July 2018
by Jeremiah Johnson
Since 2011, HIV prevention has undergone a true revolution. With three major studies (HPTN 052, PARTNER, and Opposites Attract) now showing zero new infections linked to an HIV positive person who has successfully suppressed their virus through antiretroviral treatment, it is now apparent that being “undetectable” means that a person living with HIV will not transmit the virus sexually. TDF/FTC pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) continues to be a game changer, with an expanding body of literature demonstrating its essential role in driving down new infections. Most notably, a rapid scale-up of PrEP in Australia since 2016 has corresponded with a 35% decline in the number of new diagnoses in gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in New South Wales and a 44% decline in the number of early infections in that same population. While youth continue to be left behind in the fight against HIV, the FDA’s recent approval of PrEP for adolescents is a long overdue and essential step toward protecting this vulnerable population from HIV infection.
While we have made tremendous strides, the revolution is far from over. Sustainably ending HIV as an epidemic for all affected communities will require even more options for prevention as we continue to advocate for a vaccine and a cure. Promising open label extension studies for the dapivirine vaginal ring– where researchers in the HOPE and DREAM studies estimate that they have both seen over a 50% decline in the number of new infections– provide hope that a better option for cisgender women is on the way. A regulatory application for the ring was also submitted to the European Medicines Agency in 2017. With several barriers to adherence for oral PrEP limiting the efficacy of that intervention for many individuals, the promise of long acting injectable cabotegravir– currently the focus of two phase III studies with results anticipated in late 2021 (MSM and transgender women) and early 2022 (cisgender women)– may eventually provide the option of injections every two months as opposed to daily pill taking. While funding cuts threaten to completely derail future possibilities for microbicide research, innovative products such as enemas containing tenofovir, rectal and vaginal gels, and multipurpose technologies that may one day protect individuals from other STIs and pregnancy in addition to HIV remain in the pipeline. Alternative oral PrEP regimens continue to be researched, most notably TAF/FTC (Gilead Inc.’s “Descovy”), however advocates will need to ensure that future PrEP and other preventive technologies are priced in a way that ensures access for marginalized populations around the world.
The following charts provide a quick snapshot of the PrEP and microbicides pipeline as of July 2018. We have mostly included interventions currently in clinical trials; other innovations such as long acting implants and microneedle array patches remain in preclinical development. Also of note, MK-8591, a long acting oral ARV that may only require weekly dosing for treatment, has also been shown to protect rhesus macaques against SHIV infection at weekly doses of 1.3 and 0.43 mg/kg, which would translate into weekly doses of less than 250 μg in humans. Clinical trials have not yet been announced for MK-8591 as PrEP but are anticipated.
Agent |
Class/Type |
Manufacturer/Sponsor |
Delivery |
Status |
ORAL FORMULATIONS | ||||
TAF + FTC | NtRTI/NRTI | Gilead Sciences | Oral PrEP | Phase III |
|
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TAF + FTC | NtRTI/NRTI | CONRAD | Oral PrEP | Phase I (in cisgender women) |
|
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F/TDF, Truvada
F/TAF, Descovy |
NtRTI/NRTI | CONRAD | Oral PrEP | Phase II |
|
||||
Raltegravir
Raltegravir + Lamivudine
|
INSTI
INSTI/NRTI |
Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust
|
Oral PrEP | Phase IV |
|
||||
Genvoya (EVG + COBI + FTC + TAF) | INSTI/NtRTI/NRTI | Emory University | Oral PrEP | Phase I |
|
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LONG-ACTING FORMULATIONS | ||||
Cabotegravir
NCT03164564 (Cisgender Women) NCT02720094 (MSM and Transgender Women)
|
INSTI | ViiV Healthcare | IM | Phase IIb/III (HPTN 083)
Phase III (HPTN 084) |
|
Agent |
Class/Type |
Manufacturer/Sponsor |
Delivery |
Status |
MICROBICIDE RINGS, GELS, ENEMAS, FILMS, AND OTHER INSERTABLES
|
||||
Dapivirine
NCT03234400 (3 Month Vaginal Ring) MTN-026 and MTN-033 (Rectal Gel) NCT02858037 (HOPE) (DREAM) |
NNRTI
|
IPM (vaginal ring/gel/film); DAIDS/MTN (rectal gel)
|
Monthly vaginal ring | Phase IIIb |
3-month vaginal ring | Phase I | |||
Rectal gel | Phase I | |||
|
||||
Tenofovir | NtRTI
|
CONRAD | Vaginal ring | Phase I |
|
||||
TAF/Elvitegravir | NRTI/INSTI | CONRAD | Vaginal or Rectal Insert | Advanced preclinical;Phase 1 |
Tenofovir | NtRTI | Johns Hopkins University | Enema | Phase I |
|
||||
IQP-0528 | NNRTI | ImQuest U19 | Rectal gel | Phase I |
|
||||
Griffithsin
NCT02875119 (Vaginal Gel) |
Cell-viral fusion–blocking agent | U19 University of Louisville/University of Pittsburgh (Enema)
Population Council (Vaginal Gel) |
Enema | Phase I |
|
||||
PC-1005
NCT03408899 (Rectal Gel) |
NNRTI, ZA, CGN | Population Council/MTN | Rectal gel | Phase I |
|
||||
DS003 | EI | IPM | Vaginal tablet | |
|
||||
Dapivirine + DS003 | NNRTI/EI | IPM | Vaginal ring | Preclinical |
Darunavir | PI | IPM | Vaginal ring | Preclinical |
MULTIPURPOSE TECHNOLOGIES | ||||
Tenofovir + levonorgestrel | NtRTI/HC | CONRAD | Vaginal ring | Phase I |
|
||||
Dapivirine + levonorgestrel | NNRTI/HC | IPM | Vaginal ring | Phase I |
|
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MB66 | Anti-HIV + anti-HSV antibodies | LeafBio, Inc. | Vaginal film | Phase I |
|
ABBREVIATIONS
CGN: carrageenan
COBI: cobicistat
EI: entry inhibitor
EVG: elvitegravir
FTC: emtricitabine
HC: hormonal contraception
HSV: herpes simplex virus
IM: intramuscular
IPM: International Partnership for Microbicides
MVC: maraviroc
MTN: Microbicide Trials Network
INSTI: integrase strand transfer inhibitor
NNRTI: non-nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitor
NRTI: nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitor
NtRTI: nucleotide analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitor
PI: protease inhibitor
PrEP: pre-exposure prophylaxis
TAF: tenofovir alafenamide
ZA: zinc acetate