Darunavir is a nonpeptidic protease inhibitor with a high genetic barrier to resistance that evolved from a prototype compound synthesized using structure-based design strategies. Once-daily darunavir at 800mg boosted with 100mg of ritonavir is an effective antiretroviral agent indicated for HIV-infected treatment-naïve patients. In treatment-experienced patients, darunavir was initially approved for twice-daily administration boosted with twice-daily ritonavir at 600mg and 100mg, respectively. Recently, once-daily darunavir/ritonavir was approved for use in treatment-experienced adult patients with viremia with no darunavir resistance mutations. In treatment-experienced patients with viral suppression, switching from an antiretroviral taken twice-daily to a once-daily dose is an attractive option to promote greater patient acceptability and adherence, and potentially minimize side effects and toxicities. Because of darunavir/ritonavir's high genetic barrier to resistance and well-established safety profile at a once-daily dose, switching patients with virologic suppression from twice-daily darunavir/ritonavir to once-daily darunavir/ritonavir will likely confer attributes more favorable to patients through a simplified dosing schedule and lower potential for lipid elevation without the loss of virologic control. DRIVESHAFT is a 48-week Phase 4, randomized, open label, comparative study. The study will be conducted in 60 HIV-1 infected, antiretroviral experienced, virologically-suppressed patients on regimens containing darunavir 600mg/ ritonavir 100mg twice-daily and a minimum of two other antiretrovirals, with a history of 0-1 darunavir-associated resistance mutations. Subjects will be randomized 1:1 to switch to darunavir 800mg/ ritonavir 100mg once-daily or continue on their current regimen. Rates of virologic suppression of once-daily darunavir/ritonavir regimens relative to darunavir/ritonavir twice-daily regimens will be compared, and safety, change from baseline fasting lipid parameters, and adherence will be evaluated.
The Darunavir/Ritonavir In Virologically-suppressed Experienced Subjects Halving an Antiretroviral by Finetuning Therapy (DRIVESHAFT) study was a prospective, randomized, single-centre, two-arm, open-label 48-week pilot study. The aim of DRIVESHAFT was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of switching the DRV/r component from twice-daily to once-daily 800/100 mg compared with those remaining on current therapy among HIV-1-infected, treatment-experienced patients with 0-1 DRV RAMs on a stable regimen including twice-daily DRV/r 600/100 mg. The study was conducted at The Ruth M Rothstein CORE Center (Chicago, IL, USA). The sample size was determined upon feasibility as a single-site study and not powered for non-inferiority. Study enrolment was planned for 60 participants randomized 1:1 to one of two arms: the switch arm from DRV/r 600/100 mg twice daily to DRV/r 800/100 mg once/daily plus current ARV regimen including a minimum of two other agents or remain on current ARV regimen with minimum of three agents inclusive of twice-daily DRV/r. Two DRV 400 mg tablets were used in the once-daily DRV/r arm, with DRV 600 mg tablets administered in the twice-daily DRV/r arm. DRIVESHAFT inclusion criteria included HIV-1-infected adult (\>18 years of age), HIV-1 RNA measurements \<40 copies/ml (using a local assay) over at least 12 weeks on a stable regimen including DRV/r 600/100 mg twice daily plus a minimum of two other ARVs, screening HIV-1 RNA\<40 copies/ml, have undergone genotypic testing at any time prior to starting current antiretroviral therapy (ART) with evidence of \<2 cumulative DRV RAMs, CD4+ T-cell count \>50 cells/mm3, and a negative serum pregnancy test at screening visit Participants who were randomized and received at least one dose of study medication were included in efficacy analysis, and the primary end point was the proportion of participants with HIV-1 RNA\<40 copies/ml at week 48.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
Subjects randomized 1:1 to remain on regimens containing combination Darunavir 600mg plus Ritonavir 100mg twice-daily
Subjects randomized 1:1 to switch to from combination Darunavir 600mg plus Ritonavir 100mg twice-daily at baseline to the experimental combination Darunavir 800mg plus Ritonavir 100mg once-daily for 48 weeks
Ruth M. Rothstein CORE Center
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Primary Efficacy Endpoint for Virologic Suppression in HIV-infected Subjects
Proportion of subjects with plasma HIV-1 RNA \<40 c/mL at Week 48 using a Missing, Switch, or Discontinuation = Failure (MSDF) algorithm as codified by the FDA's "snapshot" algorithm
Time frame: 48 weeks after randomization to study medication
Secondary Efficacy Endpoints
•Proportion of subjects with plasma HIV-1 RNA \>200 c/mL at Week 24
Time frame: Within 24 weeks after randomization to study medication
Change in Total Cholesterol From Baseline to 48 Weeks
Absolute change in lipid parameter (total cholesterol mg/dl) of once-daily versus twice-daily darunavir/ritonavir containing regimens over 48 weeks
Time frame: Within 48 weeks of randomization baseline to study medications
Absolute Value Change in CD4+ From Baseline to Week 48
Absolute value increase in CD4+ cells/mm3 from baseline to week 48
Time frame: 48 weeks after randomization baseline to study medications
Assessment of Virologic Failure
•Assess the development of viral resistance in subjects experiencing virological failure
Time frame: Within 48 weeks of randomization to study medications
Number of Participants With Greater Than 95% Adherence at 48 Weeks
Characterize adherence to once-daily versus twice-daily darunavir/ritonavir containing regimens using the Modified Medication Adherence Self-Report Inventory (M-MASRI) scale
Time frame: Within 48 weeks of randomization to study medications
Secondary Efficacy Endpoints
•Proportion of subjects with plasma HIV-1 RNA \<40 c/mL at Week 24
Time frame: week 24
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