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Gilead Presents Data on Investigational HIV-1 Capsid Inhibitor GS-6207 as a Potential Component of Long-Acting HIV Therapy

Published: 2019-11-08 13:00:00 ET
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─ Phase 1 Results Support Up to Six-month Dosing Interval and Advancement Into Later-Stage Clinical Trials ─

FOSTER CITY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Gilead Sciences, Inc. (NASDAQ:GILD) today announced data on GS-6207, an investigational, novel, selective, first-in-class inhibitor of HIV-1 capsid function, that support its further development and potential role as a component in long-acting HIV combination therapy. New data from two Phase 1 studies demonstrate that GS-6207 has potent antiviral activity and a potential dosing interval of up to every six months. In both clinical studies, GS-6207 was generally well tolerated and no serious adverse events were reported. Additional in vitro virology study results suggest GS-6207 can potentially be used in a broad range of people living with HIV regardless of their treatment history. These data were presented at the 17th European AIDS Conference (EACS) in Basel, Switzerland.

“These data reinforce the potential of HIV capsid inhibition as a new long-acting therapeutic pathway to achieving durable viral suppression and support further clinical development of GS-6207,” said Diana Brainard, MD, Senior Vice President, HIV and Emerging Viruses, Gilead Sciences. “Based on these promising results, we look forward to initiating additional studies to evaluate GS-6207 in people living with HIV later this year.”

Gilead will be initiating enrollment of two new clinical trials of GS-6207 in combination with other antiretroviral agents in people living with HIV – a Phase 2/3 study (NCT03739866) in heavily treatment-experienced people living with multidrug resistant HIV-1, as well as a Phase 2 study (NCT04143594) in treatment-naïve people living with HIV. GS-6207 will be administered via a two-week oral lead-in, followed by a subcutaneous injection every six months.

“Long-acting HIV therapy is an exciting approach that could offer more convenience for people living with the disease who prefer not to take a daily pill,” said Eric Daar, MD, Chief of Division of HIV Medicine, Lundquist Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. “The potency and safety profiles of GS-6207, as demonstrated so far in research and early stage clinical trials, show its potential as a core component of a future long-acting HIV therapy.”

Data on GS-6207 presented at EACS 2019 include:

  • Safety and PK of subcutaneous of GS-6207, a novel HIV-1 capsid inhibitor (oral presentation PS13/1)

In this Phase 1 study,40 healthy participants were randomized to receive either subcutaneous GS‑6207 at doses of 30, 100, 300 or 450 mg (n=8 for each cohort), or placebo (n=8). GS-6207 was generally safe and well tolerated. The most common AEs were injection site erythema (47 percent) and pain (38 percent), all of which were mild and resolved in a few days. The PK profile was characterized by prolonged exposure, with measurable concentrations for at least 32 weeks. These data suggest that GS-6207 may have a potential to be administered up to every six months.

  • Single doses of long-acting capsid inhibitor GS-6207 administered by subcutaneous injection are safe and efficacious in people living with HIV (poster PE3/17)

This is an ongoing double-blind, placebo-controlled, proof-of-concept Phase 1b study in people living with HIV who are capsid inhibitor-naïve. Participants were randomized to receive either a single dose of GS-6207 (20, 50, 150 or 450 mg) administered subcutaneously (n=6 for each cohort) or placebo (n=2 for each cohort). The primary endpoint was maximum reduction of HIV-1 RNA through 10 days of treatment. Across 20 to 450 mg cohorts, mean maximum reduction in HIV-1 RNA by Day 10 ranged from 1.4 to 2.2 log10copies/mL; these reductions were all significantly greater than those observed in the placebo groups (all p