Efficacy and Safety of Switching to Daily Bictegravir Plus Lenacapavir From a Complex Human Immunodeficiency Virus Treatment Regimen: A Randomized, Open-Label, Multicenter Phase 2 Study (ARTISTRY-1)
Karam Mounzer, Jihad Slim, Moti Ramgopal, Malcolm Hedgcock, Mark Bloch, Jorge Santana, Ines Mendes, Ying Guo, Priyanka Arora, Jairo M Montezuma-Rusca, Peter Sklar, Jared M Baeten, Sorana Segal-MaurerAbstract
Background
Complex antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimens, such as those requiring multiple tablets, several doses per day, or both, can negatively affect quality of life and treatment adherence among people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Methods
ARTISTRY-1 is a phase 2/3, operationally seamless, randomized, open-label, multicenter, active-controlled study (GS-US-621-6289; NCT05502341). Phase 2 of the study enrolled adults with plasma HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL receiving a complex ART regimen for ≥6 months. Efficacy and safety outcomes were evaluated after a switch to bictegravir (BIC) (75-mg) + lenacapavir (LEN) (25- or 50-mg) regimens, compared with continuing on a complex ART regimen through 24 weeks.
Results
Overall, 128 participants were assigned randomly to begin BIC 75 mg + LEN 25 mg (n = 51) or BIC 75 mg + LEN 50 mg (n = 52) or continue on their complex ART regimen (n = 25). At week 24, HIV-1 RNA was ≥50 copies/mL in 0 of 51, 1 of 52 (1.9%), and 0 of 25 participants in the 3 groups, respectively. CD4 cell counts and percentages remained stable through week 24; the median change from baseline in CD4 cell count (interquartile range) was 18 (−39 to 70), −16 (−80 to 93), and 42 (−36 to 90) cells/µL, respectively. There were no study discontinuations due to a serious adverse event through week 24. Both BIC + LEN dosing regimens were well tolerated, with similar safety profiles observed between groups.
Conclusions
These data support the continued evaluation of the combination of BIC and LEN to optimize treatment in people with HIV and virologic suppression who are receiving complex ART regimens.