| Elvitegravir 
        "Quad" Single-tablet Regimen Shows Continued HIV Suppression 
        at 48 Weeks
        
        
          
           
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                  | SUMMARY: 
                    Gilead Science's experimental "Quad" pill -- a once-daily 
                    single-tablet coformulation containing the new integrase inhibitor 
                    elvitegravir, 
                    the novel boosting agent cobicistat (GS 9350), and tenofovir 
                    plus emtricitabine (the drugs in the Truvada 
                    pill) -- continued to demonstrate potent antiviral activity 
                    and good tolerability at 48 weeks, according to data presented 
                    this week at the 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial 
                    Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010). 
                    In a second comparison, cobicistat worked as well as ritonavir 
                    as a booster for atazanavir, with similar changes in kidney 
                    function. |  |  |   
            |  |  |  |  |  By 
          Liz Highleyman  If 
          approved, elvitegravir will be the second integrase inhibitor to enter 
          the market. Unlike raltegravir, it requires a pharmacoenhancer, or boosting 
          agent, to reach optimal levels in the body. Cobicistat interferes with 
          liver enzymes that process other drugs, thereby raising the latter drug's 
          concentration in the blood. In contrast with ritonavir 
          (Norvir), the only currently approved booster, cobicistat has no 
          anti-HIV activity of is own. 
 Results at week 24 from studies of the Quad pill and of cobicistat 
          as a booster for the protease inhibitor atazanavir were presented this 
          past February at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections 
          (CROI 2010).
 
 At ICAAC, Rick Elion from the Whitman Walker Clinic and colleagues presented 
          48 week findings from Study 236-0104, a Phase 2 trial comparing the 
          elvitegravir/cobicistat/tenofovir/emtricitabine Quad coformulation versus 
          efavirenz/tenofovir/emtricitabine (Atripla) 
          in previously untreated HIV patients. They also presented data from 
          a comparison of atazanavir boosted with either cobicistat or ritonavir.
 
 Quad vs Atripla
 
 Study 236-0104 included 71 treatment-naive participants who were randomly 
          assigned (2:1) to take the Quad pill or Atripla once-daily for 48 weeks. 
          Most participants (about 90%) were men, the average age was about 35 
          years, and about 75% were white. All had a baseline viral load of > 
          5000 copies/mL (mean of about 40,000 copies/mL) and no resistance to 
          NRTIs, NNRTIs, or protease inhibitors. The average CD4 count was approximately 
          400 cells/mm3.
 Results 
           
            |  | In 
              an intent-to-treat (missing = failure) analysis at 48 weeks, 90% 
              of participants in the Quad group achieved viral load < 50 copies/mL, 
              compared with 83% in the Atripla group, showing that the Quad pill 
              was non-inferior to Atripla. |   
            |  | In 
              an analysis with missing patients excluded, 96% in the Quad group 
              and 95% in the Atripla group achieved undetectable viral load. |   
            |  | Median 
              CD4 count gains (which had been similar at week 24) were now greater 
              in the Quad arm compared with the Atripla arm (240 vs 162 cells/mm3, 
              respectively). |   
            |  | 3 
              participants in each arm discontinued their study drug early due; 
              none in the Quad arm and 1 in the Atripla arm did so due to adverse 
              events. |   
            |  | 46% 
              patients in the Quad arm experienced drug-related adverse events 
              of any severity, compared with 57% in the Atripla arm. |   
            |  | This 
              difference was largely attributable to fewer central nervous system 
              (CNS) side effects in the Quad arm. |   
            |  | Mean 
              estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, a calculation of kidney 
              function) was worse in the Quad arm than in the Atripla arm at 48 
              weeks (change of -20 mL/min or -14% vs -6 mL/min or -4%, respectively). |  These 
          findings led the investigators to conclude that the Quad pill "was 
          well tolerated and maintained a high rate of virologic suppression (90%) 
          that was non-inferior to [Atripla] (83%)."
 Study 102, a large 96-week Phase 3 trial of the Quad pill versus Atripla, 
          is currently underway at more than 130 study sites in the United States 
          and Puerto Rico.
 
 Cobicistat vs Ritonavir
 
 The second trial, Study 216-0105, included 79 treatment-naive participants 
          who were randomly assigned (again 2:1) to receive 150 mg cobicistat 
          or 100 mg ritonavir, all with once-daily atazanavir plus tenofovir/emtricitabine 
          for 48 weeks. Patient characteristics were similar to those in the previous 
          study, except this trial included a higher proportion of people of color.
 Results 
           
            |  | In 
              an intent-to-treat (missing = failure) analysis at 48 weeks, 82% 
              of participants in the cobicistat arm and 86% in the ritonavir arm 
              achieved HIV RNA < 50 copies/mL, not a significant difference. |   
            |  | In 
              an analysis with missing patients excluded, viral suppression rates 
              were 91% vs 96%, respectively. |   
            |  | Participants 
              taking cobicistat experienced a median CD4 cell gain of 230 cells/mm3 
              vs 206 cells/mm in the ritonavir arm, again not significantly different. |   
            |  | 2 
              people in the cobicistat arm and 1 in the ritonavir arm discontinued 
              early due to adverse events. |   
            |  | 36% 
              of patients in the cobicistat arm and 48% in the ritonavir group 
              experienced any drug-related adverse events (mostly elevated bilirubin 
              associated with atazanavir). |   
            |  | At 
              48 weeks, mean eGFR decreased by about the same amount in the cobicistat 
              and Atripla arms (-13 mL/min or -12% vs -14 mL/min or -11%, respectively). |  Based 
          on these findings, the researchers concluded that cobicistat-boosted 
          atazanavir plus tenofovir/emtricitabine was safe and had efficacy similar 
          to ritonavir-boosted atazanavir plus tenofovir/emtricitabine through 
          48 weeks. 
 Elevated serum creatinine and reduced eGFR observed at week 24 in people 
          taking cobicistat raised concern about potential kidney toxicity. Prior 
          studies of HIV negative volunteers showed that cobicistat may inhibit 
          kidney tubular secretion -- leading to elevated creatinine -- but does 
          not seem to cause significant nephrotoxicity. Caution is warranted, 
          however, especially when combining cobicistat with tenofovir, which 
          has been linked to kidney 
          impairment.
 
 Since creatinine is one of the factors in the equation used to compute 
          eGFR, researchers at CROI said that cobicistat alters estimated but 
          not actual GFR. At 48 weeks, the early changes in eGFR seen through 
          week 24 were stable, and in the booster comparison, eGFR decreases were 
          similar in the cobicistat and ritonavir arms.
 
 Investigator affiliations: Whitman Walker Clinic, Washington, DC; 
          Therapeutic Concepts, P.A., Houston, TX; Capital Med. Associates, PC, 
          Washington, DC; Peter Shalit, MD, Seattle, WA; Southwest CARE Ctr., 
          Santa Fe, NM; Gilead Sciences, Inc, Foster City, CA.
 9/14/10
 ReferenceR Elion, J Gathe, B Rashbaum, and others. The 
          Single-Tablet Regimen of Elvitegravir/Cobicistat/Emtricitabine/Tenofovir 
          Disoproxil Fumarate (EVG/COBI/FTC/TDF; Quad) Maintains a High Rate of 
          Virologic Suppression, and Cobicistat (COBI) is an Effective Pharmacoenhancer 
          Through 48 Weeks. 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial 
          Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010). Boston, September 12-15, 2010.
 
 Other 
          Source
 Gilead 
          Sciences. Gilead's Single-Tablet "Quad" HIV Regimen Maintains 
          High Viral Suppression Through 48 Weeks in Phase II Study. Press release. 
          September 13, 2010.
 
 
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