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Session 36 Oral Abstracts
HIV Drug Resistance: Mechanisms and Impact on Response to New Agents
Session Day and Time: Wednesday, 10 am - 12:30 pm
Presentation Time: 11:45 am
Room: Lecture Hall


159LB
Potent Antiretroviral Effect of MK-0518, a Novel HIV-1 Integrase Inhibitor, in Patients with Triple-class Resistant Virus
Beatriz Grinsztejn*1, B Y Nguyen2, C Katlama3, J Gatell4, A Lazzarin5, D Vittecoq6, C Gonzalez7, J Chen2, R Isaacs2, and the Protocol 005 Study Team
1Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute/Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; 2Merck, West Point, PA, US; 3Hosp Pitié-Salpétrière, Paris, France; 4Univ of Barcelona, Spain; 5San Raffaele Sci Inst, Milan, Italy; 6Hosp Paul Borusse, Villejuif, France; and 7New York Univ Sch of Med, NY, US

 

Background:  MK-0518 is a novel and potent HIV-1 integrase inhibitor. This study evaluates MK-0518 in HIV-infected patients with HIV RNA level >5000 copies/mL and documented genotypic/phenotypic resistance to each of the 3 classes of oral ART.

Methods:  Multi-center, double-blind, randomized study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of MK-0518 (200, 400, or 600 mg orally twice daily) vs placebo, both plus optimized background therapy (OBT). Since atazanavir (ATV) increases MK-0518 plasma concentrations, there are 2 sub-studies:  (A) patients receiving OBT without ATV, and (B) patients receiving OBT with ATV. Patients were closely monitored for safety and ART effect.

Results:  At this interim analysis, 116 patients were enrolled in sub-study A and 16 in sub-study B. The median duration for prior use of ART was ~10 years for both groups. The mean baseline HIV RNA ranged from 4.71 to 4.81 log10 copies/mL. Based on phenotypic resistance testing at baseline, ~30% of patients had no active ART in their OBT. At week 8, the percentage of patients with HIV RNA level <400 copies/mL (observed data) is summarized in the table. At week 8, 63% to 67% of patients receiving MK-0518 treatment vs 8% receiving placebo had HIV RNA <50 copies/mL. The most common (³5% in any treatment group) drug-related adverse experiences were diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fatigue, headache, flushing, injection site reaction, and pruritus; these were comparable between the MK-0518 and control groups. There were no dose-related adverse experiences and no discontinuations.

 

 

Sub-study A

Sub-study B

Sub-study A & B Combined

Treatment

n

Percentage
 (95% CI)

n

Percentage
 (95% CI)

n

Percentage
(95% CI)

MK-0518 200 mg twice daily

21

86 (64, 97)

3

100 (29, 100)

24

88 (68, 97)

MK-0518 400 mg twice daily

22

86 (65, 97)

4

75 (19, 99)

26

85 (65, 96)

MK-0518 600 mg twice daily

22

91 (71, 99)

2

100 (16, 100)

24

92 (73, 99)

Placebo

22

23 (8, 45)

3

33 (1, 91)

25

24 (9, 45)

CI = Confidence Interval.

All subjects received OBT in addition to MK-0518 or placebo.

.

Conclusions:  In this preliminary analysis of patients failing current therapies and with triple-class resistant virus, the HIV-1 integrase inhibitor, MK-0518 at all doses in combination with OBT had potent antiretroviral activity and was generally well-tolerated.