Publication: Week 96 efficacy and safety results of the phase 3, randomized EMERALD trial to evaluate switching from boosted-protease inhibitors plus emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate regimens to the once daily, single-tablet regimen of darunavir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (D/C/F/TAF) in treatment-experienced, virologically-suppressed adults living with HIV-1.
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Identifiers
Date
2019-07-04
Authors
Eron, Joseph J
Orkin, Chloe
Cunningham, Douglas
Pulido, Federico
Post, Frank A
De Wit, Stéphane
Lathouwers, Erkki
Hufkens, Veerle
Jezorwski, John
Petrovic, Romana
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Darunavir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (D/C/F/TAF) 800/150/200/10 mg was investigated through 96 weeks in EMERALD (NCT02269917). Virologically-suppressed, HIV-1-positive treatment-experienced adults (previous non-darunavir virologic failure [VF] allowed) were randomized (2:1) to D/C/F/TAF or boosted protease inhibitor (PI) plus emtricitabine/tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate (F/TDF) over 48 weeks. At week 52 participants in the boosted PI arm were offered switch to D/C/F/TAF (late-switch, 44 weeks D/C/F/TAF exposure). All participants were followed on D/C/F/TAF until week 96. Efficacy endpoints were percentage cumulative protocol-defined virologic rebound (PDVR; confirmed viral load [VL] ≥50 copies/mL) and VL < 50 copies/mL (virologic suppression) and
≥50 copies/mL (VF) (FDA-snapshot analysis). Of 1141 randomized patients, 1080 continued in the extension phase. Few patients had PDVR (D/C/F/TAF:
3.1%, 24/763 cumulative through week 96; late-switch: 2.3%, 8/352 week 52–96). Week 96 virologic suppression was 90.7% (692/763) (D/C/F/TAF) and 93.8% (330/352) (late-switch). VF was 1.2% and 1.7%, respectively. No darunavir, primary PI, tenofovir or emtricitabine resistance-associated mutations were observed post-baseline. No patients discontinued for efficacy-related reasons. Few discontinued due to adverse events (2%D/C/F/TAF arm). Improved renal and bone parameters were maintained in the D/C/F/TAF arm and observed in the late-switch arm, with small increases in total cholesterol/high-density-lipoprotein-cholesterol ratio. A study limitation was the lack of a control arm in the week 96 analysis. Through 96 weeks, D/C/F/TAF resulted in low PDVR rates, high virologic suppression rates, very few VFs, and no resistance development. Late-switch results were consistent with D/C/F/TAF week 48 results. EMERALD week 96 results confirm the efficacy, high genetic barrier to resistance and safety benefits of D/C/F/TAF.
Description
MeSH Terms
Adenine
Adult
Aged
Alanine
Anti-HIV agents
Cobicistat
Darunavir
Drug combinations
Drug substitution
Emtricitabine
Emtricitabine, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate drug combination
Female
HIV infections
HIV-1
Humans
Male
Middle aged
Protease inhibitors
Sustained virologic response
Tablets
Tenofovir
Treatment outcome
Viral Load
Adult
Aged
Alanine
Anti-HIV agents
Cobicistat
Darunavir
Drug combinations
Drug substitution
Emtricitabine
Emtricitabine, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate drug combination
Female
HIV infections
HIV-1
Humans
Male
Middle aged
Protease inhibitors
Sustained virologic response
Tablets
Tenofovir
Treatment outcome
Viral Load
DeCS Terms
Adenina
Alanina
Carga viral
Combinación de medicamentos
Comprimidos
Fármacos anti-VIH
Infecciones por VIH
Inhibidores de proteasas
Alanina
Carga viral
Combinación de medicamentos
Comprimidos
Fármacos anti-VIH
Infecciones por VIH
Inhibidores de proteasas
CIE Terms
Keywords
Darunavir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/TAF, Efficacy, Safety, Single-tablet regimen, Switch study
Citation
Eron JJ, Orkin C, Cunningham D, Pulido F, Post FA, De Wit S, et al. Week 96 efficacy and safety results of the phase 3, randomized EMERALD trial to evaluate switching from boosted-protease inhibitors plus emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate regimens to the once daily, single-tablet regimen of darunavir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (D/C/F/TAF) in treatment-experienced, virologically-suppressed adults living with HIV-1. Antiviral Res. 2019 Oct;170:104543