Efficacy and Safety of Long-Acting Subcutaneous Lenacapavir in Heavily Treatment-Experienced People with Multidrug-Resistant HIV-1: Week 104 Results of a Phase 2/3 Trial.
Journal
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
Journal Volume
80
Journal Issue
3
Start Page
566
End Page
574
ISSN
1537-6591
Date Issued
2025-03-17
Author(s)
Ogbuagu, Onyema
Molina, Jean-Michel
Chetchotisakd, Ploenchan
Ramgopal, Moti N
Sanchez, William
Brunetta, Jason
Castelli, Francesco
Crofoot, Gordon E
Ronot-Bregigeon, Sylvie
Margot, Nicolas A
Wang, Hui
Dvory-Sobol, Hadas
Rhee, Martin S
Segal-Maurer, Sorana
Abstract
Background. Lenacapavir is a long-acting human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) capsid inhibitor for treatment of HIV-1 infection. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of lenacapavir in combination with an investigator-selected optimized background regimen (OBR) after 104 weeks in adults with multidrug-resistant HIV-1. Methods. This ongoing, international, Phase 2/3 trial at 42 sites included 72 adults with multidrug-resistant HIV-1. Following a 2-week oral lenacapavir loading phase, participants received subcutaneous lenacapavir every 26 weeks with an OBR. HIV-1 RNA, CD4 cell counts, and adverse events were assessed over 104 weeks. One participant did not enter the extension phase. Results. At Week 104, 44 of 71 participants (62%, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 50; 73) had HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL via US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) snapshot algorithm. When missing data (including discontinuations) were excluded, 44 of 54 participants (82%) had HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL at Week 104, mean CD4 cell count increased by 122 cells/µL (95% CI: 80; 165), and the proportion of participants with CD4 cell count <200 cells/µL decreased from 64% (46 of 72) at Baseline to 29% (16 of 55). Fourteen participants had treatment-emergent lenacapavir resistance; 7 resuppressed (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL) while maintaining lenacapavir use. There were no Grade 4 or serious treatment-related adverse events. One participant discontinued study drug due to an injection site reaction. Conclusions. Treatment with subcutaneous lenacapavir in combination with an OBR was well tolerated and resulted in a high rate of virological suppression over 104 weeks. Lenacapavir represents an important treatment option in people with multidrug-resistant HIV-1.
Subjects
HIV-1
capsid inhibitor
heavily treatment-experienced
lenacapavir
subcutaneous
Type
journal article