News from the FDA/CDC

FDA approves first two-drug tablet for HIV


 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the first two-drug, fixed-dose, complete regimen for HIV-infected adults, according to an FDA press announcement.

FDA icon

Dovato (dolutegravir and lamivudine), a product of ViiV Healthcare, is intended to serve “as a complete regimen” for the treatment of HIV-1 infection in adults who have had no previous antiretroviral treatment and who have an infection with no known or suspected genetic substitutions associated with resistance to the individual components of Dovato.

“With this approval, patients who have never been treated have the option of taking a two-drug regimen in a single tablet while eliminating additional toxicity and potential drug interactions from a third drug,” said Debra Birnkrant, MD, director of the FDA’s Division of Antiviral Products.

The Dovato labeling includes a Boxed Warning that patients infected with both HIV and hepatitis B should add additional treatment for their HBV or consider a different drug regimen. The most common adverse reactions with Dovato were headache, diarrhea, nausea, insomnia, and fatigue. In addition, the FDA warned that, as there is a known risk for neural tube defects with dolutegravir, patients are advised to avoid use of Dovato at the time of conception through the first trimester of pregnancy.

mlesney@mdedge.com

Recommended Reading

For now, HIV cure is worse than infection
Federal Practitioner
Repeat VTE risk heightened in HIV patients
Federal Practitioner
CDC exhorts more testing and treatment of HIV
Federal Practitioner
Universal “Test-and-Treat” Strategy Cuts Down New HIV Infections
Federal Practitioner
FDA examines changing donation policies for men who have sex with men
Federal Practitioner
Increased sudden death risk in HIV linked to cardiac fibrosis
Federal Practitioner
One HCV infection leads to another in HIV+ MSM
Federal Practitioner
Noninfected children of HIV-positive mothers have high rates of obesity
Federal Practitioner
Making HIV Transmission a Rare Event
Federal Practitioner
Genetic data boost HIV surveillance efforts
Federal Practitioner