Showing posts with label Taimed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taimed. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2012

Activists Caution HIV+ Patients and their Physicians About Monotherapy in Upcoming Access Program



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 9, 2012

Contact: Nelson Vergel (NelsonVergel@yahoo.com)

Activists Caution HIV+ Patients and their Physicians About
Monotherapy in Upcoming Access Program

New York, February 9, 2012—AIDS activists and physician advocates welcome the news that ViiV Healthcare will be providing  expanded access of dolutegravir (DTG), a new investigational integrase inhibitor for HIV patients with few remaining HIV treatment options.  However, they warn patients and physicians to avoid functional monotherapy, or the introduction of dolutegravir as an "add-on" to a failing treatment regimen if the patient’s virus is resistant to all other currently available antiretroviral drugs (ARVs).  Functional monotherapy has been shown to permit rapid HIV resistance to new medications, which can result in more rapid disease progression, health deterioration, and death.

Currently, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) adult HIV treatment guidelines recommend three ARVs be given in combination to suppress HIV.  But many patients have HIV that has mutated rendering their virus multi-drug resistant (MDR-HIV).  Those with MDR-HIV cannot construct a viable HIV suppressive regimen with current FDA-approved and commercially available ARVs.  "The DHHS guidelines specify that patients that have developed HIV drug resistance to all commercially available antiretrovirals require access to at least two new active drugs to maximize their chances for treatment response.  However, “another new drug to combine with dolutegravir will not be commercially available for at least two years, and some patients cannot wait that long,” said Nelson Vergel, an activist founder of SalvageTherapies.org.  "For them, access to another research drug in combination with DTG is the only hope for survival," added Vergel.

In studies to date, dolutegravir (DTG) appears to be the most potent integrase inhibitor soon to enter the ARV market.  Unlike Gilead's upcoming elvitegravir, DTG has been shown to be effective against HIV that has developed resistance to Merck's Isentress (raltegravir), the only FDA-approved integrase inhibitor currently on the market.

Fortunately, another new ARV that can help patients with MDR-HIV is in active development and clinical trials.  Ibalizumab, a monoclonal antibody from a small biotech firm, Taimed Biologics, may soon be available via patient participation in research studies.  While ibalizumab has yet to enter phase three studies, it can also be provided to patients at risk of death via a named (or single) patient access application permitted by the FDA via a physician’s direct request to Taimed.  However, it is for the company to approve such requests for compassionate access.

There are no documented estimates of how many people have MDR-HIV in the United States.  A report in the Journal of Clinical Infectious Diseases estimates that about 260,000 patients are being treated with HIV in the United States.  However, it is virtually impossible to know how many are now without sufficient treatment options since no registry for such patients exists.  But most experts agree that this population is probably small – possibly up to 10% of the total in treatment.

"With little immune function left and resistance to all approved HIV medications, I have tried desperately to get access to two new drugs to help save my life,” said Christopher Cacioppo, a patient with MDR-HIV in  San Diego who believes he is running out of time. “My doctor tells me that I have little choice but to wait for the dolutegravir expanded access program and some as yet unknown and unavailable second new drug."

A coalition of activists and physicians have been in discussions with Taimed and ViiV for nearly two years to obtain compassionate-use access to their new ARVs in combination for those with MDR-HIV in greatest need of new treatment options.  The AIDS Community Research Initiative of America (ACRIA), a New York City-based community research and education organization, and physicians in San Francisco have proposed solutions to overcome this “two-drug access barrier” in an effort to secure urgent access to patients across the country.

Physicians and providers with patients with MDR-HIV in need of two new ARVs are urged to complete this form.

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Friday, August 06, 2010

What am I going to do now, Nelson?


What am I going to do now, Nelson?
Aug 6, 2010
Hi Nelson, I hope all is well. Last year you told me about the trial with ibalizumab at ACRIA and I received the meds for about 1 year. In the beginning of thet trial the virus became undectadable but then it started to go up again and they took me out of the study. I was in the trial for about 1 year. My doctor changed my regimen to recycle meds...I'm resistant to all of them. I am now on Aptivus, Viread, Norvir and Trizivir. Do you know of any other trials in NYC? Thanks for your help.
Response from Mr. Vergel

I am so sorry that your virus developed resistance to ibalizumab (Taimed's intravenous CD4 monoclonal antibody that may be given once every two weeks).
I am working with ACRIA and two San Francisco doctors in setting up a small expanded access pilot to combine two investigational agents by early summer 2011, but we are still waiting for data. But it is not a done deal. However, one of the drugs may be ibalizumab.
GSK-ViiV are testing a second generation integrase inhibitor (GSK572) in phase II now and we are really hoping it can help people with raltegravir resistance. Some preliminary data show that it may help those with certain integrase mutations. GSK is also testing two non nucleosides in early phase 2. So, it will take at least 8 months to know where we are going with these agents.
AVEXA, an Australian company that has an interesting nucleoside, may be back in the picture after their board reconsidered not dropping their drug due to activist pressure. I am following that drug closely also.
BMS seems to have an entry inhibitor but they are a company that does not like to share information with treatment activists, so it has been a challenge to get them to tell us anything. It is unfortunate that in 2010 we still have this lack of communication going (but they are rare among companies).
Progenics also had a once a week subcutaneous entry inhibitor that looks very exciting. They are also a company that has refused to meet with treatment activists. They are small and may not understand the power that activists have in the present to help advocate for new drugs.
Koronis (http://www.koronispharma.com/KP1461forHIV.html) also has an interesting nucleoside that works very differently than the ones we have right now, but they have not tested it in people like you with a failing regimen.
Some of these companies may or may not agree to provide drug in a compassionate manner for one patient (but remember that you need at least two new active drugs to avoid functional monotherapy). But if your doctor wants to ask them, the FDA has set up a way to do so provided that the companies are willing to help. The FDA procedure is http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/CentersOffices/CDER/ucm163982.htm
It is getting harder and harder for companies to justify spending money on new drugs that attack new targets since they perceive the treatment experienced market to be too small to justify the investment. And many doctors are telling them that people like you and me do not exist anymore. So, it is more important than ever not to fall asleep in treatment activism.
I am focusing a lot of my energies in helping people like you who may fall through the cracks if we do not provide at least two drugs at the same time that your virus does not have resistance to.
One more thing. This is anecdotal but I have seen people in salvage's viral load go down a lot with good daily prophylaxis for herpes (acyclovir, Valtrx, or Famvir) (http://www.aidsmap.com/page/1431675/) twice a day and also with the use of an antibiotic called minoxycline ( http://www.aidsmap.com/page/1438246/), plus their HIV drug regimen. Talk to your doctor about these if you are not taking them already.
Keep in contact with me. I will keep everyone informed through this column as things progress.
Hang in there and please keep in touch with me.
Nelson

Wednesday, June 23, 2010


Pipeline Problems
by David Evans

In the past month, two companies shelved their once-promising experimental HIV drugs, citing the challenging nature of bringing a profitable product to market. Has the overwhelming success of modern-day HIV drugs jeopardized the future of new HIV treatment options?
Since Matt Sharp first learned that he was HIV positive in 1988, life has been about trying to stay one step ahead of the virus. Like many, he started each new HIV drug only to have it eventually fail, followed by a wait for the next one to be available through a clinical trial, expanded access program or U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. That’s just the way it was—trying to outrun HIV and to hold on until science and the pharmaceutical industry developed the next best thing. There were no other options.

The last three years, however, have been kinder to Sharp. In the space of about a year and a half, from June 2006 through January 2008, four new antiretroviral (ARV) treatments were approved, all of them with the potential to work against even the most drug-resistant HIV. After Sharp started a regimen with one of these new treatments, his virus became undetectable for the first time ever. His CD4 cells, which had been depressed for years, started to inch back up, and he continues to do well today.

Sharp is not alone in his Lazarus effect. Thousands of people with multidrug resistant virus, many of whom were once quite sick, have been able to push their viral loads to undetectable levels and restore their health with the newest antiretrovirals, often in combination with each other. But what happens if their HIV accumulates additional mutations and breaks through? Unfortunately, the number of promising agents waiting in the wings for people with drug resistant virus is dwindling.

Two companies, Avexa and Myriad Genetics, suspended development of their experimental ARV treatments over the past month. From press statements, it appears that both companies determined that their drugs—apricitabine (a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor) and bevirimat (a maturation inhibitor)—could not be brought profitably to market. While neither drug was perfect, or had a certain shot at FDA approval, some activists and researchers see their failure as evidence of a paradox—that today’s highly effective drugs are hurting the development of tomorrow’s promising agents.

“The very incentives that got industry involved to develop HIV drugs are now working against us,” says Jay Lalezari, MD, the director of clinical research at Quest Clinical Research in San Francisco, who specializes in the study of drugs for people with multiple drug resistance. “But, you know, money is a driver, and you don’t expect these companies to do it for nothing,” he laments.

“It’s getting harder and harder to hit a homerun with a new HIV drug,” says Bob Huff, a longtime HIV treatment activist from San Diego. “The current drugs are very good, and most doctors and patients are fairly satisfied…. The incentive for companies to invest in developing new HIV drugs is not strong right now.”

“It’s disconcerting,” Sharp agrees. “In terms of practical issues around drug development, we do need to put our heads together and strategize about fixing the things that are broken.”

Sharp is working with Huff and Nelson Vergel, an activist from Houston, to help identify novel ways for people who’ve run out of treatment options to get their hands on multiple experimental agents at one time. The three are also looking at creative ways for companies to get drugs approved that might only benefit treatment-experienced people, a market that is increasingly small and potentially less profitable than ever before.

Sharp, Huff and Vergel express concern about options for people who have already become resistant to current meds. With apricitabine and bevirimat now out of the picture, it only leaves a couple of drugs in an advanced state of development for people with multi-drug-resistant virus. Given the uncertain nature of drug development, however, those drugs could also tank or be delayed, and it could be quite a while before something new is approved.

Sharp is not hopeless, however, and cautions that, “There’s no reason to panic. I definitely don’t think this is the end of the world.”

Lalezari agrees that things are not so bleak, at least not yet. He points out that a number of his patients are still doing well clinically, despite going for many years with very low CD4 counts and detectable virus. He stresses that it is possible to pick a regimen and stick with it for a long time, even if your viral load remains detectable. He encourages people to sit tight on such a regimen and to “try to keep this détente with the virus, and we’ll see if gene therapies or other immune therapies can be brought to bear in the future.”

Vergel is another veteran of the treatment wars and knows what it’s like to face uncertainty. He says that if his current drug regimen fails, he’s not sure what he’ll turn to. He’s not despairing, however, because he feels that he and other activists are making progress with the FDA in figuring out how to make new treatment options available, even when the traditional avenues of approval are a challenge.

In the meantime, he distills his own positive outlook for the many hundreds of people with HIV he interacts with each year through his Internet and public speaking activities. As he sums it up: “You have to give them hope.”
A Good News, Bad News Story

“The bigger picture with HIV therapeutics is a good news, bad news story,” says Paul Sax, MD, clinical director of the HIV program at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “The good news is that HIV treatment success is so high now. The bad news,” he adds, is that “the motivation to develop new drugs, especially drugs to treat resistant virus, has ironically never been lower. There’s this small group of people who have no options even with those newer drugs, and for them, the situation is very discouraging.”

Treatment success has made developing a new drug targeted toward drug-resistant virus problematic in several ways. First, we can no longer simply pit a new drug against a placebo, with no other active drugs to back it up. A number of studies have found that when people take only one active drug at a time, they quickly develop resistance to that drug. For this reason, federal treatment guidelines recommend waiting to start a new treatment, if possible, until two or three active drugs can be combined into a new regimen.

While combining two or three active agents is good for study participants, it's a headache for trial designers. This is because the difference between an experimental drug and a placebo are much smaller and more difficult to measure if their impact is masked by the potency of other powerful drugs.

Sax points to the failure of the drug vicriviroc to demonstrate efficacy over a placebo in treatment experienced participants as a perfect example of this dynamic at work. “The vicriviroc study had the old study design,” Sax explains, “which was [a background regimen chosen by drug resistance tests] plus or minus the [vicriviroc], and they didn’t see any benefit, unless you [only looked at people taking] one other active drug.”

To detect such slight differences you have to either recruit only people with one or fewer active treatments available or design trials with twice as many people. The first option goes against the grain of treatment guidelines, and Sax thinks that the challenging and slow recruitment for a number of recent studies targeting treatment-experienced patients makes it quite unattractive to the companies. Even more unattractive, however, is the second option which almost doubles the cost of the trial.

Vergel has been working with Lalezari and Steve Deeks, MD, professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco, to estimate the number of people in the United States with resistance to all of the existing drugs—the kind of people that Sax says would be a challenge to recruit.

Vergel estimates that there are at least 1,500 such individuals, but that number is not growing rapidly. While this may be good news from a public health perspective, it is bad news for people with highly drug-resistant HIV who are depending on the pharmaceutical industry to develop new treatment options. Corporate board members and shareholders demand the highest profit possible with the least expense. With clinical trials potentially getting more expensive and harder to recruit, and the market size staying small, it’s getting very difficult to meet those demands.

“We’re up against the fact that drug development is about making a profit,” Sharp says, “and unfortunately that’s what we have to deal with.”
What the Future Holds

Sharp, who works frequently with Vergel on treatment advocacy projects, says that there 
are promising treatments further back in the pipeline, and that still other more innovative types of treatment are finally reaching the point where they can move in to clinical trials designed to prove efficacy and safety. What’s more, Sharp remains devoted to advocacy related to eradication: the elimination of HIV from the body.

Lynda Dee, a veteran treatment activist and the president of AIDS Action Baltimore, confirms Sharp’s experience: “Activists have met with companies over the last year, and some have said that they have internal programs looking at new drugs and eradication,” she says. “I’m hopeful that this discontinuation of the development of [apricitabine and bevirimat] doesn’t mean that all of the industry has turned tail and left the HIV field.”

Lalezari thinks that an entry inhibitor from TaiMed Biologics, an integrase inhibitor from ViiV Healthcare, and an attachment inhibitor from Bristol-Myers Squibb might have a shot further down the road. He’s less sanguine than Sharp or Dee about the prospects for antiretroviral drug development in general, given the challenges involved. “I think we could enter a period where there’s an abrupt end to HIV drug development,” he asserts. “That’s not to say that there aren’t new modalities of interest…but in terms of new direct-acting antivirals, it’s going to be very difficult,” he predicts.
Protecting Your Options

Are we on the verge of returning to the days when the best that a long-term survivor could do was guard against opportunistic infections and pray to survive long enough to benefit from the next drugs to come out of the pipeline?

Perhaps not, according to Lalezari. “The thing about the treatment-experienced population, which is astonishing, is that I have a whole bunch of people that I have been following for a number of years now, who are doing just fine. They have detectable virus, and their [CD4] cells are less than 20, but their health is just great, which is not explained in my understanding of the universe.”

Sax stresses that going off treatment would be a lot worse than staying on a failing regimen. “You know, all attempts of treatment interruptions of people with drug resistant virus met with bad outcomes,” he says, “So one thing for sure, is that people should stay on something. The question of what is more difficult. It’s never been well studied.”

In the end, what’s at stake is whether new drug development can stay ahead of HIV-positive people’s needs for new treatment options. Vergel points out that those who’ve yet to develop drug resistance can preserve their future options by finding a tolerable effective treatment and adhering to it religiously. In this regard, the possibility of a dry spell in new drug approvals could encourage people not to take for granted that new options will inevitably keep coming down the pike. “Fear,” Vergel says, “can be a good motivator” by way of emphasizing the importance of treatment adherence.

For people who’ve run out of new options, there is still reason for hope. It is possible to stay clinically healthy despite a failing ARV regimen, as Sax and Lalezari point out, and there are ways to minimize the risk of developing resistance to the experimental agents that might come later. Vergel tries to remind people of that and tells them “to not come from a place of despair.”

Sax thinks it will be helpful for researchers and health care providers to pool together their knowledge and resources to figure out the best care models for people who’ve run out of treatment options, arguing that since few providers have large numbers of such individuals it is difficult to become an “expert” in treating them. He thinks that activists and groups such as the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research in Washington, DC, can aid in that process.

Despite the challenges involved in developing the next generation of HIV therapies, Sax believes in remaining optimistic, especially with his patients who’ve run out of options. He tells them: “Press on. Drug development has helped us in the past. We hope it does again in the future.”


Wednesday, May 12, 2010

The Forgotten Minority: HIV+ Patients With No Available HIV treatment Options


Most successful HIV medication combinations require 3 medications that are fully active, but a small portion of long term survivors with long treatment history and accumulated HIV resistance mutations do not have the luxury of constructing a viable regimen to save their lives.

Several potent antiretrovirals (ARVs) in the past 4 years have enabled many patients with multidrug resistance (MDR) to suppress their HIV viral load.

Due to several factors, there is still a relatively small number of patients that have developed resistance or toxicity to the new ARV’s

To protect them from functional monotherapy, these patients are not allowed in pre- approval studies.

Some HIV ARV’s in phase II studies may potentially help those patients, but combining them after their respective approvals may take at least 3 or 4 years.

Some of these patients may be at risk of clinical decline and death if no viable regimen is available for them before 2012

We do not know how many of these patients there are in the U.S.

I performed a physician survey with the help of some researchers and activists to find out how many patients may be present in the U.S. with HIV multidrug resistance in deep salvage (one or zero active medications to treat their HIV).

These figures summarize our findings (click on figures to enlarge):





These are the HIV medications in current development. The ones with an asterisk are the ones that may work for patients with no options left.



The closest ones to approval are Taimed's ibalizumab ( an IV once every two weeks) which may be two years away from approval, and GSK's integrase inhibitor GSK572 (2-3 years) . Avexa recently stopped the development of   Apricitabine and Myriad may follow suit with their maturation inhibitor. A combination of at least two compounds will probably not be feasible until 2013.  Efforts towards creating an expanded access program using multiple investigational agents is currently under way but it may not be a possibility until 2011.  All companies and the FDA are welcoming the concept in its early stages.  I will provide an update during the last quarter of 2010.

I wish we could help patients who need help now.

Nelson Vergel

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