Efficacy and safety of rilpivirine (TMC278) versus efavirenz at 48 weeks in
treatment-naive HIV-1-infected patients: pooled results from the phase 3
double-blind randomized ECHO and THRIVE Trials.
Author(s): Cohen CJ, Molina JM, Cahn P, Clotet B, Fourie J, Grinsztejn B, Wu H, Johnson MA,
Saag M, Supparatpinyo K, Crauwels H, Lefebvre E, Rimsky LT, Vanveggel S, Williams
P, Boven K; ECHO Study Group; THRIVE Study Group.
Affiliation(s): Community Research Initiative of New England, Boston, MA, USA. ccohen@crine.org
Publication date & source: 2012, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. , 60(1):33-42
BACKGROUND: Pooled analysis of phase 3, double-blind, double-dummy ECHO and
THRIVE trials comparing rilpivirine (TMC278) and efavirenz.
METHODS: Treatment-naive HIV-1-infected adults were randomized 1:1 to rilpivirine
25 mg once daily or efavirenz 600 mg once daily, with background tenofovir
disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) (ECHO) or TDF/FTC,
zidovudine/lamivudine, or abacavir/lamivudine (THRIVE). The primary endpoint was
confirmed response [viral load <50 copies per milliliter; intent-to-treat
time-to-loss-of-virologic-response (ITT-TLOVR) algorithm] at week 48. The pooled
data set enabled analyses of subgroups and predictors of response/virologic
failure.
RESULTS: Confirmed responses were 84% (rilpivirine) and 82% (efavirenz). The
difference in response rates (95% confidence interval) was 2.0% (-2.0% to 6.0%).
The incidence of virologic failure was 9% (rilpivirine) versus 5% (efavirenz).
Responses in ITT-TLOVR and ITT-snapshot analyses were consistent. Responses were
similar for rilpivirine and efavirenz by background regimen, gender, race and
clade. Suboptimal adherence and higher baseline viral load resulted in lower
responses, higher virologic failure, and development of resistance in both
groups; the effects on virologic failure were more apparent with rilpivirine. CD4
cell count increased over time in both groups. Rilpivirine compared with
efavirenz gave smaller incidences of adverse events leading to discontinuation
(3% vs. 8%, respectively), treatment-related grade 2-4 adverse events (16% vs.
31%), rash (3% vs. 14%), dizziness (8% vs. 26%), abnormal dreams/nightmares (8%
vs. 13%), and grade 2-4 lipid abnormalities.
CONCLUSIONS: At week 48, rilpivirine 25 mg once daily and efavirenz 600 mg once
daily had comparable response rates. Rilpivirine had more virologic failures and
improved tolerability versus efavirenz.
|