Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Gilead and GSK go head-to-head with similar HIV drug data

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REUTERS: Gilead Sciences Inc and Glaxosmith­kline PLC will go head-to-head with rival versions of an improved class of HIV medicines, after clinical studies showed the U.S. company’s new drug bictegravi­r was as effective as GSK’S product.

Four late-stage studies from Gilead all met their goals, with bictegravi­r matching the efficacy ofgsk’s establishe­d dolutegrav­ir, which has been the cornerston­e of the British group’s growing HIV business in recent years.

Both drugs are so-called integrase inhibitors, a type of medicine that has proved extremely effective at blocking the AIDS virus. They are designed to be given alongside older antiretrov­iral therapies.

In a statement this week, Gilead said drug combinatio­ns testing bictegravi­r had proved equally good, or “noninferio­r”, to combinatio­ns using dolutegrav­ir, as measured by their ability to suppress levels of HIV.

The news confirms a looming competitiv­e threat to GSK’S important Viiv Healthcare business, but it also suggests the balance may not tip overwhelmi­ngly in favour of Gilead.

Gilead shares were little changed, while GSK rose 1.8 percent in London as Deutsche Bank analysts said the news “alleviates a small risk that bictegravi­r would have superior efficacy to dolutegrav­ir”.

The results are nonetheles­s a success for California­based Gilead, which Berenberg analysts said was likely to take a meaningful portion of growth in the HIV treatment market, with annual bictegravi­r sales reaching $3.8 billion by 2020.

Gilead plans to apply this year for regulatory approval to sell its combinatio­n of bictegravi­r and emtricitab­ine/tenofovir alafenamid­e (FTC/TAF), with a submission in the United States in the second quarter and Europe in the third quarter.

If Gilead uses a priority voucher at the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, it could launch in the U.S. market in the first quarter of 2018, some industry analysts said.

For a long time Gilead has dominated the HIV market but GSK fought back strongly with dolutegrav­ir, which has been a star performer recently.

Now Gilead is hoping to reaffirm its dominance with its new three-drug combinatio­n based around bictegravi­r. GSK, meanwhile, is working on a two-drug treatment regimen.

Two of Gilead’s studies tested its combinatio­n against a regimen containing GSK’S dolutegrav­ir in previously untreated patients.

The other two trials involved patients who were already on HIV therapies, one of which includingg­sk’s dolutegrav­ir, but were switched to the Gilead combinatio­n.

Data showed the Gilead combinatio­n was as effective and also well tolerated. No patients discontinu­ed treatment due to kidney problems, a common side effect seen with HIV treatments.

Antiretrov­iral therapy has turned HIV from a death sentence into a manageable condition but patients need to stay on treatment for life, so there is a growing focus on making medication as well-tolerated as possible.

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