| MERIT 
Reanalysis with More Sensitive Trofile Test Shows Maraviroc (Selzentry) Works 
as well as Efavirenz (Sustiva) in Patients New to Therapy By 
Liz Highleyman The 
first CCR5 antagonist, maraviroc 
(Selzentry), was approved in August 2007 for treatment-experienced HIV patients 
with drug-resistant virus. Agents in this class interfere with CCR5, one of the 
2 coreceptors HIV uses to enter cells.  
 HIV 
tropism -- or which coreceptor the virus uses -- is determined by a tropism test 
such as Monogram Biosciences' Trofile assay. Only patients with exclusively CCR5-tropic 
virus, rather than CXCR4-tropic or dual/mixed strains, are considered eligible 
to use maraviroc. As 
previously reported, the Phase III MERIT study failed to show that maraviroc 
was non-inferior to efavirenz (Sustiva) 
in treatment-naive individuals, especially those with a high baseline viral load. 
However, nearly half the patients who experienced virological failure while taking 
maraviroc were found to have CXCR4-tropic HIV that might have been present but 
undetected at screening. In 
a late-breaking poster at the 48th International Conference 
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008), taking place this week 
in Washington, DC, researchers presented a retrospective reanalysis of the data 
-- dubbed MERIT ES -- utilizing a new, more sensitive version of the Trofile assay. 
 Briefly, MERIT included 721 participants starting antiretroviral therapy 
for the first time. About 70% were men, just over half were white, and about 35% 
were black; nearly 400 were from the Northern hemisphere and slightly more than 
300 were from the Southern hemisphere. At baseline, the median CD4 cell count 
was about 250 cells/mm3 and the mean viral load was about 700,000 copies/mL. Participants 
were randomly assigned to receive either 300 mg twice-daily maraviroc or 600 mg 
once-daily efavirenz, both in combination with zidovudine/lamivudine 
(Combivir coformulation) for 48 weeks.
 
 In MERIT ES, stored samples 
from study participants were retested using the recently 
introduced enhanced Trofile assay, which is better able to detect CXCR4-tropic 
virus. The enhanced Trofile test -- the only version currently available -- can 
detect CXCR4-tropic or dual/mixed HIV variants that make up as little as 0.3% 
of an individual's total virus population, a 30-fold improvement in sensitivity. 
Key 48-week study endpoints were reanalyzed after excluding patients found to 
have non-CCR5-tropic virus using the new test.
 Results 	
 
     106 
of 721 patients (14.7%) across both treatment arms initially classified as having 
exclusively CCR5-tropic HIV were found to have dual/mixed virus using the new 
test, leaving 311 remaining in the maraviroc arm and 303 in the efavirenz arm 
(1 person was initially misclassified). 
  
     Reanalysis 
using the enhanced test identified 52% of patients who displayed dual/mixed HIV 
at baseline or on study, and 12% who displayed CCR5 tropism at baseline or on 
study.
 
  
     Baseline 
characteristics were similar for the original and revised patient populations.
 
  
     At 
48 weeks, 68% of patients in both the maraviroc and efavirenz arms achieved HIV 
RNA < 50 copies/mL (compared with 64% and 69%, respectively, in the original 
analysis).
 
  
     Among 
patients with baseline viral load ? 100,000 copies/mL, 64% of those taking maraviroc 
and 63% taking efavirenz achieved HIV RNA < 50 copies/mL (versus 60% and 66%, 
respectively, in the earlier analysis).
 
  
     For 
HIV RNA < 400 copies/mL, the new percentages were 73% in the maraviroc arm 
and 72% in the efavirenz arm (compared with 70% and 73%, respectively, in the 
original analysis).
 
  
     CD4 
counts increased by 174 and 144 cells/mm3, respectively, in the maraviroc and 
efavirenz arms (similar to the initial analysis).
 
  
     9% 
of patients in the maraviroc arm and 4% in the efavirenz arm discontinued therapy 
due to lack of efficacy (compared with 12% and 4%, respectively, in the earlier 
analysis).
 
  
     4% 
of patients in the maraviroc arm and 14% in the efavirenz arm discontinued due 
to adverse events (similar to the original analysis).
 Based 
on these findings, the investigators concluded, "The enhanced Trofile assay 
reclassified approximately 15% of patients as [having] non-R5 HIV and identified 
approximately 52% of patients who had [dual/mixed] virus at baseline or on study."
 "Excluding 
these [patients] improved the efficacy of maraviroc relative to efavirenz compared 
with results using the original assay," they added. "Reclassification 
with the enhanced Trofile assay resulted in fewer overall discontinuations and 
discontinuations due to lack of efficacy in the maraviroc arm, but had little 
impact on these outcomes in the efavirenz arm."
 
 "The results 
of MERIT ES are exciting as they show that with an enhanced sensitivity tropism 
assay the efficacy rate of Selzentry shown in MERIT with the original Trofile 
assay is improved further," presenter Michael Saag stated in a press release 
issued by maraviroc manufacturer Pfizer. "These findings are important for 
patients and physicians and offer guidance for clinical practice with the only 
version of Trofile currently available."
 
 A 
similar reanalysis of data from the ACTG 5211 trial of Schering-Plough's investigational 
CCR5 antagonist vicriviroc 
also showed improved efficacy when patients were reclassified based on the enhanced 
Trofile assay.
 
 Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL; Orlando 
Immunology Ctr., Orlando, FL; Saint-Pierre Univ. Hosp., Brussels, Belgium; Univ. 
of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Monogram 
BioSciences, South San Francisco, CA; Pfizer Global R&D, New London, CT; Pfizer 
Global R&D, Sandwich, UK.
 
 10/28/08
 
 Reference
 M 
Saag, J Heera, J Goodrich, and others. Reanalysis of the MERIT study with the 
enhanced Trofile assay. 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents 
and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract H-1232a.
 
 Other 
source
 Pfizer. Pfizer's Novel HIV/AIDS Treatment Selzentry (Maraviroc) 
Demonstrates Increased Efficacy Rate in Treatment-Naive HIV Patients. Press 
release. October 26, 2008.
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