Long-term
Safety of Investigational CCR5 Antagonist Vicriviroc in Treatment-experienced
Patients By
Liz Highleyman Schering-Plough's
investigational CCR5 antagonist vicriviroc
has demonstrated potent activity against HIV
in laboratory studies and clinical trials of treatment-experienced patients. 
More
than 200 patients received vicriviroc in Phase II trials. In a poster presented
at the 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents
and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008), taking place this week in Washington, DC, researchers
described long-term safety data from this population. Participants
in studies ACTG 5211 and VICTOR-E1 were allowed to continue taking vicriviroc
on an open-label basis after completing the initial 48-week randomized dosing
period. A total of 205 patients with advanced HIV disease were enrolled in the
2 trials, and 196 received more than 12 weeks of vicriviroc. The
drug was started at doses ranging from 5 to 30 mg, but all patients eventually
escalated to 30 mg once-daily, as supported by safety and efficacy findings. In
the present analysis, data were pooled for all participants, regardless of initial
dose, since no safety differences were seen across dose groups. Taken
together, most study participants (84%) were men, 73% were white, 40% were Hispanic/Latino,
about two-thirds were from North America, and the mean CD4 count was about 200
cells/mm3. AIDS
complications, malignancies, infections, and liver-related abnormalities were
evaluated. Changes in HIV RNA levels and CD4 counts were based on available data
at defined intervals. Results
The
mean duration of vicriviroc use was 80 weeks (range 1 to 216 weeks).
AIDS
complications included:
9 AIDS-associated opportunistic infections;
2 cases of Kaposi's sarcoma (KS);
2 cases of wasting syndrome;
1 case of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML).
13 malignancies were reported:
7 skin cancers (including the 2 KS cases);
5 lymphomas;
1 case of gastric (stomach) carcinoma.
Liver
abnormalities included:
25 cases of elevated bilirubin (all associated with use of atazanavir
[Reyataz]);
17 cases of elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST);
14 cases of elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT);
1 case of cirrhosis;
1 case of hepatosplenomegaly (enlarged liver and spleen).
ALT and AST elevations were generally mild and were not considered drug related.
Infections reported in at least 5% of participants included:
22 cases of sinusitis (11%);
19 cases of bronchitis (9%);
18 upper respiratory infections (9%);
12 cases of herpes simplex virus infection (6%);
10 cases of influenza (5%);
10 cases of pneumonia (5%).
Median decreases in HIV RNA from baseline were 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, and 2.3 log10, respectively,
at weeks 48, 96, 144, and 168.
Mean CD4 count increases from baseline were 121, 144, 158, and 143 cells/mm3,
respectively, at the same time points.
According
to the investigators, "These data represent the longest treatment duration
and clinical experience reported to date for CCR5 antagonist." "Vicriviroc
demonstrated excellent tolerability, few HIV complications, and no clearly vicriviroc-related
toxicity," they concluded. "Sustained antiviral effect with prolonged
maintenance of improved CD4 counts was observed." In
this study, vicriviroc was "not associated with hepatotoxicity, seizures,
or ischemic cardiovascular events," they added. "These
long-term results demonstrate that vicriviroc added to an optimized background
therapy may provide durable viral suppression and sustained elevated CD4 counts
in treatment-experienced HIV-infected patients," said study investigator
Jihad Slim in a pres release issued by Schering-Plough. "Importantly, vicriviroc
was well tolerated, with some patients continuing on treatment for up to four
years, and it was not associated with increased liver, [central nervous system]
or cardiovascular adverse events or with an increased incidence of malignancy
in this patient population." Vicriviroc
is currently being studied in 2 large international Phase III trials, VICTOR-E3
and VICTOR-E4, which have completed enrollment with more than 850 treatment-experienced
patients. It is also being evaluated as first-line therapy for treatment-naive
patients in an ongoing Phase II study. Reanalysis
Using Enhanced Trofile Assay In
a related study, investigators reanalyzed data from ACTG 5211 using a new, more
sensitive version of Monogram Biosciences' Trofile HIV tropism assy. CCR5
antagonists like vicriviroc interfere with one of the 2 coreceptors HIV uses to
enter cells. HIV tropism -- or which coreceptor the virus uses -- is determined
by a tropism test. Only patients with exclusively CCR5-tropic virus, rather than
CXCR4-tropic or dual/mixed strains, are considered eligible to use CCR5 antagonists.
However, the original Trofile test may have misclassified some patients with low
levels of non-CCR5-tropic virus. Researchers
used the enhanced Trofile assay to determine coreceptor usage in 114 patients
who had CCR5-tropic virus at study screening according to the older test. Using
the enhanced test, 89 patients were found to have CCR5-tropic virus, while 25
had dual/mixed virus. Greater reductions in HIV RNA were observed in vicriviroc
recipients who had CCR5-tropic virus at both study screening and study entry,
compared with those who had CCR5-tropic HIV at screening but dual/mixed virus
at study entry and those who had dual/mixed virus at screening.
Trends
toward improved virological responses were observed at day 14 and week 24 in vicriviroc
recipients with CCR5-tropic virus as determined by the enhanced Trofile test compared
with the original assay.
"Enhanced Trofile showed improved ability
to predict antiretroviral responses to vicriviroc," the investigators concluded.
"Enhanced Trofile is an improved screening tool for determining patient eligibility
for CCR5 antagonist therapy."
A similar reanalysis
of the MERIT trial of Pfizer's approved CCR5 antagonist maraviroc (Selzentry)
also showed improved efficacy, as well as fewer treatment discontinuations, when
patients were properly reclassified using the enhanced Trofile assay.
Harvard
Sch of Publ. Hlth., Boston, MA; Monogram BioSciences, Inc., South San Francisco,
CA; Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD; Weill-Cornell Med. College, New York,
NY; Boston Univ. Med. Ctr., Boston, MA; Schering-Plough Res. Inst., Kenilworth,
NJ; Harvard Med. Sch, Boston, MA.
10/28/08
References LM
Dunkle, WL Greaves, MC McCarthy, and others. Long term vicriviroc safety. 48th
International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008).
Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract H-1269. Z
Su, JD Reeves, A Krambrink, and others. Response to vicriviroc (VCV) in HIV-infected
treatment-experienced subjects using an enhanced Trofile HIV co-receptor tropism
assay: reanalysis of ACTG 5211 results. 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract
H-895. Other
source Schering-Plough Corp. Analysis of long-term vicriviroc data provides
evidence of sustained viral suppression, increased CD4 cell counts and tolerability
in treatment-experienced HIV-infected patients. Press release. October
26, 2008. |