectively with <50 c/mL compared to 60% for those receiving EFV (1°EP); at 48 weeks results were 91, 88, 90%, versus 82% EFV, respectively (2°EP), DTG sustained efficacy and tolerability through week 96: 88% maintained viral response <50 c/mL for the 50 mg DTG arm versus 72% EFV arm. In the EFV arm, 10% withdrew due to adverse events versus 3% in the DTG arm influencing this difference | DTG demonstrated rapid viral decay as compared to EFV 50 mg daily dose was chosen for phase 3 (maximum tolerated; all doses efficacious) No emerging resistance on DTG | |
VIKING (2b) dosing study OL [ Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: France, Italy, Spain, Canada, US D: 84% Caucasian; 84% male, | IC: ≥18 years. Treatment experienced with RAL, VL >1,000 c/mL, genotypic INSTI resistance, and ≥1 compound with genotypic/phenotypic resistance in ≥2 classes NRTI, NNRTI, or PI classes R: Cohort 1 ( 1°EP: HIV RNA ≥0.7 log decrease from baseline or <400 c/mL at day 10. 2°EP: change from baseline HIV-1 RNA after day 11 on OBR, proportion of those suppressed (<400 or <50 c/mL), change in CD4+ cell count Results: 96% in cohort 2 versus 78% in cohort 1 reached 1°EP. At week 24 with an OBR, 75% (cohort 2) versus 41% (cohort 1) had VL <50 c/mL at 24 weeks. A higher IC50 fold change was noted in daily dosing, especially when Q148 + 2 additional mutations were present | In treatment-experienced participants, twice-daily DTG was better than daily dosing Mutation combination Q148 + ≥2 additional mutations was most likely to confer DTG resistance | |
| Phase 3 ART naive | SPRING-2 R, DB NI 48 weeks [ 96 weeks [ Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: Canada, USA, Australia, Europe D: 85% Caucasian; 85% male, | IC: ≥18 years, naïve to ART, VL >1,000 c/mL; CD4+ >200 c/μL R (1:1): RAL BD compared to DTG QD with investigator-selected NRTI backbone ABC/3TC or TDF/FTC 1°EP: VL <50 c/mL at week 48 2°EP: CD4, severity of AE, lab parameters, evidence of resistance. VF defined as confirmed VL >50 c/mL Results: DTG was NI to RAL at 48 weeks regardless of NRTI background regimen (88% versus 85%) and NI was sustained to 96 weeks (81% versus 76%, respectively). None in DTG had genotypic or phenotypic emerging resistance | DTG is NI to RAL The potential advantage of DTG (QD) versus RAL (BD) could not be assessed due to placebo-dosed randomization No emerging resistance on DTG |
SINGLE R, DB, NI → Superiority 48 weeks [ 96 weeks [ Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: Canada, USA, Australia, Europe D: black (24%); non-white (32%); males (84%); | IC: ≥18 years, naïve to ART, VL >1,000 c/mL, screening for HLA-B*5701, a contraindication to ABC use R: DTG + ABC/3TC versus FTC/TDF/EFV stratified by VL ≤ or >100,000 c/mL and CD4 ≤ or >200 cells/mL 1°EP: VL <50 c/mL at week 48 Results: DTG demonstrated rapid viral suppression at 28 versus 84 days in the EFV arm ( | ABC/3TC/DTG is superior to FTC/TDF/EFV DTG statistically significant more rapid virologic decay compared to EFV No primary emerging resistance on DTG | |
Flamingo [ R, OL NI → Superiority Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: well-resourced countries D: non-white (28%); males 85%; | IC: ≥18 years, naïve to ART, VL >1,000 c/mL OL: DTG 50 mg QD versus DRV/r 800 mg/100 mg QD with background either TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC. Stratified by VL ≤ or >100,000 c/mL (25% >100,000 c/mL) 1°EP: VL <50 c/mL at week 48 (NI margin −12%) Results: 48-week snapshot analysis showed 90 versus 83% had VL <50 c/mL. This demonstrated not only NI, but also S ( | DTG is superior to DRV/r in treatment-naïve participants | |
| Phase 3 ART experienced | SAILING [ R, DB, NI Funding: ViiV Healthcare | S: 1st to include RLSb Australia, Canada, Europe D: 68% male; 48% from RLS. 68% subtype B; 14% subtype C; 6% complex subtype.
| IC: ART-experienced, INSTI-naïve; VL >400 c/mL × 2 consecutive or >1,000 c/mL at screening; resistance to ≥2 classes of ARV with 1–2 fully active drugs for OBR stratified by VL ≤ or >50,000 c/mL and DRV/r R: DTG 50 mg QD versus 400 mg RAL BD and investigator-selected OBR. 1°EP: HIV-1 RNA <50 c/mL at week 48. 2°EP: proportion of patients with tx-emergent INSTI resistance Results: 71% in DTG and 64% in RAL met 1°EP. Pre-specified statistical criteria revealed NI of DTG to RAL (adjusted treatment difference greater than −12%) and superiority ( | DTG both NI and superior to RAL among ART-experienced but INSTI-naïve participants The benefit of daily dosing could not be assessed given the blinded nature of the trial No phenotypic resistance to DTG occurred, although 1% did have INSTI genotypic substitutions |
VIKING-3 Single arm, OL Week 24 [ Week 48 [ Funding ViiV Healthcare | S: US, Canada, Europe D: 77% male; 71% white; | IC: >18 years, VF ≥500 c/mL, documented resistance to RAL and/or EVG + ≥2 other classes with 1 active option remaining for OBR OL: DTG 50-mg BD to evaluate a monotherapy phase of DTG in INSTI-resistant patients for 7 days; OBR from day 8 to 24 weeks 1°EP was changed in baseline HIV-1 RNA at 8 days; proportion achieving <50 c/mL at week 24 Results: on day 8, mean change from baseline RNA was −1.43 log10 c/mL (95% CI −1.52, −1.34). Major resistance mutations included 79% with ≥2 NRTI, 70% with ≥2 PI, 75% had ≥1 NNRTI, 62% with CXCR4 virus detected. Because of this variety, OBR changes on day 8 were diverse. At week 24, 69% achieved <50 c/mL; 56% at week 48. Presence of Q148 plus ≥2 additional mutations were associated with reduction of 0.69 log10 c/mL in day 8 response as compared to those with no Q148 mutation at baseline ( | DTG 50-mg BD was potent as functional monotherapy in highly resistant participants Presence of mutation Q148 plus 2 or more additional mutations reduced effectiveness | |
VIKING 4 [ NCT01568892 R, DB, PC OL on day 8 Funding: ViiV Healthcare | Not published | IC: ≥18 years; HIV-1 RNA >1,000 c/mL, ART experienced with INSTI resistance; >2 additional class resistance R: DTG 50 mg BID + OBR versus placebo + OBR; day 8 becomes OL: DTG 50 mg BD + OBR versus placebo + OBR 1°EP: mean change from baseline in HIV RNA at day 8; 2°EP: proportion of patients with HIV RNA <400 c/mL, <50 c/mL Results: not yet published nor presented | Different from VIKING 3 in that includes a randomized placebo |
1°EP primary endpoint, 2°EP secondary endpoint, ABC/3TC abacavir/lamivudine, AE adverse events, ART antiretroviral therapy, BD twice daily dose, c/mL copies/mL, CI confidence interval, D demographics, DB double-blind, DRV/r darunavir/ritonavir, DTG dolutegravir, EFV efavirenz, F funding, FTC emtricitabine, GSK GlaxoSmithKline, IC inclusion criteria, IC half-maximal inhibitory concentration, IC ninety percent inhibitor concentration, INSTI integrase strand transfer inhibitors, IQR interquartile range, ITT intention to treat, LDL low-density lipoprotein, mITT-E modified intent-to-treat-exposed, NI non-inferior, NIAID National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NICHD National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, NIH National Institutes of Health, NIMH National Institute of Mental Health, NNRTI non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, NRTI nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, OBR optimized background regimen, OL open label, PB partially blind, PC placebo-controlled, PD pharmacodynamics, PI protease inhibitor, PK pharmacokinetics, QD daily dose, R randomized, RAL raltegravir, RLS resource-limited setting, S setting, t half-life, TDF tenofovir, VF virologic failure, VL viral load, x average age
aThose receiving 25 mg had a sub-study with midazolam to test CYP3A4 activity
bLatin America, Taiwan, South Africa and USA