A two-drug combination of
dolutegravir (Tivicay) and lamivudine
suppressed viral load as well as a standard three-drug antiretroviral regimen
for people with HIV starting treatment for the first time, according to results
from the GEMINI studies presented yesterday at the 22nd
International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2018) in Amsterdam.
Response rates exceeded
90% with both dolutegravir/lamivudine and dolutegravir plus
tenofovir/emtricitabine (the drugs in Truvada),
showing that the dual regimen was non-inferior to standard therapy. But the
dual regimen led to fewer side-effects including kidney and bone problems,
reported Pedro Cahn of Fundación Huésped in Buenos
Aires.
HIV treatment is life-long and anything that reduces
drug burden would be welcome for patients, Cahn told reporters at a Tuesday
press briefing. A two-drug regimen would potentially offer less cumulative drug
exposure, fewer side-effects and lower cost than standard therapy.
Dolutegravir is
a potent integrase strand transfer inhibitor with a high barrier to resistance.
Lamivudine is a well-tolerated and inexpensive nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) with
available generic versions.
Previous
studies have shown that dolutegravir plus lamivudine maintains viral
suppression in people who switch from a triple regimen with an undetectable
viral load. A combination pill containing dolutegravir and the
non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) rilpivirine (Juluca) was
recently approved in Europe and the US, but only as a switch option for people
with suppressed viral load.
Cahn's team aimed to show whether
dolutegravir/lamivudine can fully suppress viral load when used as initial
treatment. At the 2016 International AIDS Conference in Durban, Cahn presented
promising results from a small pilot study known as PADDLE, which
enrolled 20 previously untreated people with viral loads <100,000
copies/ml. This year he presented findings from GEMINI 1 and 2, a pair of large
phase 3 trials that permitted patients with viral load as high as 500,000
copies/ml.
Together, the GEMINI studies enrolled 1433
participants in Europe, North and South America, Asia, Russia and South Africa.
About 85% were men, two-thirds were white and the median age was approximately
32 years. At baseline, 80% had viral load <100,000 copies/ml, while
20% had high viral loads between 100,000 and 500,000 copies/ml. Most had CD4
cell counts above 200 cells/mm3. People with hepatitis B and those
with hepatitis C requiring treatment were excluded.
Participants were randomly assigned to
receive dolutegravir/lamivudine
or dolutegravir plus tenofovir disiproxil fumarate (TDF) and emtricitabine (an
NRTI similar to lamivudine). The primary study endpoint was
the proportion of people with vira loads below 50 copies/ml at 48 weeks after
starting treatment.
At week 48, in a pooled analysis of both
trials, 91% of dolutegravir/lamivudine
recipients and 93% of dolutegravir/TDF/lamivudine recipients had undetectable
viral load in an intent-to-treat analysis.
Response rates were high
for people who started with either lower (91 vs 94%, respectively) or higher
(92 vs 90%) viral load at baseline. However, among the minority of patients
with low CD4 counts, the triple regimen appeared to work better in a snapshot
analysis (79 vs 93%).
Looking at treatment
failure, 3% of dolutegravir/lamivudine
recipients and 2% of dolutegravir/TDF/lamivudine recipients were considered
virological non-responders. In each treatment arm, 1% or
less had confirmed virological failure. No treatment-emergent integrase or NRTI
mutations were seen among these participants.
Both regimens were
generally safe and well-tolerated. Dolutegravir/lamivudine was associated with somewhat
fewer drug-related adverse events than the triple regimen (18 vs 24%), but
rates of withdrawal due to adverse events were the same in both treatment arms (2%).
The most common adverse events in both groups were headache, diarrhoea and sore
throat or upper respiratory tract infections.
TDF can lead to impaired kidney function
and bone loss in susceptible individuals, such as older people and those with
pre-existing conditions. In these studies the dual regimen had significantly
less detrimental effect on serum and urine biomarkers of kidney impairment as
well as markers of bone loss. Changes in blood lipid levels were similar in
both groups.
These findings, the researchers concluded,
"support [dolutegravir/lamivudine]
as an effective option for the treatment of HIV-1 infection."
This was the first time a study has shown
the non-inferiority of double versus triple therapy, Cahn said. He added,
however, that dolutegravir monotherapy should not be recommended, as other
studies have shown that a potent agent like an integrase inhibitor or protease
inhibitor needs to be combined with a reverse transcriptase inhibitor.
"I'm very comfortable using this as a strategy,"
Cahn told reporters. "It's not one size fits all, but for some people it's a
very safe and potent combination with less drug burden for our patients."
Asked at his presentation about the use of this strategy in settings where baseline viral
load testing could not be carried out before treatment initiation, Cahn replied,
"Don't try this at home" without appropriate monitoring.