ViiV
Healthcare receives FDA approval for Triumeq®
(abacavir, dolutegravir and lamivudine), a new single-pill regimen for the
treatment of HIV-1 infection
London, UK, 22 August, 2014 –
ViiV Healthcare announced today that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has approved Triumeq®
(abacavir 600mg, dolutegravir 50mg and lamivudine 300mg) tablets for the
treatment of HIV-1 infection.1
Triumeq is ViiV Healthcare’s first dolutegravir-based fixed-dose combination,
offering many people living with HIV the option of a single-pill regimen that
combines the integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI) dolutegravir, with the
nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) abacavir and
lamivudine.
Triumeq
alone is not recommended for use in patients with current or past history of
resistance to any components of Triumeq. Triumeq alone is not recommended in
patients with resistance-associated integrase substitutions or clinically
suspected INSTI resistance because the dose of dolutegravir in Triumeq is
insufficient in these populations. Before initiating treatment with
abacavir-containing products, screening for the presence of a genetic marker,
the HLA-B*5701 allele, should be performed in any HIV-infected patient,
irrespective of racial origin. Products containing abacavir should not be used
in patients known to carry the HLA-B*5701 allele.1
Dr
Dominique Limet, Chief Executive Officer, ViiV Healthcare, said: “Today’s approval of Triumeq offers many
people living with HIV in the US the first single-pill regimen containing
dolutegravir. ViiV Healthcare is committed to
delivering advances in care and new treatment options to physicians and people
living with HIV. We are proud to announce this important milestone, marking the
second new treatment to be approved in the US from our pipeline of
medicines.”
This FDA
approval is based primarily upon data from two clinical trials:
|
·
|
the Phase
III study (SINGLE) of treatment-naïve adults, conducted with dolutegravir and
abacavir/lamivudine as separate pills2,3
|
|
·
|
a
bioequivalence study of the fixed-dose combination of abacavir, dolutegravir and
lamivudine when taken as a single pill compared to the administration of
dolutegravir and abacavir/lamivudine as separate pills.4
|
In the
SINGLE study, a non-inferiority trial with a pre-specified superiority analysis,
more patients were undetectable (HIV-1 RNA <50 abacavir="" and="" arm="" atripla="" components="" copies="" dolutegravir="" font="" in="" lamivudine="" ml="" of="" separate="" style="display: inline; font-size: 70%; vertical-align: text-top;" than="" the="" triumeq="">®50>†
(efavirenz, emtricitabine and tenofovir) arm, the most commonly used single-pill
regimen. The difference was statistically significant and met the pre-specified
test for superiority. The difference was driven by a higher rate of
discontinuation due to adverse events in the Atripla arm.2,
3
|
·
|
At 96
weeks, 80% of participants on the dolutegravir-based regimen were virologically
suppressed compared to 72% of participants on Atripla. Grade 2-4 treatment
emergent adverse reactions occurring in 2% or more participants taking the
dolutegavir-based regimen were insomnia (3%), headache (2%) and fatigue
(2%).3
|
About
HIV
HIV
stands for the Human Immunodeficiency Virus. Unlike some other viruses, the
human body cannot get rid of HIV, so once someone has HIV they have it for
life.5-7
HIV
infects specific cells of the immune system, called CD4 cells or T-cells. Over
time, HIV can destroy so many of these cells that the body cannot fight off
infections and disease. When this happens, HIV infection leads to Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) which is the final stage of HIV infection.
There is no cure for HIV, but with early diagnosis and effective treatment most
people with HIV will not go on to develop AIDS.5-7
An
estimated 1.1 million people in the US are living with HIV. However,
only 33 percent are taking the medication they need.8
About
Triumeq
Triumeq
is a fixed-dose combination containing the INSTI dolutegravir and the NRTIs
abacavir and lamivudine.
Two
essential steps in the HIV life cycle are replication – when the virus turns its
RNA copy into DNA – and integration – the moment when viral DNA becomes part of
the host cell’s DNA. These processes require two enzymes called reverse
transcriptase and integrase. NRTIs and integrase inhibitors interfere with the
action of the two enzymes to prevent the virus from replicating and further
infecting cells.
Dolutegravir
was approved in the US in August 2013 and in Europe in January 2014 under the
brand name Tivicay®. The
Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines
Agency (EMA) granted a positive opinion on the Marketing Authorisation
Application (MAA) for Triumeq on 26 June 2014. Regulatory
applications are also being evaluated in other markets worldwide, including
Australia, Brazil and Canada.
Tivicay
and Triumeq are registered trademarks of the ViiV Healthcare group of
companies.
No comments:
Post a Comment