GSK's ViiV says study shows its long-acting HIV shot as effective as
Gilead's daily pill
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[February 23, 2023]
By Maggie Fick
LONDON (Reuters) - British drugmaker GSK's HIV treatment division, ViiV
Healthcare, published data on Wednesday showing its long-acting HIV
injection is as effective as the market-leading daily pill made by
Gilead Sciences Inc.
GSK's ViiV ran the so-called "head to-head" clinical study on its own
injection Cabenuva, which is given every two months, and Gilead's
Biktarvy, an oral pill taken daily.
Analysts and investors are paying close attention to the future of GSK's
HIV business as patents for treatments containing its core HIV compound,
dolutegravir, begin to expire in 2028.
Given existing HIV treatments effectively suppress the virus, the next
frontier for pharma companies is introducing different mechanisms for
delivering the drugs, such as injections, which some people living with
HIV say they prefer to pills.
Gilead, together with rival Merck & Co Inc, launched a study in 2021
that is testing a combination of its experimental HIV drugs to develop
its own long-acting injection.
GSK forecasts that sales from longer-acting HIV injections like Cabenuva
will enable it to manage the loss of exclusivity from dolutegravir. It
forecasts that by 2026, sales from its longer-acting medicines will
generate around 2 billion pounds ($2.4 billion) in revenue, around one
third of HIV sales.
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GSK (GlaxoSmithKline) logo is seen in
this illustration, August 10, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/
The 12-month clinical study involved
670 people living with HIV who prior to the study were virally
suppressed and taking Gilead's Biktarvy. Two thirds of those people
were switched to the Cabenuva injection, while the others remained
on Biktarvy.
The study met its primary goal of showing that Cabenuva was as
effective as Biktarvy, while some 90% of the switchers said they
preferred the long-acting regimen to the daily pill, ViiV said in a
press release.
Reasons given included that they did not have to remember to take a
pill every day and did not have to be reminded of their HIV status
every day, ViiV said.
"The future of HIV treatment and prevention is long-acting,"
Kimberly Smith, head of research and development at ViiV, told
Reuters in an interview ahead of the study's publication. "We’re to
the point where we can improve (peoples’) quality of life, because
HIV is still a very stigmatized disease."
Pfizer Inc and Shionogi & Co Ltd have small stakes in ViiV.
($1 = 0.8267 pounds)
(Reporting by Maggie Fick; Editing by Mark Potter)
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