1585. Efficacy and safety of long-acting subcutaneous lenacapavir in heavily treatment-experienced people with multi-drug resistant HIV: Week 52 results

  • Ogbuagu O
  • Segal-Maurer S
  • Ratanasuwan W
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Background. Lenacapavir (LEN), a potent first-in-class inhibitor of HIV-1 capsid function, is in development as a long-acting agent for treatment and prevention of HIV-1. Methods. CAPELLA is an ongoing, phase 2/3 study in heavily treatment-experienced (HTE) people with HIV-1 (PWH) with multidrug-resistance. 36 participants were randomized (2:1) to add oral LEN or placebo to their failing regimen. At D15, those on oral LEN received subcutaneous (SC) LEN 927 mg (Q6M); those on placebo started the oral LEN lead-in, followed by SC Q6M. All randomized participants initiated an investigator-selected, optimized background regimen (OBR) at D15. An additional 36 participants started OBR concurrent with LEN (oral lead-in → SC) in a non-randomized cohort. We report the Week (W) 52 efficacy and safety results from both cohorts. Results. Of 72 participants enrolled, 25% were female, 38% Black, median age 52 years, 64% had CD4 < 200 cells/μL, 46% had HIV-1 resistant to all 4 major classes (NRTI, NNRTI, PI, INSTI), and 53% had OBR with 1 or no fully active agents. At W52, 78% (56/72) achieved VL< 50 c/mL and 82% (59/72) achieved VL< 200 c/mL via FDA Snapshot algorithm. CD4 count increased by a median 84 cells/μL (Q1 to Q3: 21 to 153) and the proportion of participants with CD4 count ≥200 cells/ul increased from 36% at baseline to 68% at W52. Ten participants had emergent LEN resistance (8 previously reported); 4 of 10 subsequently suppressed. The median (range) duration of follow up on LEN was 71 (13-111) weeks. One participant discontinued due to injection site nodule (Grade 1). The most common injection site reaction (ISR) was swelling (28% [20/72] and 17% [12/70] after the 1st and 2nd SC doses, respectively). Most ISRs were mild or moderate. The most common AEs (excluding injection site reactions) were nausea and diarrhea (14% each). Conclusion. In HTE PWH, subcutaneous LEN was well tolerated and in combination with OBR led to high and sustained rate of virologic suppression at W52. These results support the potential role for LEN for treatment of multi-drug resistant HIV-1 infection.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ogbuagu, O., Segal-Maurer, S., Ratanasuwan, W., Trottier, B., Brunetta, J., Shirasaka, T., … Molina, J.-M. (2022). 1585. Efficacy and safety of long-acting subcutaneous lenacapavir in heavily treatment-experienced people with multi-drug resistant HIV: Week 52 results. Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 9(Supplement_2). https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofac492.108

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free