
Susan Swindells, MBBS, on the ATLAS Trial
Susan Swindells, MBBS, discusses the ATLAS trial evaluating long-acting intramuscular injections of cabotegravir/rilpivrine in treatment-experienced individuals.
The 48-week results of the ATLAS study indicate that the regimen of monthly intramuscular injections of
The findings of the study were presented in an oral abstract presentation at the
Interview Transcript: (modified slightly for readability)
Contagion®: Can you summarize the ATLAS trial?
Dr. Swindells: "So, my trial is called ATLAS, and it's a phase 3 study of a different way of taking anti-HIV medicines by injection as opposed to daily oral therapy. There are 2 drugs involved in the study, one’s an inhibitor called cabotegravir and one's a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor called rilpivirine. They're both formulated to make long-acting injections possible up to a month apart, perhaps, in the future even less frequently, but in this study, they were given to patients a month apart.
So, the study enrolled patients on conventional oral therapy that had virologic suppression, they were randomized to continue their daily oral therapy or to go on to monthly injections of cabotegravir/rilpivirine. At 48 weeks we looked at the results and they were very similar in terms of the number of patients in each arm that had detectable virus — very small numbers in each arm – more than 90% suppressed in both arms. It was a non-inferiority designed so non-inferiority was met and there were 3 virologic failures in the investigational arm with the injections."
For more information on cabotegravir/rilpivirine studies presented at CROI 2019, check out our coverage on the
Newsletter
Stay ahead of emerging infectious disease threats with expert insights and breaking research. Subscribe now to get updates delivered straight to your inbox.