AI Article Synopsis

  • Cabotegravir is an investigational long-acting injectable medication for HIV preexposure prophylaxis, designed to prevent infection.
  • A phase I study measured cabotegravir levels in the blood and tissues associated with HIV transmission after oral and injectable doses, with 19 participants enrolled and monitored for 52 weeks.
  • Results showed effective cabotegravir concentrations in plasma and relevant tissues, establishing strong correlations that may inform its preventive use, though injection-site reactions were commonly reported.

Article Abstract

Aims: Cabotegravir is an integrase strand transfer inhibitor in clinical development as long-acting (LA) injectable HIV preexposure prophylaxis.

Methods: This phase I study assessed pharmacokinetics of cabotegravir in plasma and anatomical sites associated with sexual HIV-1 transmission after repeated oral and single intramuscular (IM) LA dosing in healthy adults. Following a 28-day oral lead-in period of cabotegravir 30 mg and a washout period of 14-42 days, participants were administered a single ultrasound-guided gluteal IM cabotegravir LA 600-mg injection. The study objective was to characterize cabotegravir concentrations in plasma, cervical, vaginal and rectal tissues, and cervicovaginal and rectal fluids and up to Week 12 after IM injection.

Results: Nineteen participants enrolled and 16 completed the study through Week 52. Cabotegravir was detected in plasma and all tissues and fluids. Median plasma cabotegravir concentrations exceeded the in vitro protein-adjusted 90% maximal inhibitory concentration through Week 12. Median tissue- and fluid-to-plasma cabotegravir concentration ratios across all visits were 0.32 for rectal fluid and 0.08-0.16 for other tissues and fluids. Adjusted R coefficients between cabotegravir concentrations in plasma and cervical, vaginal and rectal tissues were 0.78, 0.79 and 0.90, respectively. Injection-site reactions were common (88% of participants) and were mostly grade 1 in intensity (82%). Two participants reported 11 non-drug-related serious adverse events.

Conclusion: Concentrations of cabotegravir in tissues and fluids were proportional to plasma over time, with strong correlations between tissue and plasma concentrations. Cabotegravir LA tissue-to-plasma ratios may be important for understanding its use as preexposure prophylaxis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9290068PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14980DOI Listing

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