Long-acting cabotegravir pharmacokinetics with and without oral lead-in for HIV PrEP.
Kelong HanParul PatelScott McCallisterAlex R RinehartYash GandhiWilliam SpreenRaphael J LandovitzSinead Delany-MoretlweMark A MarzinkeTodd McKeonPiotr BudnikJean van WykSusan L FordPublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2024)
Long-acting cabotegravir is approved for pre-exposure prophylaxis and combination HIV treatment, both initiated with optional short-term oral lead-in (OLI). We evaluated the impact of OLI on long-acting cabotegravir pharmacokinetics. Cabotegravir plasma concentrations were compared between HIV-positive participants initiating injections with ( n = 278) or without ( n = 110) OLI in phase III treatment study FLAIR and in HIV-negative participants using OLI ( n = 263) in pivotal pre-exposure prophylaxis studies HPTN 083 and HPTN 084. Cabotegravir pharmacokinetic profiles were simulated in three populations (assigned-male-at-birth, 50%-assigned-female-at-birth, and assigned-female-at-birth) under three scenarios: first injection given (A) 1 or (B) 3 days after final OLI dose (OLI-injection gap) or (C) without OLI. The PK objective was 80% of participants achieving 4× in vitro protein-adjusted 90% maximal inhibitory concentration (PA-IC 90 ) and 50% achieving 8× PA-IC 90 . Observed trough concentrations ( C τ ) were similar with and without OLI ( P > 0.3). With a 3-day OLI-injection gap, simulated pre-injection C τ remained above PK objective. Approximately 1-2 weeks after the first injection, simulated PK profiles became nearly identical among all scenarios. Without OLI, it was predicted that 80% of participants achieve 4× PA-IC 90 in 1.2, 1.8, and 2.8 days after the first injection in each population, respectively, and 50% achieve 8× PA-IC 90 in 1.4, 2.1, and 3.8 days, respectively. Observed long-acting cabotegravir exposure was similar with or without OLI, supporting optional OLI use. Cabotegravir exposure was predicted to remain above PK objective for OLI-injection gaps of ≤3 days and rapidly achieve PK objective after first injection without OLI. Findings are consistent between assigned-male-at-birth and assigned-female-at-birth populations.This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT02720094.
Keyphrases
- hiv positive
- antiretroviral therapy
- ultrasound guided
- men who have sex with men
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- gestational age
- hepatitis c virus
- south africa
- climate change
- hiv aids
- phase iii
- blood pressure
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- heart rate
- open label
- small molecule
- pregnant women
- protein protein
- case control