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Patient-Reported Outcomes Through 1 Year of an HIV-1 Clinical Trial Evaluating Long-Acting Cabotegravir and Rilpivirine Administered Every 4 or 8 Weeks (ATLAS-2M)

Author

Listed:
  • Vasiliki Chounta

    (ViiV Healthcare)

  • Edgar T. Overton

    (University of Alabama at Birmingham)

  • Anthony Mills

    (Men’s Health Foundation)

  • Susan Swindells

    (University of Nebraska Medical Center)

  • Paul D. Benn

    (ViiV Healthcare)

  • Simon Vanveggel

    (Janssen Pharmaceutica NV)

  • Rodica Solingen-Ristea

    (Janssen Pharmaceutica NV)

  • Yuanyuan Wang

    (GlaxoSmithKline)

  • Krischan J. Hudson

    (ViiV Healthcare
    Horizon Therapeutics)

  • Mark S. Shaefer

    (ViiV Healthcare
    Hengrui USA)

  • David A. Margolis

    (ViiV Healthcare
    Brii Biosciences)

  • Kimberly Y. Smith

    (ViiV Healthcare)

  • William R. Spreen

    (ViiV Healthcare)

Abstract

Background Advances in HIV-1 therapeutics have led to the development of a range of daily oral treatment regimens, which share similar high efficacy rates. Consequently, more emphasis is being placed upon the individual’s experience of treatment and impact on quality of life. The first long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1 (long-acting cabotegravir + rilpivirine [CAB + RPV LA]) may address challenges associated with oral treatment for HIV-1, such as stigma, pill burden/fatigue, drug–food interactions, and adherence. Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) collected in an HIV-1 clinical trial (ATLAS-2M; NCT03299049) comparing participants’ experience with two dosing regimens (every 4 weeks [Q4W] vs. every 8 weeks [Q8W]) of CAB + RPV LA are presented herein. Methods PRO endpoints evaluated through 48 weeks of therapy included treatment satisfaction (HIV Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire [HIVTSQ]), treatment acceptance (“General Acceptance” domain of the Chronic Treatment Acceptance [ACCEPT®] questionnaire), acceptability of injections (Perception of Injection [PIN] questionnaire), treatment preference (questionnaire), and reasons for switching to/continuing long-acting therapy (exploratory endpoint; questionnaire). Participants were randomized 1:1 to receive CAB + RPV LA Q8W or Q4W. Results were stratified by prior CAB + RPV exposure in either preplanned or post hoc analyses. Results Overall, 1045 participants were randomized to the Q8W (n = 522) and Q4W (n = 523) regimens; 37% (n = 391/1045) had previously received CAB + RPV in ATLAS. For participants without prior CAB + RPV exposure, large increases from baseline were reported in treatment satisfaction in both long-acting arms (HIVTSQ status version), with Q8W dosing statistically significantly favored at Weeks 24 (p = 0.036) and 48 (p = 0.004). Additionally, improvements from baseline were also observed in the “General Acceptance” domain of the ACCEPT questionnaire in both long-acting arms for participants without prior CAB + RPV exposure; however, no statistically significant difference was observed between arms at either timepoint (Week 24, p = 0.379; Week 48, p = 0.525). Significant improvements (p

Suggested Citation

  • Vasiliki Chounta & Edgar T. Overton & Anthony Mills & Susan Swindells & Paul D. Benn & Simon Vanveggel & Rodica Solingen-Ristea & Yuanyuan Wang & Krischan J. Hudson & Mark S. Shaefer & David A. Margol, 2021. "Patient-Reported Outcomes Through 1 Year of an HIV-1 Clinical Trial Evaluating Long-Acting Cabotegravir and Rilpivirine Administered Every 4 or 8 Weeks (ATLAS-2M)," The Patient: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, Springer;International Academy of Health Preference Research, vol. 14(6), pages 849-862, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:patien:v:14:y:2021:i:6:d:10.1007_s40271-021-00524-0
    DOI: 10.1007/s40271-021-00524-0
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