EACS 2015: TAF Single-Tablet Regimen Shows Good Efficacy, Improved Kidney and Bone Safety
- Details
- Category: Experimental HIV Drugs
- Published on Friday, 23 October 2015 00:00
- Written by Liz Highleyman

A single-tablet regimen containing the new tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) -- to be marketed as Genvoya -- suppressed HIV as well as a coformulation containing the older tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), according to a poster presented this week at the 15th European AIDS Conference in Barcelona. A related studyfound that people who switched from an atazanavir (Reyataz)-based regimen to the new combo had superior virological outcomes, and in both clinical trialsparticipants saw improvements in kidney and bone biomarkers.
Gilead Sciences' TAF is a new pro-drug formulation that delivers the active agent to HIV-infected cells more efficiently than the current TDF formulation (Viread, also in Truvada, Atripla, Complera, and Stribild). TDF is considered generally safe and well-tolerated, but it can cause a small amount of bone loss soon after starting therapy and can lead to kidney problems in susceptible people.
Presenter Bart Rijnders from Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam explained that TAF has a longer half-life, allowing more time for active tenofovir to enter CD4 T-cells. TAF therefore produces sufficient intracellular drug levels with a smaller dose, which means a lower concentration in the blood and less drug exposure for the kidneys, bones, and other organs and tissues.
TAF vs TDF with Elvitegravir
As described in a late-breaking poster, David Wohl from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and colleagues did a head-to-headcomparison of first-line therapy using single-tablet regimens containing the integrase inhibitor elvitegravir (150 mg), the booster cobicistat (150 mg), emtricitabine (200 mg), and either TAF (10 mg) or TDF (300 mg). The existing TDF coformulation is marketed as Stribild and the TAF coformulation will be called Genvoya.
These 2 international randomized Phase 3 studies (GS-US-292-0104 and GS-US-292-0111) together enrolled 1733 treatment-naive participants with near-normal kidney function. About 85% were men, about 40% were white, and the median age was 34 years. The median baseline CD4 cell count was approximately 400 cells/mm3 and nearly a quarter had high viral load (>100,000 copies/mL).
Results
- As described at this year's Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, both coformulations demonstrated similar high efficacyat 48 week: 92% for Genvoya and 90% for Stribild.
- The EACS poster reported that viral suppression rates remained high at 96 weeks: 87% for Genvoya and 85% for Stribild.
- By 96 weeks, 1.2% of TAF recipients and 0.9% taking TDF had virological failure with drug resistance.
- Virological outcomes did not differ by age, sex, race/ethnicity, geographic region, baseline viral load, or CD4 count.
- Treatment was generally safe and well-tolerated, with similar rates of overall and serious adverse events, but TAF had less detrimental effects on the kidneys and bones than TDF.
- Rates of discontinuation due to adverse events were low in both treatment arms (1.2% for Genvoya vs 2.3% for Stribild).
- The most common side effects were headache, diarrhea, and nausea.
- Multiple laboratory tests of kidney function and specific tubular function favored the TAF regimen.
- No cases of renal tubulopathy (including Fanconi Syndrome) occurred in the TAF-containing arm, compared with 2 in the TDF-containing arm.
- People taking the TAF-containing coformulation had a significantly smaller mean decrease in bone mineral density at the lumbar spine (-0.96 vs -2.79) and hip (-0.67 vs -3.28) at 96 weeks.
- Total, LDL, and HDL cholesterol increases were significant larger in the TAF arm -- a known side effect of tenofovir -- but the total-to-HDL cholesterol ratio remained stable.
- The number of people who needed to start lipid-modifying medications was similar in both arms: 3.8% for Genvoya vs 4.4% for Stribild.
"After 2 years, TAF combined with [elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine] produced a high rate of virologic suppression (87%) and remained non-inferior to Stribild in treatment-naive patients," the researchers concluded. "[Genvoya] continued to have a statistically superior bone and renal safety profile compared with Stribild."
Switching from Atazanavir
Rijnders presented findings from a sub-analysis of another TAF study (GS-US-292-0109), in which people with stable viral suppression (<50 copies/mL for at least a year) on TDF-containing regimens were randomized to stay on the same treatment or switch to Genvoya.
The overall study population included 1436 participants. They had near-normal kidney function (median estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] 106 mL/min) and 9% had proteinuria (protein in the urine) at baseline. Results from the full study were presentedat the International AIDS Society Conference this summer in Vancouver.
This sub-analysis focused on 601 participants who switched to Genvoya from a regimen of TDF, emtricitabine, and atazanavir boosted with either ritonavir or cobicistat. In this analysis 86% were men, about 65% were white, the median age was 41 years, and the median CD4 count was approximately 650 cells/mm3.
At 48 weeks, 97% of participants who switched to Genvoya and 92% of those who stayed on their atazanavir-based regimen maintained HIV RNA <50 copies/mL. No patients in this sub-analysis experienced virological failure (viral load >50 copies/mL). Rijnders noted that the difference in response rates was driven by missing data, mostly due to withdrawal of consent.
Again, treatment was generally safe and well-tolerated. Rates of most adverse events were similar in the 2 treatment arms, but as expected elevated bilirubin was more common with atazanavir (55% vs <1% with Genvoya).
Measures of proteinuria and specific tubular proteinuria improved significantly. However, Rijnders explained that cobicistat inhibits excretion of serum creatinine, which can result in elevated levels that do not actually reflect impaired kidney function.
Both hip and spine bone mineral density (BMD) improved significantly in the Genvoya arm according to DXA scans --- a difference that was apparent by week 24. At week 48 spine BMD rose by +2.18% in the Genvoya arm while falling by -0.54% in the atazanavir arm. Changes in hip BMD were +11.74% vs -0/54%, respectively. The proportion of people who met the criteria for osteopenia or osteoporosis at the spine or hip decreased in the Genvoya arm, while rising or remaining stable in the atazanavir arm.
Blood lipid levels rose more with the TAF-containing regimen, but the total cholesterol-to-HDL ratio again did not change significantly. More people taking Genvoya started lipid-modifying medication (8.7% vs 5.0%).
"In both the overall population and in prior boosted atazanavir and [emtricitabine]/TDF users, those switching to [Genvoya] had significantly more virological success," the researchers concluded, as well as significant improvements in spine and hip BMD, less osteoporosis, and improvements in proteinuria, tubular proteinuria, and albuminuria, but higher creatinine and blood lipids.
Based on favorable study findings to date, Gilead has requested U.S. and European regulatory approval of the elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/TAF single-tablet regimen. The Food and Drug Administration is scheduled to make a decision in November.
In addition, the company has also requested approval of other TAF single-tablet regimen containing rilpivirine ordarunavir, and a dual coformulation of TAF and emtricitabine that would be a successor to Truvada. Stand-alone TAF is also being developed as a treatment for hepatitis B.
10/23/15
References
B Rijnders, C Stephan, A Lazzarin, et al. Switching from Ritonavir or Cobicistat Boosted Atazanavir (ATV) Plus Emtricitabine (FTC)/Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate (TDF) to a Tenofovir Alafenamide (TAF)-based Single Tablet Regimen (STR): Week 48 Data in Virologically Suppressed Adults. 15th European AIDS Conference. Barcelona, October 21-24, 2015. Abstract PS10/3.
D Wohl, S Oka, N Clumeck, et al. A Randomized, Double-Blind Comparison of Tenofovir Alafenamide (TAF) vs. Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate (TDF), Each Coformulated with Elvitegravir, Cobicistat and Emtricitabine (E/C/F) for Initial HIV-1 Treatment: Week 96 Results. 15th European AIDS Conference. Barcelona, October 21-24, 2015. Abstract LBBPD1/1.
Other Source
Gilead Sciences. Gilead Announces Phase 3 Results for Genvoya (Elvitegravir, Cobicistat, Emtricitabine and Tenofovir Alafenamide), an Investigational Once-Daily Single Tablet Regimen for HIV. Press release. October 22, 2015.