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  INTRODUCTION
 
                                 
                                      The 
                                  U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved 
                                  raltegravir (Isentress) on October 12, 2007, 
                                  for use as part of combination antiretroviral 
                                  therapy in treatment-experienced adult HIV patients. 
                                    
                                      Raltegravir 
                                  (previously known as MK-0518) belongs to the 
                                  class of drugs known as integrase inhibitors. 
                                  These drugs suppress HIV replication by inhibiting 
                                  the activity of the integrase enzyme of HIV, 
                                  which prevents the virus from inserting its 
                                  DNA into the host cell. Raltegravir is the first 
                                  integrase inhibitor to be approved by the FDA.  
                                      Approval 
                                  of raltegravir was based in part on results 
                                  from the ongoing Phase III BENCHMRK trials, 
                                  which found that after 24 weeks, 400 mg twice-daily 
                                  raltegravir in combination with optimized background 
                                  therapy (OBT) led to significant reductions 
                                  in HIV viral load and increases in CD4 counts 
                                  (see Efficacy, below). 
 
  DOSING
 
                                 
                                      Raltegravir 
                                  is an oral drug, and the recommended dose for 
                                  treatment-experienced patients is one 400 mg 
                                  tablet twice daily, in combination with other 
                                  antiretroviral drugs. No dosage adjustment is 
                                  necessary in patients with mild to moderate 
                                  hepatic or severe renal impairment (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, October 
                                  2007). 
 
  PHARMACOLOGY
 
                                 
                                      Administration 
                                  of raltegravir following a high-fat meal increased 
                                  the raltegravir area under the concentration-time 
                                  curve (AUC) by approximately 19%. A high-fat 
                                  meal slowed the rate of absorption, resulting 
                                  in an approximately 34% decrease in the maximum 
                                  plasma concentration (Cmax), an 8.5-fold increase 
                                  in the plasma concentration at 12 hours, and 
                                  a delay in the time to maximum concentration 
                                  (Tmax) following a single 400 mg dose.   
                                      The 
                                  effect of consumption of a range of food types 
                                  on steady-state raltegravir pharmacokinetics 
                                  (PK) is not known. Raltegravir was administered 
                                  without regard to food in pivotal safety and 
                                  efficacy studies of HIV-infected patients.   
                                      With 
                                  twice-daily dosing, PK steady state is achieved 
                                  within approximately the first 2 days of dosing. 
                                  Considerable variability was observed in the 
                                  PK of raltegravir in clinical trials. Among 
                                  study participants receiving 400 mg twice-daily 
                                  raltegravir, drug exposures were characterized 
                                  by a geometric mean AUC within the first 12 
                                  hours of 14.3 mcM(hr) and a plasma concentration 
                                  at 12 hours of 142 nM. The absolute bioavailablilty 
                                  of raltegravir has not been established. 
 
  EFFICACY 
 Treatment-experienced patients
 
                                A 
                                  Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled 
                                  trial included 179 treatment-experienced patients 
                                  who had a viral load greater than 5000 copies/mL, 
                                  were failing HAART, and had resistance to at 
                                  least 1 drug in each of the 3 major antiretroviral 
                                  drug classes. Participants received 200, 400, 
                                  or 600 mg twice-daily doses of raltegravir or 
                                  else placebo, all with OBT. 
 At Week 24, HIV RNA decreased by a mean 1.80-1.87 
                                  log10 copies/mL in the raltegravir arms, compared 
                                  with 0.35 log10 copies/mL in the placebo group; 
                                  65% of patients taking raltegravir achieved 
                                  an undetectable HIV viral load below 50 copies/mL. 
                                  Three patients (2%) across all raltegravir-treated 
                                  arms and 1 (2%) in the placebo group discontinued 
                                  the study because of adverse events; 14 (11%) 
                                  across all raltegravir-treated arms and 27 (60%) 
                                  in the placebo group discontinued due to lack 
                                  of efficacy (Lancet 369(9569): 1261-1269. 
                                  April 14, 2007).
 
 The 400 mg twice-daily raltegravir dose was 
                                  selected as having the best efficacy/safety 
                                  profile. After 48 weeks, 64% of patients who 
                                  continued on this dose had a viral load below 
                                  50 copies/mL, while CD4 count increased by 110 
                                  cells/mm3 (47th ICAAC, 2007, abstract H-713).
  The 
                                  twin BENCHMRK trials included about 700 treatment-experienced 
                                  patients with documented antiretroviral drug 
                                  resistance in North and South America, Europe, 
                                  and Asia. Participants were randomly assigned 
                                  to receive 400 mg twice-daily raltegravir or 
                                  placebo, all with OBT. After 24 weeks, participants 
                                  who took raltegravir were about twice as likely 
                                  to achieve a viral load below 50 copies/mL than 
                                  those taking placebo (63% vs 34%, respectively). 
                                  CD4 cell gains were also larger in the raltegravir 
                                  arm (85 vs 35 cells/mm3, respectively). Raltegravir 
                                  worked best in people who started another active 
                                  drug at the same time (14th CROI, 2007, abstracts 
                                  150aLB and 150bLB).
 Treatment-naive 
                                patients 
                                The 
                                  anti-HIV activity of raltegravir has also been 
                                  studied in patients starting treatment for the 
                                  first time. A dose-ranging trial compared 10-day 
                                  raltegravir monotherapy in 28 treatment-naive 
                                  patients versus placebo in 7 patients. At least 
                                  50% of patients in each raltegravir dose group 
                                  achieved a viral load below 400 copies/mL by 
                                  Day 10. (JAIDS 43(5): 509-15, December 
                                  15, 2006). After 
                                  16 weeks of therapy, patients receiving raltegravir 
                                  doses of 100, 200, 400, or 600 mg twice daily 
                                  achieved greater than 50-fold viral load reductions. 
                                  Viral load decreased to less than 400 copies/mL 
                                  in 50%-57% of patients, and to less than 50 
                                  copies/mL in 13%-29%. All raltegravir dose groups 
                                  had statistically superior antiretroviral activity 
                                  compared with placebo. In 
                                  the second part of the study, 198 treatment-naive 
                                  patients were randomly assigned to receive either 
                                  the same doses of twice-daily raltegravir or 
                                  600 mg once-daily efavirenz (Sustiva), both 
                                  in combination with 3TC/tenofovir (Truvada). 
                                  Viral load became undetectable more rapidly 
                                  in patients who received raltegravir at any 
                                  dose than in those who received efavirenz. By 
                                  week 24, however, outcomes in all treatment 
                                  arms were similar. Across all arms, 85%-95% 
                                  of patients achieved a viral load below 50 copies/mL. 
                                  After 48 weeks, 83%-88% maintained virological 
                                  suppression at this level. Virological 
                                  failure before week 48 was observed in 3% of 
                                  patients taking raltegravir and 3% taking efavirenz. 
                                  Of the 5 patients who experienced failure on 
                                  raltegravir, 2 had virus with the N155H amino 
                                  acid substitution, a mutation known from in 
                                  vitro experiments to be selected by raltegravir. 
                                  (4th IAS, 2007, abstract TuAb104 & JAIDS 
                                  46(2):125-33, October 1, 2007). 
 
  ADVERSE 
                                EVENTS / TOXICITY
 
                                Studies 
                                  have shown that raltegravir is generally safe 
                                  and well tolerated. In Phase II studies in treatment-experienced 
                                  patients, the most commonly reported treatment-related 
                                  adverse effects were diarrhea, nausea, fatigue, 
                                  headache, and itching. Other reported adverse 
                                  effects included constipation, flatulence, and 
                                  sweating. Overall, the adverse effects of raltegravir 
                                  were comparable to those in the placebo arm. 
                                   In 
                                  the BENCHMRK trials, less than 2% of study participants 
                                  discontinued therapy due to adverse events. 
                                  The most common adverse events of all intensities, 
                                  regardless of causality, were nausea, diarrhea, 
                                  headache, and fever. Additionally, Grade 2 to 
                                  4 creatine kinase laboratory abnormalities were 
                                  observed in the raltegravir arm (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 4). In 
                                  the Phase II study of treatment-naive patients, 
                                  the most common adverse events occurring after 
                                  24 weeks of treatment were headache, dizziness, 
                                  and nausea. Eight serious, non drug-related 
                                  adverse effects occurred overall (7/160 in the 
                                  raltegravir arm and 1/38 in the efavirenz arm); 
                                  1 patient taking 600 mg twice-daily raltegravir 
                                  discontinued treatment due to elevated liver 
                                  function tests. Although 
                                  some early data indicated that more people taking 
                                  raltegravir developed cancer, this was later 
                                  attributed to an unusually low rate of cancer 
                                  among patients taking placebo, and the rates 
                                  evened out with longer follow-up. Long-term 
                                  carcinogenicity studies of raltegravir in rodents 
                                  are ongoing. No evidence of mutagenicity or 
                                  genotoxicity was observed in vitro during microbial 
                                  mutagenesis tests, assays for DNA breakage, 
                                  or in vitro and in vivo during chromosomal aberration 
                                  studies.  Manufacturer 
                                  Merck notes that because clinical trials are 
                                  conducted under widely varying conditions, adverse 
                                  reaction rates observed in the clinical trials 
                                  of a drug cannot be compared directly to rates 
                                  in the clinical trials of other drugs, and may 
                                  not reflect rates observed in practice (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 2). Immune 
                                  reconstitution syndrome has been reported in 
                                  patients treated with combination antiretroviral 
                                  therapy, which may include raltegravir-containing 
                                  regimens. During the initial phase of HAART, 
                                  a patient whose immune system improves may develop 
                                  an inflammatory response to indolent or residual 
                                  opportunistic infections (e.g., Mycobacterium 
                                  avium, cytomegalovirus, Pneumocystis 
                                  pneumonia, tuberculosis, varicella zoster virus), 
                                  which may necessitate further evaluation and 
                                  treatment (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 2). 
 
  FERTILITY 
                                AND PREGNANCY
 
                                No 
                                  effect on fertility was seen in male or female 
                                  rats at raltegravir doses up to 600 mg/kg/day, 
                                  which resulted in an exposure 3-fold greater 
                                  than the exposure seen with the recommended 
                                  human dose (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 10). Raltegravir 
                                  is in FDA Pregnancy Category C. No adequate 
                                  or well-controlled studies of raltegravir have 
                                  been done in pregnant women. Also, no PK studies 
                                  have been conducted to date in pregnant women. 
                                  In animal studies, no treatment-related effects 
                                  on embryonic/fetal survival or fetal weight 
                                  were observed in rabbits (up to 1000 mg/kg/day) 
                                  or rats (up to 600 mg/kg/day) receiving up to 
                                  3- to 4-fold the exposure at the recommended 
                                  human dose. No treatment-related external, visceral, 
                                  or skeletal changes were observed in rabbits. 
                                   Raltegravir 
                                  should be used during pregnancy only if clearly 
                                  needed. To monitor maternal and fetal outcomes 
                                  of pregnant women exposed to raltegravir and 
                                  other antiretroviral agents, physicians may 
                                  access an Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry. 
                                  Physicians may register patients online at www.APRegistry.com 
                                  or by calling 1-800-258-4263.  It 
                                  is not known whether raltegravir or its metabolites 
                                  are distributed in human breast milk; however, 
                                  raltegravir is secreted into the milk of lactating 
                                  rats. Because of both the potential for HIV 
                                  transmission and serious adverse reactions in 
                                  nursing infants, HIV positive mothers should 
                                  not breast-feed their infants if they are taking 
                                  raltegravir (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 6). 
 
  DRUG 
                                AND FOOD INTERACTIONS
 
                                Based 
                                  on the results of drug interaction studies and 
                                  clinical trials, no dose adjustment of raltegravir 
                                  is required when raltegravir is co-administered 
                                  with other antiretroviral agents (Merck press 
                                  release, October 12, 2007).  The 
                                  addition of enfuvirtide 
                                  (T-20; Fuzeon) to a raltegravir-containing 
                                  regimen appears to increase virological response. 
                                  A 24-week analysis of 1 dose-ranging study of 
                                  treatment-experienced participants found that 
                                  viral load decreased to less than 400 copies/mL 
                                  in 60% of participants receiving raltegravir 
                                  monotherapy and 90% of patients receiving raltegravir 
                                  plus enfuvirtide. Raltegravir 
                                  should be used with caution when administered 
                                  with strong inducers of UGT1A1, including rifampin. 
                                  These may reduce plasma concentrations of raltegravir 
                                  (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 2).  As 
                                  with rifampin, ritonavir-boosted 
                                  tipranavir (Aptivus) reduces plasma concentrations 
                                  of raltegravir. However, in clinical trials, 
                                  comparable raltegravir efficacy was observed 
                                  in this treatment subgroup when compared with 
                                  study participants not receiving tipranavir 
                                  (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 6). Drugs 
                                  that inhibit UGT1A1 may increase plasma levels 
                                  of raltegravir. Clinical trial data suggested 
                                  that concomitant use of raltegravir plus ritonavir-boosted 
                                  atazanavir (Reyataz), 
                                  a strong inhibitor of UGT1A1, increased plasma 
                                  concentrations of raltegravir. However, this 
                                  increase was not significant enough to warrant 
                                  dose adjustment when co-administering raltegravir 
                                  with atazanavir (Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information, p. 6).  
 
  FURTHER 
                                READING
 
                                Isentress 
                                  Prescribing Information  B 
                                  Grinsztejn, N Bach-Yen, C Katlama, and others. 
                                  Safety and efficacy of the HIV-1 integrase inhibitor 
                                  raltegravir (MK-0518) in treatment-experienced 
                                  patients with multidrug-resistant virus: a phase 
                                  II randomized controlled trial. The Lancet 
                                  369(9569): 1261-1269. April 14, 2007. B 
                                  Grinsztejn, B Nguyen, C Katlama, and others. 
                                  48 week efficacy and safety of MK-0518, a novel 
                                  HIV-1 integrase inhibitor, in patients with 
                                  triple-class resistant virus. 47th Interscience 
                                  Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 
                                  (ICAAC). Chicago, September 17-20, 2007. Abstract 
                                  H-713. 
 M Markowitz, J O Morales-Ramirez, B-Y Nguyen, 
                                  and others. Antiretroviral Activity, Pharmacokinetics, 
                                  and Tolerability of MK-0518, a Novel Inhibitor 
                                  of HIV-1 Integrase, Dosed As Monotherapy for 
                                  10 Days in Treatment-Naive HIV-1-Infected Individuals. 
                                  Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 
                                  43(5): 509-515. December 15, 2006.
 
 D Cooper, J Gatell, J Rockstroh, and others. 
                                  Results from BENCHMRK-1, a phase III study evaluating 
                                  the efficacy and safety of MK-0518, a novel 
                                  HIV-1 integrase inhibitor, in patients with 
                                  triple-class resistant virus. 14th Conference 
                                  on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections 
                                  (CROI). Los Angeles, February 25-28, 2007. Abstract 
                                  105aLB.
 
 R Steigbigel, P Kumar, J Eron, and others. Results 
                                  from BENCHMRK-2, a phase III study evaluating 
                                  the efficacy and safety of MK-0518, a novel 
                                  HIV-1 integrase inhibitor, in patients with 
                                  triple-class resistant virus. 14th CROI. Abstract 
                                  105bLB.
 
 M Markowitz, BY Nguyen, E Gotuzzo, and others. 
                                  Rapid and Durable Antiretroviral Effect of the 
                                  HIV-1 Integrase Inhibitor Raltegravir as Part 
                                  of Combination Therapy in Treatment-Naive Patients. 
                                  JAIDS 46(2):125-33. October 1, 2007.
 Merck 
                                  & Co. FDA Approves ISENTRESS (raltegravir) 
                                  Tablets, First-in-Class Oral HIV-1 Integrase 
                                  Inhibitor. Press release. October 12, 
                                  2007.
 
 Manufacturer 
                                  Information Isentress
 Merck & Company, Inc
 One Merck Dr
 P.O. Box 100
 Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889-0100
 (800) 609-4618
 
 1/29/08
 
 Sources
 NIAID. Fact Sheet on Isentress.
 
 
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