1. Academic Validation
  2. Inflammatory Biomarker Reduction With Fostemsavir Over 96 Weeks in Heavily Treatment-Experienced Adults With Multidrug-Resistant HIV-1 in the BRIGHTE Study

Inflammatory Biomarker Reduction With Fostemsavir Over 96 Weeks in Heavily Treatment-Experienced Adults With Multidrug-Resistant HIV-1 in the BRIGHTE Study

  • Open Forum Infect Dis. 2024 Aug 26;11(9):ofae469. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofae469.
Andrew Clark 1 Manyu Prakash 1 Shiven Chabria 2 Amy Pierce 3 Jose R Castillo-Mancilla 3 Marcia Wang 4 Fangfang Du 4 Allan R Tenorio 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 ViiV Healthcare, Brentford, UK.
  • 2 ViiV Healthcare, Branford, Connecticut, USA.
  • 3 ViiV Healthcare, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
  • 4 GSK, Collegeville, Pennsylvania, USA.
Abstract

Background: Fostemsavir, a first-in-class attachment inhibitor that binds to the viral envelope protein gp120, is approved for heavily treatment-experienced persons with HIV-1 with limited treatment options. We explored changes in immunologic and coagulopathy parameters in the BRIGHTE study: a phase 3 trial that evaluated fostemsavir plus optimized background therapy in heavily treatment-experienced adults with multidrug-resistant HIV-1.

Methods: CD4+ T-cell count, CD4+/CD8+ ratio, soluble CD14, soluble CD163, and D-dimer levels were measured through 96 weeks in participants with 1 or 2 fully active antiretroviral agents available at screening. No formal statistical analyses were performed.

Results: Among 272 participants, increases were observed from baseline to week 96 in CD4+ T-cell count (mean increase, +205 cells/mm3) and CD4+/CD8+ ratio (mean increase, +0.24). The proportion of observed participants with a CD4+/CD8+ ratio ≥0.45 increased from 9% (25/272) at baseline to 40% (85/213) at week 96. From baseline to week 96, we also observed trends toward decreases in the following (mean [SD] change): soluble CD14, -738.2 (981.8) µg/L; soluble CD163, -138.0 (193.4) µg/L; and D-dimer, -0.099 (0.521) mg/L fibrinogen-equivalent units. Decreases in biomarkers were generally observed among subgroups by baseline disease characteristics, virologic response, and CD4+ T-cell count.

Conclusions: These data suggest that heavily treatment-experienced persons with multidrug-resistant HIV-1 treated with fostemsavir + optimized background therapy may have improvements in immune parameters, including markers of monocyte activation and coagulopathy.

Clinical trials registration: NCT02362503 (ClinicalTrials.gov; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT02362503).

Keywords

CD4+ T-cell count; CD4+/CD8+ ratio; biomarkers; fostemsavir; heavily treatment experienced.

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