Dolutegravir-based
antiretroviral therapy (ART) is effective and safe when taken at the same time as
standard tuberculosis (TB) therapy, according to an international study presented at the 22nd International AIDS Conference
(AIDS 2018), held in Amsterdam in July.
After 48 weeks of therapy, 75% of people had an
undetectable viral load, comparable to the rate of viral suppression observed
among people treated with efavirenz. The treatment was safe, with few
people experiencing serious adverse events and reported side-effects were
generally mild. TB therapy was successful in almost all people.
ART based on dolutegravir is now recommended by the World Health
Organization as a preferred regimen for both first- and second-line therapy.
Dolutegravir-containing therapy is known to have good long-term virological
efficacy and a favourable safety profile. Moreover, the drug also has a high
barrier to resistance and low potential for interactions with other
medications.
Establishing the
efficacy, safety and optimum dose of dolutegravir for HIV-positive people who
are also taking therapy for TB is a current research priority. Efavirenz-based
ART is widely used in the context of HIV/TB co-infection, but alternative
regimes are needed, especially because of this drug's side-effect profile and
also in settings where there is a high rate of transmitted resistance to
efavirenz and other drugs in the non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
(NNRTI) class.
Research has already
established that, when taken in combination with the anti-TB drug rifampin, twice-daily 50mg dose of dolutegravir is well tolerated and achieves dolutegravir
concentrations similar to those observed with standard once-daily 50mg
dolutegravir therapy.
Investigators
designed a 48-week study to establish the virological efficacy and safety of
ART based on dolutegravir 50mg twice daily in people taking rifampin-based TB
treatment.
The phase IIIb
study was multi-centre and open-label. A total of 113 people were recruited
at 37 sites in seven low- and middle-income countries. The participants were
randomised to receive dolutegravir or efavirenz.
The study was not
intended to be comparative, and the primary end-point was the proportion of
dolutegravir-treated people with a viral load below 50 copies/ml after 48
weeks of therapy. Data were also gathered on virological response among the
efavirenz-treated people, changes in CD4 cell count, the incidence and severity
of adverse events and side-effects, the rate of TB- and non-TB-related immune
reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS), the proportion of people
discontinuing therapy or developing resistance and the success of TB therapy.
A total of 69
people were randomised to receive dolutegravir and 44 to take efavirenz. The
two groups were well matched. Median age was 32.5 years, between 36% and 43%
were female, median viral load was 125,000 to 160,000 copies/ml and baseline
CD4 cell count was a little over 200 cells/mm3. Two-thirds of
people took the study drug in combination with tenofovir/emtricitabine.
Almost all the participants had pulmonary TB.
The
intent-to-treat analysis showed that after 48 weeks of therapy, 75% of
people randomised to dolutegravir had an undetectable viral load, as did 82%
of those randomised to efavirenz. The proportion of people without a
virological response was 9% and 7%, respectively, with a further 16% and 11%,
respectively, stopping therapy for other reasons.
Median CD4 cell
count increased from baseline by 220 cells/mm3 among people taking
dolutegravir and by 190 cells/mm3 among the efavirenz-treated
individuals. Plasma dolutegravir concentrations were well within the therapeutic range.
TB therapy was successful in 88% of people randomised to dolutegravir and 91% of people randomised to efavirenz.
Most people
reported a side-effect. But for the most part, these were mild.
A drug-related
adverse event was recorded in a quarter of people taking dolutegravir and a
third of efavirenz-treated people. Serious adverse events were rare,
occurring in 4% of people in each treatment group. None of the people
taking dolutegravir stopped therapy because of an adverse event.
There was a low
incidence of TB-related and non-TB-related IRIS (7% for dolutegravir; 9% for
efavirenz). Very few people experienced significant elevations in liver
enzymes and none stopped treatment because of drug-induced liver injury.
On the basis of
these findings, the investigators concluded that dolutegravir 50mg twice daily
in combination with other antiretrovirals is effective and well tolerated in
adults with HIV/TB co-infection who are also receiving rifampin-based TB
treatment.