News

FDA Approves Four-in-One HIV Pill Stribild


 

The Food and Drug Administration approved Stribild on Aug. 27, the product’s user fee date, to treat HIV-1 infection in adults who have never been treated for HIV.

Quad is the moniker by which the four-drug, fixed-dose combination (elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir) has become widely known. The product combines the novel HIV integrase inhibitor elvitegravir with a novel "boosting" agent, cobicistat, and Gilead’s dual nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor regimen Truvada (emtricitabine/tenofovir).

The approval makes Stribild the first fixed-dose combination HIV drug approved before its individual novel components. Gilead filed the Quad New Drug Application (NDA) in October 2011. The company announced the NDA submissions for single-agent elvitegravir on June 27 and cobicistat 1 day later.

The FDA highlighted the product’s streamlined, once-daily regimen in announcing Stribild’s approval.

"Through continued research and drug development, treatment for those infected with HIV has evolved from multi-pill regimens to single-pill regimens," FDA Office of Antimicrobial Products Director Dr. Edward Cox said in an agency release. "New combination HIV drugs like Stribild help simplify treatment regimens."

Gilead has previously said that Quad would take over the first-line position in the company’s HIV detailing efforts, bumping the triple-combination Complera, which is partnered with Johnson & Johnson’s Tibotec, to second position. Approved in August 2011, Complera combines the non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor Edurant (rilpivirine) with Truvada.

An Easy Review

Quad sailed through its May 11 review by the FDA’s Antiviral Drugs Advisory Committee. The panel voted 13-1 in favor of approval, despite renal toxicity concerns and calls for postmarketing studies to better define the drug’s efficacy and safety. The meeting was a relative breeze for Gilead, the FDA, and the committee compared to the panel’s marathon review a day earlier of a pre-exposure prophylaxis indication for Truvada.

At the time of the advisory committee, the FDA appeared to harbor no major efficacy concerns about Quad.

The NDA filing was based upon two similarly designed, phase III studies in which Quad was shown to be noninferior to Gilead/Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Atripla (efavirenz/emtricitabine/tenofovir) and atazanavir/ritonavir plus Truvada.

The agency’s presentation to the committee primarily focused on safety, particularly renal effects and the risk of proximal renal tubulopathy.

Tenofovir has been associated with adverse renal effects. Gilead asserted that cobicistat can cause a modest elevation in serum creatinine, resulting in a decrease in the estimated glomerular filtration rate. However, the company maintained that actual GFR is not affected.

The FDA presented data from the pooled phase III studies showing that eight subjects who received Quad discontinued the study drug due to renal adverse events, four of whom developed proximal renal tubular dysfunction. The agency also presented high-level safety data from a phase III trial of single-agent cobicistat, in which five subjects receiving the boosting agent experienced proximal tubulopathy.

Given the renal adverse events seen with Quad and single-agent cobicistat, the FDA questioned whether two discrete processes were at work: a nonpathologic decrease in eGFR, as suggested by Gilead, and a bona fide increased risk of renal dysfunction.

Panel members generally found the potential renal toxicities were real but manageable with the help of enhanced monitoring. Nephrologists on the panel generally supported the FDA’s proposal that renal function be monitored for all patients, not just those with, or at risk for, renal impairment, as had been suggested by Gilead.

Labeling includes a warning about acute renal failure and Fanconi syndrome with the use of tenofovir and Stribild. It also contains detailed instructions for health care providers: "Monitor estimated creatinine clearance (CrCl), urine glucose, and urine protein in all patients prior to initiating and during therapy; additionally monitor serum phosphorus in patients with or at risk for renal impairment. Cobicistat may cause modest increases in serum creatinine and modest declines in CrCl without affecting renal glomerular function; patients with an increase in serum creatinine greater than 0.4 mg/dL from baseline should be closely monitored for renal safety. Do not initiate Stribild in patients with CrCl below 70 mL/min. Discontinue Stribild if CrCl declines below 50 mL/min. Avoid concurrent or recent use with a nephrotoxic agent."

There is also a boxed warning about lactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis with the use of nucleoside analogues, including tenofovir, when used in combination with other antiretrovirals.

Committee members suggested that postmarketing studies should evaluate the best means for detecting renal injury early, and evaluate long-term effects of Quad on renal and bone parameters. The panel also called for further studies on drug-drug interactions and use in women, who represented only 8%-12% of the population in the pivotal trials.

Pages

Recommended Reading

CDC Outlines Heterosexual HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Influenza H3N2v: Efficacy Varies Among Rapid Detection Tests
MDedge Internal Medicine
Flu Vaccine Approved for Upcoming Season
MDedge Internal Medicine
CDC Urges Hep C Test for Baby Boomers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Vaccines in the Pipeline For Diseases Affecting Children Worldwide
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mycobacterial Infections: The Link to Ink
MDedge Internal Medicine
CDC: 'Worst Season Ever' for West Nile Virus
MDedge Internal Medicine
Routine Postpneumonia X-Ray Unwarranted
MDedge Internal Medicine
Stopping the Flu Starts With You
MDedge Internal Medicine
Inpatient Flu Vaccine Protocols Leave Nothing to Chance
MDedge Internal Medicine