A new, integrase inhibitor–based, one-pill, once-daily combination has been approved for treatment of HIV.
Bictegravir (BIC) is an unboosted HIV integrase inhibitor with a high in vitro barrier to resistance. The U.S. FDA has now approved the combination of BIC with emtricitabine and tenofovir alafenamide in a single-pill formulation (BIC/FTC/TAF; Biktarvy).
In phase III randomized trials in treatment-naive adults with HIV infection, virologic suppression with Biktarvy was noninferior to dolutegravir (DTG)/abacavir (ABC)/lamivudine (3TC) and DTG plus TAF/FTC (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2017 and Lancet 2017; 390:2063). In randomized trials in people who were already virologically suppressed on a protease-inhibitor regimen or on DTG, ABC, and 3TC, Biktarvy maintained virologic control.
Biktarvy dosed as one pill per day is indicated for initial treatmen…
Author
DisclosuresGrant/Research SupportNIH
Editorial BoardsUpToDate; ID Images (idimages.org); Infectious Diseases Society of America COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines; International Antiviral Society–USA (Guidelines Committee)
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesHIV Medicine Association; Infectious Diseases Society of America (Board of Directors)
DisclosuresGrant/Research SupportNIH
Editorial BoardsUpToDate; ID Images (idimages.org); Infectious Diseases Society of America COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines; International Antiviral Society–USA (Guidelines Committee)
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesHIV Medicine Association; Infectious Diseases Society of America (Board of Directors)