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Stribild is effective and well tolerated in older people with HIV
Liz Highleyman, 2013-10-02 07:30:00

The Stribild single-tablet regimen matched both Atripla and boosted atazanavir (Reyataz) in efficacy amongst people age 50 and older, who responded as well as younger patients, researchers reported at the recent 53rd Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) in Denver. Related studies showed that Stribild had durable efficacy through three years and causes fewer central nervous system (CNS) side-effects than Atripla.

While modern antiretroviral therapy is safe and highly effective, there is always room for new drugs that are more convenient or better tolerated. The four-in-one Stribild pill contains the HIV integrase inhibitor elvitegravir, the boosting agent cobicistat (approved by the EMA last week as a stand-alone drug with the brand name Tybost) and tenofovir and emtricitabine (the drugs in Truvada).

Joel Gallant from the Southwest Care Center in Santa Fe presented findings from an analysis of the safety and tolerability of Stribild in older individuals, who make up a growing proportion of the HIV population in Europe and the US.

As reported at the International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention this past July, Gilead Sciences' phase 3 Study 102 showed that that Stribild was non-inferior to Atripla (efavirenz/tenofovir/emtricitabine) at 96 weeks, with 84 vs 82% of previously untreated patients, respectively, having undetectable viral load (<50 copies/ml). Likewise, Study 103 showed that Stribild worked as well as ritonavir-boosted atazanavir plus Truvada, with 83 vs 82%, respectively, having undetectable HIV RNA.

Gallant's analysis compared response rates and side-effects between people age 50 and older and those younger than 50, using 96 week data from these two trials. In Study 102, 49 people (14%) randomly assigned to receive Stribild and 56 (16%) assigned to Atripla were age 50 or older. In Study 103, 48 (14%) randomised to Stribild and 48 (14%) on atazanavir were in the older age group.

In both studies, about 90% of participants were men, between two-thirds and three-quarters were white and the mean CD4 cell count was approximately 375 cells/mm3.

In Study 102, 82% of participants older than 50 had undetectable viral load at week 96 in both the Stribild and Atripla arms. Within the younger group, rates were 85% and 81%, respectively, not a significant difference. One older person in each treatment arm developed drug resistance during the first year, but no additional patients did so during the second year.

Response rates were also comparable in Study 103: 90% of people over 50 achieved undetectable viral load with both Stribild and boosted atazanavir. In the younger group response rates were 82 and 81%, respectively. In this study, no older patients developed resistance during either the first or second year.

Older patients did see somewhat smaller CD4 cell gains. In Study 102, CD4 cells increased by 233 cells/mm3 with Stribild and 250 cells/mm3 with Atripla at 96 weeks in the over 50 group, compared with 305 and 278 cells/mm3, respectively, in the younger group. In Study 103, gains were 226 cells/mm3 with Stribild and 231 cells/mm3 with atazanavir in the older group, and 261 and 266 cells/mm3, respectively, in the younger group.

Turning to side-effects in Study 102, in the older group there was significantly less dizziness and fewer abnormal dreams amongst Stribild recipients compared with Atripla recipients. In the younger group, Stribild again caused less dizziness and fewer abnormal dreams, but also significantly less rash and more nausea.  Looking only at those taking Stribild, diarrhoea was less common amongst older compared with younger patients, but none of the other side-effects differed significantly by age. 

In Study 103, there were no statistically significant differences in adverse events between older recipients of Stribild vs boosted atazanavir. In the younger group, Stribild recipients had significantly less yellowing of the eyes (a sign of elevated bilirubin) and less diarrhoea, but more back pain, than atazanavir recipients. Within the Stribild arm, older people had slightly less nausea but significantly more depression than younger patients.

Older and younger people had similar serum creatinine levels at baseline and experienced similar changes at 96 weeks of treatment. In both age groups, however, increases were higher with Stribild (older 0.14-0.16 mg/dl; younger 0.12-0.13 mg/dl) than with Atripla (older 0.05 mg/dl; younger 0.01 mg/dl) or atazanavir (older 0.12 mg/dl; younger 0.07 mg/dl).

Total cholesterol, LDL ('bad') cholesterol and HDL ('good') cholesterol increased significantly less with Stribild than with Atripla among younger patients. Increases in total cholesterol, LDL and triglycerides were also were also smaller with Stribild in the older group, though here there differences did not reach statistical significance due to small numbers, Gallant noted. In contrast, cholesterol levels rose more with Stribild than with boosted atazanavir in both age groups, though differences again were not significant.

People age 50 and older "had high and similar rates of virological suppression as subjects age <50 years," the researchers concluded. Median CD4 cell increases were similar with all three regimens, but were smaller for older patients.

Older people had "blunted" immune recovery indicated by "less pronounced gains" in CD4 cells across the board, Gallant explained.

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