CROI 2013: CCR5/CCR2 Inhibitor Cenicriviroc Has Both Anti-HIV and Anti-inflammatory Effects

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Cenicriviroc, which blocks both CCR5 and CCR2 receptors on immune cells, is effective against HIV, better tolerated than current antiretrovirals, and has immunomodulatory activity that may reduce inflammation, according to a presentation yesterday at the 20th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2013) in Atlanta.

Under development by Tobira Therapeutics, cenicriviroc (formerly TBR-652) blocks CCR5, 1 of the 2 co-receptors HIV uses to enter T-cells. It also interferes with CCR2, a receptor that binds to monocyte chemo-attractant protein 1 (MCP-1), a cytokine that promotes migration of monocytes.

Though not fully understood, CCR2 plays a role in inflammation and is implicated in a range of conditions including liver fibrosis, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disease. A growing body of evidence indicates that chronic inflammation plays a role in a variety of non-AIDS conditions, helping explain why HIV positive people still have higher mortality than age-matched HIV negative people.

Joseph Gathe from Therapeutic Concepts in Houston described findings from Study 202, an ongoing, Phase 2b study of cenicriviroc vs efavirenz (Sustiva). The trial will last 48 weeks; Gathe presented data from a 24-week primary analysis.

In addition to HIV parameters, the researchers also looked at immune and inflammatory biomarkers to assess the drug's effect on CCR2, including levels of MCP-1 (the ligand or binding partner of CCR2) and soluble CD14 (sCD14, a marker of monocyte activation). Gathe explained that higher sCD14 was an independent predictor of all-cause death in the SMART treatment interruption trial.

This dose-finding study included 143 antiretroviral-naive adults who were tested to ensure that they had exclusively CCR5-tropic (using only the CCR5 co-receptor) virus. Although more than 90% of participants were men the group was racially/ethnically diverse, with about 60% white, 30% African American, and 25% Latino/Hispanic. The average CD4 T-cell count was approximately 400 cells/mm3 and about 20% had high viral load (100,000 copies/mL or more) at baseline.

Participants were randomly allocated (2:2:1) to receive 100 mg or 200 mg once-daily cenicriviroc or 600 mg once-daily efavirenz, both with co-formulated tenofovir/emtricitabine (Truvada). When the study was started, only a 50 mg cenicriviroc pill was available, requiring people to take 2 or 4 cenicriviroc or matching placebo tablets with a meal in the morning, 1 efavirenz tablet or placebo at bedtime, and Truvada whenever desired.

 

Results

o   76% with 100 mg cenicriviroc;

o   73% with 200 mg cenicriviroc;

o   71% with efavirenz.

 

"When used in combination with [Truvada] in treatment-naive HIV-1+ adults with CCR5-tropic virus, both once-daily cenicriviroc doses were effective, resulted in fewer discontinuations due to adverse events compared with [efavirenz] and decreased total and LDL cholesterol," the researchers concluded. "The effect of cenicriviroc on sCD14 merits further evaluation in clinical trials."

Gathe acknowledged that the regimen used in this study was complex and difficult to adhere to, and is "probably not a reliable component of modern HAART." The larger number of dropouts among cenicriviroc recipients -- which led to the higher failure rate -- may have been in part attributable to the difficulty of the regimen. Since that time, however, a higher-dose single tablet has been developed and fixed-dose combinations with other agents are in the works.

In the future the success of HIV treatment may be assessed not just based on viral load reduction and CD4 cell increases, Gathe suggested at a CROI press conference, but also on whether it has beneficial effects on other endpoints beyond just HIV control.

SEE ALSO: CROI 2013: New Antiretroviral Agents: Cenicriviroc [VIDEO]

3/6/13

Reference

J Gathe, J Cade, E DeJesus, et al. Week-24 Primary Analysis of Cenicriviroc vs Efavirenz, in Combination with Emtricitabine/Tenofovir, in Treatment-naïve HIV-1+ Adults with CCR5-tropic Virus. 20th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Atlanta, March 3-6, 2013. Abstract 106LB.