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Ultra-long-acting in-situ forming implants with cabotegravir protect female macaques against rectal SHIV infection.

Isabella C YoungIvana MassudMackenzie L CottrellRoopali ShrivastavaPanita MaturavongsaditAlka PrasherAndres Wong-SamChuong DinhTiancheng EdwardsVictoria MrotzJames MitchellJosilene Nascimento SeixasAryani PallerlaAllison ThorsonAmanda SchauerCraig SykesGabriela De la CruzStephanie A MontgomeryAngela D M KashubaWalid HeneineCharles W DobardMartina KovarovaJ Victor Garcia-MartinezJ Gerardo Garcίa-LermaSoumya Rahima Benhabbour
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Ultra-long-acting delivery platforms for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) may increase adherence and maximize public health benefit. We report on an injectable, biodegradable, and removable in-situ forming implant (ISFI) that is administered subcutaneously and can release the integrase inhibitor cabotegravir (CAB) above protective benchmarks for more than 6 months. CAB ISFIs are well-tolerated in female mice and female macaques showing no signs of toxicity or chronic inflammation. In macaques, median plasma CAB concentrations exceed established PrEP protection benchmarks within 3 weeks and confer complete protection against repeated rectal SHIV challenges. Implant removal via a small incision in 2 macaques at week 12 results in a 7- to 48-fold decrease in plasma CAB levels within 72 hours. Modeling to translate CAB ISFI dosing suggests that a 3 mL injection would exceed protective benchmarks in humans for over 5 months post administration. Our results support the clinical advancement of CAB ISFIs for ultra-long-acting PrEP in humans.
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