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1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)

BACKGROUND: The principal goal of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is durable suppression of HIV RNA. In treatment-experienced (TE) patients, ongoing viremia can lead to further accumulation of drug resistance, increased morbidity and mortality. ART efficacy often depends on HIV disease severity; theref...

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Autores principales: Kumar, Princy, Leider, Jason, Slim, Jihad, Moyle, Graeme, Leonard, Maurice, Cash, R Brandon, Weinheimer, Steven, Mesquita, Pedro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7776162/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1194
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author Kumar, Princy
Leider, Jason
Slim, Jihad
Moyle, Graeme
Leonard, Maurice
Cash, R Brandon
Weinheimer, Steven
Mesquita, Pedro
author_facet Kumar, Princy
Leider, Jason
Slim, Jihad
Moyle, Graeme
Leonard, Maurice
Cash, R Brandon
Weinheimer, Steven
Mesquita, Pedro
author_sort Kumar, Princy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The principal goal of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is durable suppression of HIV RNA. In treatment-experienced (TE) patients, ongoing viremia can lead to further accumulation of drug resistance, increased morbidity and mortality. ART efficacy often depends on HIV disease severity; therefore, we sought to assess its impact on long-term virologic suppression in patients treated with Ibalizumab (IBA), the first long-acting, post-attachment inhibitor approved for multi-drug resistant (MDR) HIV-1 treatment. METHODS: In TMB-301, a Phase 3 study, 40 TE patients with viral load (VL) >1000 copies/mL (c/mL) received an intravenous (IV) loading dose of IBA (2000mg) followed by maintenance doses (800mg IV) every 2 weeks combined with an optimized background regimen. Patients who completed TMB-301 in the US (n=27) continued to an expanded access protocol TMB-311. To determine the impact of baseline (BL) disease on long-term virologic response, we conducted an on-treatment analysis stratified by BL VL and CD4 count up to week 96. Differences in the proportion of suppressed (< 50 c/mL) individuals among the strata were assessed by Fisher’s exact test. RESULTS: Median BL VL and CD4 count were 35,350 c/mL and 73 cells/mL, respectively. The number of patients in the VL strata were 11, 17 and 12 for VL < 10,000, 10,000-70,000, and >70,000 c/mL, respectively. There were 12, 10, 5 and 13 patients in the subgroups with CD4 count < 10, 10-100, >100-200 and >200 cells/µL. Population disease severity was reflected by four deaths (unrelated to study drug). Overall, the proportion of suppressed patients increased from 55% at week 24 (n=31) to 75% for patients remaining on treatment for 96 weeks (n=20). Median VL decrease was 2.9 log(10) c/mL. Notably, no statistically significant differences were found across groups. Among patients with advanced HIV disease, 66.7% with CD4 count < 10 cells/mL and 71.4% with VL >70,000 c/mL at BL remained fully suppressed at week 96. CONCLUSION: In TE patients with advanced HIV disease, maximal viral suppression with IBA was observed regardless of BL CD4 or VL strata if patients remained on treatment. This demonstrates that TE patients across the spectrum of HIV disease, can achieve viral suppression by using drugs with a new mechanism of action. DISCLOSURES: Princy Kumar, MD, Gilead Sciences Inc. (Scientific Research Study Investigator) Jason Leider, MD, PhD, THERA (Speaker’s Bureau) Jihad Slim, MD, Abbvie (Speaker’s Bureau)Gilead (Speaker’s Bureau)Jansen (Speaker’s Bureau)Merck (Speaker’s Bureau)ViiV (Speaker’s Bureau) Graeme Moyle, MD, Theratechnologies (Consultant) Maurice Leonard, PhD, Theratechnologies Europe Ltd (Employee, Shareholder) R Brandon Cash, PharmD, Theratechnologies (Employee) Steven Weinheimer, PhD, TaiMed Biologics USA (Employee) Pedro Mesquita, PhD, Theratechnologies, Inc. (Employee)
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spelling pubmed-77761622021-01-07 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311) Kumar, Princy Leider, Jason Slim, Jihad Moyle, Graeme Leonard, Maurice Cash, R Brandon Weinheimer, Steven Mesquita, Pedro Open Forum Infect Dis Poster Abstracts BACKGROUND: The principal goal of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is durable suppression of HIV RNA. In treatment-experienced (TE) patients, ongoing viremia can lead to further accumulation of drug resistance, increased morbidity and mortality. ART efficacy often depends on HIV disease severity; therefore, we sought to assess its impact on long-term virologic suppression in patients treated with Ibalizumab (IBA), the first long-acting, post-attachment inhibitor approved for multi-drug resistant (MDR) HIV-1 treatment. METHODS: In TMB-301, a Phase 3 study, 40 TE patients with viral load (VL) >1000 copies/mL (c/mL) received an intravenous (IV) loading dose of IBA (2000mg) followed by maintenance doses (800mg IV) every 2 weeks combined with an optimized background regimen. Patients who completed TMB-301 in the US (n=27) continued to an expanded access protocol TMB-311. To determine the impact of baseline (BL) disease on long-term virologic response, we conducted an on-treatment analysis stratified by BL VL and CD4 count up to week 96. Differences in the proportion of suppressed (< 50 c/mL) individuals among the strata were assessed by Fisher’s exact test. RESULTS: Median BL VL and CD4 count were 35,350 c/mL and 73 cells/mL, respectively. The number of patients in the VL strata were 11, 17 and 12 for VL < 10,000, 10,000-70,000, and >70,000 c/mL, respectively. There were 12, 10, 5 and 13 patients in the subgroups with CD4 count < 10, 10-100, >100-200 and >200 cells/µL. Population disease severity was reflected by four deaths (unrelated to study drug). Overall, the proportion of suppressed patients increased from 55% at week 24 (n=31) to 75% for patients remaining on treatment for 96 weeks (n=20). Median VL decrease was 2.9 log(10) c/mL. Notably, no statistically significant differences were found across groups. Among patients with advanced HIV disease, 66.7% with CD4 count < 10 cells/mL and 71.4% with VL >70,000 c/mL at BL remained fully suppressed at week 96. CONCLUSION: In TE patients with advanced HIV disease, maximal viral suppression with IBA was observed regardless of BL CD4 or VL strata if patients remained on treatment. This demonstrates that TE patients across the spectrum of HIV disease, can achieve viral suppression by using drugs with a new mechanism of action. DISCLOSURES: Princy Kumar, MD, Gilead Sciences Inc. (Scientific Research Study Investigator) Jason Leider, MD, PhD, THERA (Speaker’s Bureau) Jihad Slim, MD, Abbvie (Speaker’s Bureau)Gilead (Speaker’s Bureau)Jansen (Speaker’s Bureau)Merck (Speaker’s Bureau)ViiV (Speaker’s Bureau) Graeme Moyle, MD, Theratechnologies (Consultant) Maurice Leonard, PhD, Theratechnologies Europe Ltd (Employee, Shareholder) R Brandon Cash, PharmD, Theratechnologies (Employee) Steven Weinheimer, PhD, TaiMed Biologics USA (Employee) Pedro Mesquita, PhD, Theratechnologies, Inc. (Employee) Oxford University Press 2020-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7776162/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1194 Text en © The Author 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Abstracts
Kumar, Princy
Leider, Jason
Slim, Jihad
Moyle, Graeme
Leonard, Maurice
Cash, R Brandon
Weinheimer, Steven
Mesquita, Pedro
1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title_full 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title_fullStr 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title_full_unstemmed 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title_short 1008. Disease Severity Impact on Long-Term Virologic Response to Ibalizumab in Expanded Access Protocol (TMB-311)
title_sort 1008. disease severity impact on long-term virologic response to ibalizumab in expanded access protocol (tmb-311)
topic Poster Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7776162/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1194
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