TY - JOUR
T1 - Week 96 Genotypic and Phenotypic Results of the Fostemsavir Phase 3 BRIGHTE Study in Heavily Treatment-Experienced Adults Living with Multidrug-Resistant HIV-1
AU - Gartland, Margaret
AU - Cahn, Pedro
AU - DeJesus, Edwin
AU - Diaz, Ricardo Sobhie
AU - Grossberg, Robert
AU - Kozal, Michael
AU - Kumar, Princy
AU - Molina, Jean Michel
AU - Urbina, Fernando Mendo
AU - Wang, Marcia
AU - Du, Fangfang
AU - Chabria, Shiven
AU - Clark, Andrew
AU - Garside, Louise
AU - Krystal, Mark
AU - Mannino, Frank
AU - Pierce, Amy
AU - Ackerman, Peter
AU - Lataillade, Max
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by ViiV Healthcare. We thank all BRIGHTE clinical trial participants, their families, and the BRIGHTE investigators (listed in section S2 of the supplemental material). We acknowledge Cyril Llamoso for his contributions to this study. The authors would also like to acknowledge the support of Carmeliza Santos, Monogram Biosciences, and Jill Slater, ViiV Healthcare. Editorial assistance was provided under the direction of the authors by Esther Race, PhD, Race Editorial Ltd, and Jennifer Rossi, MA, ELS, MedThink SciCom, and funded by ViiV Healthcare.
Funding Information:
M.G., S.C., A.C., M.K., A.P., P.A., and M.L. are employees of ViiV Healthcare and may own stock in GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). P.C. has served on advisory boards for GSK, ViiV Healthcare, and Merck; served as an investigator for Abbott, Gilead, ViiV Healthcare, GSK, Merck, and Richmond; and has received honoraria for his speaking or chairing engagements from Abbott, GSK, Gilead, Merck, and ViiV Healthcare. E.D. has received grants from GSK and Gilead, which were paid to his institution. M.K. served as the principal investigator for clinical trials and laboratory research at Yale University, which received grant funding from ViiV Healthcare and Gilead. P.K. has received grants and/or personal fees for advisory board participation from GSK, Merck, and Theratechnologies and holds stock in GSK, Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson, Merck, and Gilead. J.-M.M. has received honoraria from Gilead, Merck, ViiV Healthcare, and Janssen for participation in advisory boards. L.G. and F.M. are employees of and may own stock in GSK. R.S.D., R.G., and F.M.U. have nothing to disclose.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Gartland et al.
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - In the phase 3 BRIGHTE study in heavily treatment-experienced adults with multidrug-resistant HIV-1, fostemsavir plus optimized background therapy (OBT) resulted in sustained rates of virologic suppression through 96 weeks. HIV-1 RNA ,40 copies/mL was achieved in 163/272 (60%) Randomized Cohort (RC) participants (with 1 or 2 remaining approved fully active antiretrovirals) and 37/99 (37%) Nonrandomized Cohort (NRC) participants (with 0 fully active antiretrovirals). Here we report genotypic and phenotypic analyses of HIV-1 samples from 63/272 (23%) RC participants and 49/99 (49%) NRC participants who met protocol-defined virologic failure (PDVF) criteria through Week 96. The incidence of PDVF was as expected in this difficult-to-treat patient population and, among RC participants, was comparable regardless of the presence of predefined gp120 amino acid substitutions that potentially influence phenotypic susceptibility to temsavir (S375H/I/M/N/T, M426L, M434I, M475I) or baseline temsavir 50% inhibitory concentration fold change (IC50 FC). The incidence of PDVF was lower among participants with higher overall susceptibility score to newly used antiretrovirals (OSS-new), indicating that OSS-new may be a preferred predictor of virologic outcome in heavily treatment-experienced individuals. Predefined gp120 substitutions, most commonly M426L or S375N, were emergent on treatment in 24/50 (48%) RC and 33/44 (75%) NRC participants with PDVF, with related increases in temsavir IC50 FC. In BRIGHTE, PDVF was not consistently associated with treatment-emergent genotypic or phenotypic changes in susceptibility to temsavir or to antiretrovirals in the initial OBT. Further research will be needed to identify which factors are most likely to contribute to virologic failure in this heavily treatment-experienced population.
AB - In the phase 3 BRIGHTE study in heavily treatment-experienced adults with multidrug-resistant HIV-1, fostemsavir plus optimized background therapy (OBT) resulted in sustained rates of virologic suppression through 96 weeks. HIV-1 RNA ,40 copies/mL was achieved in 163/272 (60%) Randomized Cohort (RC) participants (with 1 or 2 remaining approved fully active antiretrovirals) and 37/99 (37%) Nonrandomized Cohort (NRC) participants (with 0 fully active antiretrovirals). Here we report genotypic and phenotypic analyses of HIV-1 samples from 63/272 (23%) RC participants and 49/99 (49%) NRC participants who met protocol-defined virologic failure (PDVF) criteria through Week 96. The incidence of PDVF was as expected in this difficult-to-treat patient population and, among RC participants, was comparable regardless of the presence of predefined gp120 amino acid substitutions that potentially influence phenotypic susceptibility to temsavir (S375H/I/M/N/T, M426L, M434I, M475I) or baseline temsavir 50% inhibitory concentration fold change (IC50 FC). The incidence of PDVF was lower among participants with higher overall susceptibility score to newly used antiretrovirals (OSS-new), indicating that OSS-new may be a preferred predictor of virologic outcome in heavily treatment-experienced individuals. Predefined gp120 substitutions, most commonly M426L or S375N, were emergent on treatment in 24/50 (48%) RC and 33/44 (75%) NRC participants with PDVF, with related increases in temsavir IC50 FC. In BRIGHTE, PDVF was not consistently associated with treatment-emergent genotypic or phenotypic changes in susceptibility to temsavir or to antiretrovirals in the initial OBT. Further research will be needed to identify which factors are most likely to contribute to virologic failure in this heavily treatment-experienced population.
KW - HIV-1
KW - antiretroviral agents
KW - attachment inhibitor
KW - fostemsavir
KW - heavily treatment experienced
KW - multiple antiretroviral drug resistance
KW - optimized background therapy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85132455239&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85132455239&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/aac.01751-21
DO - 10.1128/aac.01751-21
M3 - Article
C2 - 35502922
AN - SCOPUS:85132455239
SN - 0066-4804
VL - 66
JO - Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
JF - Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
IS - 6
ER -