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March 29, 2023

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Lenacapavir for the Initial Treatment of HIV

By Lauren Richey, MD, MPH, FIDSA

 

Lenacapavir is a new antiretroviral agent with a novel mechanism of action: inhibition of the HIV capsid protein. It also has a novel dosing interval: either orally daily or subcutaneously every 6 months. Lenacapavir was recently FDA approved for use in people with multidrug-resistant HIV, but there is currently no data for its use in the initial treatment of HIV, which is addressed in this study.

 

The CALIBRATE study was a randomized, open-label study. Treatment-naïve participants were randomly assigned to four different groups, 2:2:2:1, and stratified by HIV viral load (< 100,000 and > 100,000). Group 1 and 2 had an oral loading dose of lenacapavir on days 1, 2, and 8 before beginning subcutaneous lenacapavir on day 15 and repeating injections every 26 weeks. Participants were also given emtricitabine (FTC) and tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) daily through the 28-week induction period. At this point, group 1 participants who were virally suppressed at weeks 16 and 22 switched to a 2-drug regimen of TAF with subcutaneous lenacapavir. In group 2, those who were virally suppressed at weeks 16 and 22 were switched to a 2-drug regimen of bictegravir (BIC) with subcutaneous lenacapavir. Group 3 was given a loading dose of lenacapavir on days 1 and 2 but then maintained on daily oral lenacapavir plus oral FTC and TAF throughout the study. Group 4 received oral 3-drug ART with BIC, FTC, and TAF. The primary efficacy endpoint was the percentage of participants achieving viral suppression at week 54.

 

Of 182 participants, most were Black (52%) cisgender (93%) males (93%) with a median CD4 count of 437. The primary endpoint of viral suppression was achieved by 90% in group 1, 85% in group 2, 85% in group 3, and 92% in group 4 (the standard of care). Five participants from the lenacapavir groups met the definition of virologic failure, three of whom later re-suppressed without a regimen change and two of whom had lenacapavir resistance-associated mutations attributed to poor adherence to companion drugs. Among participants receiving lenacapavir subcutaneous injections, injection site reactions with erythema, pain, and swelling were common (54%) but not severe. This data supports the use of lenacapavir in initial treatment of HIV with similar viral suppression outcomes to the standard of care. 

 

(Gupta et al. Lancet HIV. 2023;10(1):e15-e23.)

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