JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, N.I.H., EXTRAMURAL
REVIEW
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Cabotegravir long-acting for HIV-1 prevention.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with daily Truvada has demonstrated clinical efficacy against HIV-1 acquisition that correlates with high adherence. Long-acting antiretroviral drugs offer an alternative to daily regimens and may improve PrEP adherence. This review summarizes the preclinical nonhuman primate studies for evaluating the efficacy of cabotegravir long-acting as PrEP and the ongoing phase 2a studies assessing safety, tolerability, and acceptability of cabotegravir long-acting.

RECENT FINDINGS: Cabotegravir is an HIV-1 integrase strand transfer inhibitor with intrinsic properties that permit its formulation as a long-acting injectable suspension. In clinical evaluation, cabotegravir long-acting has a half-life that permits infrequent dosing, possibly once every 3 months. In validated macaque models, cabotegravir long-acting demonstrated high protection against both rectal and vaginal transmission at clinically achievable drug concentrations.

SUMMARY: PrEP, after approval of Truvada, continues to evolve to address adherence limitations of daily dosing. As a long-acting injectable antiretroviral drug, cabotegravir long-acting permits quarterly dosing and demonstrated high efficacy in macaque models supporting dose selection and clinical development. Clinical studies have confirmed dose selection in phase 2a trials with cabotegravir long-acting to ultimately lead to phase 2b/3 PrEP efficacy trials.

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