Havens Joshua P, Bares Sara H, Lyden Elizabeth, Fadul Nada, Swindells Susan
College of Pharmacy, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
College of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2024 Dec 20;12(1):ofae737. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofae737. eCollection 2025 Jan.
The BASE study (NCT03998176), a phase 4, 48-week (W), single-arm, prospective trial, revealed that the use of bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (B/F/TAF) in people with HIV and substance use disorders (PWH/SUD) was safe and effective without emergent antiretroviral resistance despite incomplete adherence. Here, we present the W96 results.
A retrospective analysis of all participants enrolled in the BASE study was completed from W48 to W96. End points of interest at W96 included the proportion of participants with viral suppression (VS; HIV RNA <50 copies/mL [c/mL]), incidence of protocol-defined virologic failure (PDVF; 2 consecutive ≥400 c/mL), safety, adherence (percentage of days covered [PDC]), retention in care, and prevalence of ongoing substance use.
All enrolled BASE participants (n = 43) were included in the W96 analysis. At W48, 21 participants (49%) had achieved VS (intent-to-treat [ITT]). Thirty-six (84%) participants completed W96, with 19 achieving an HIV RNA <50 copies/mL (ITT, 44%; per-protocol, 54%). Seven participants (19%) met PDVF; genotyping was performed on 2, with no evidence of treatment-emergent antiretroviral resistance noted. No safety signals were identified or attributed to B/F/TAF. Adherence to B/F/TAF decreased 18% after W48 (mean PDC: W0-W48, 72%; W48-W96, 54%; < .01). Participants exhibiting adherence rates of ≥4 doses/wk (PDC ≥57%) were more likely to achieve VS (PDC ≥57%, 84.2%, vs PDC <57%, 15.8%; < .01). Retention in care remained stable, and participants continued to use substances through W96.
At W96, the proportion of PWH/SUD achieving VS with B/F/TAF decreased to 44%, along with an adherence decrease of 18%, with no evidence of treatment-emergent HIV drug resistance occurring.
BASE研究(NCT03998176)是一项4期、48周的单臂前瞻性试验,结果显示,对于感染HIV且患有物质使用障碍的人群(PWH/SUD),使用比克替拉韦/恩曲他滨/替诺福韦艾拉酚胺(B/F/TAF)是安全有效的,尽管依从性不完全,但未出现新的抗逆转录病毒耐药性。在此,我们公布第96周的结果。
对BASE研究中所有入组参与者从第48周到第96周进行回顾性分析。第96周的关注终点包括病毒抑制(VS;HIV RNA<50拷贝/毫升[c/mL])的参与者比例、方案定义的病毒学失败(PDVF;连续两次≥400 c/mL)发生率、安全性、依从性(服药天数百分比[PDC])、持续接受治疗情况以及持续物质使用的患病率。
所有入组的BASE参与者(n = 43)均纳入第96周分析。在第48周时,21名参与者(49%)实现了病毒抑制(意向性分析[ITT])。36名(84%)参与者完成了第96周研究,其中19名实现了HIV RNA<50拷贝/毫升(ITT,44%;符合方案分析,54%)。7名参与者(19%)符合PDVF标准;对其中2名进行了基因分型,未发现治疗引起的抗逆转录病毒耐药性证据。未识别出与B/F/TAF相关的安全信号。第48周后对比克替拉韦/恩曲他滨/替诺福韦艾拉酚胺的依从性下降了18%(平均PDC:第0 - 48周,72%;第48 - 96周,54%;P<0.01)。依从率≥4剂/周(PDC≥57%)的参与者更有可能实现病毒抑制(PDC≥57%,84.2%,对比PDC<57%,15.8%;P<0.01)。持续接受治疗情况保持稳定,参与者在第96周时仍继续使用物质。
在第96周时,使用比克替拉韦/恩曲他滨/替诺福韦艾拉酚胺实现病毒抑制的PWH/SUD比例降至44%,同时依从性下降了18%,未出现治疗引起的HIV耐药性证据。