Gilead’s Biktarvy is now the first and only INSTI-based single-tablet regimen that is FDA approved and DHHS guideline recommended for people who are virologically suppressed with M184V/I resistance.
Gilead Sciences has announced that the FDA has approved a new, expanded indication for Biktarvy, according to a company press release.1 The label update expands the therapy’s ability to now treat people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who have suppressed viral loads with known or suspected M184V/I resistance, a common form of treatment resistance.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 1.2 million people in the United States had HIV at the end of 2021. In the same year, 36,136 people received an HIV diagnosis in the United States. However, the annual number of new diagnoses decreased by 7 percent from 2017 to 2021.2
“Clinical data have established Biktarvy as a long-term HIV treatment option for a broad range of people with HIV. With this label update, healthcare providers have a better understanding of the efficacy of Biktarvy in an underserved segment of people with HIV,” said Jared Baeten, MD, PhD, vice president, HIV clinical development, Gilead Sciences in the press release. “Thanks to decades of therapeutic improvements, people with HIV may live longer, healthier lives, but treatment needs remain. Treatment resistance is one such area. We are committed to a person-centered approach to HIV treatment research that not only advances continuous scientific innovations to help address public health needs, but also maximizes long-term outcomes for people with HIV.”
According to the press release, the expanded label is based on data from a Phase III randomized, double-blinded study of virologically suppressed adults with HIV-1 on a baseline regimen of dolutegravir (DTG) + either emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (F/TAF) or emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (F/TDF). Of the participants receiving Biktarvy, 47 had HIV-1 with pre-existing M184V/I resistance substitutions. The study met its primary endpoint with 89 percent of participants with M184V/I remaining suppressed.
“Treatment failure in HIV must be avoided whenever possible, so a high barrier to resistance should be standard of care to maximize the chances of durable virologic suppression,” said Paul E. Sax, MD, clinical director, division of infectious diseases, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School in the press release. “This label update builds on the established high resistance barrier of Biktarvy by showing that it’s effective in people with HIV who may have certain forms of pre-existing resistance or a history of past treatment failure.”
Unifying Industry to Better Understand GCP Guidance
May 7th 2025In this episode of the Applied Clinical Trials Podcast, David Nickerson, head of clinical quality management at EMD Serono; and Arlene Lee, director of product management, data quality & risk management solutions at Medidata, discuss the newest ICH E6(R3) GCP guidelines as well as how TransCelerate and ACRO have partnered to help stakeholders better acclimate to these guidelines.
Arcus’ Quemliclustat Earns Orphan Drug Designation as Phase III Pancreatic Cancer Trial Advances
July 11th 2025The FDA has granted orphan status to Arcus Biosciences’ CD73 inhibitor quemliclustat for metastatic pancreatic cancer, as the global PRISM-1 Phase III trial nears full enrollment following promising survival data from ARC-8.
QWINT-1 Trial: Once-Weekly Efsitora Matches Daily Glargine in Type 2 Diabetes Management
July 10th 2025Results from the Phase III QWINT-1 trial show that Eli Lilly’s once-weekly insulin efsitora is noninferior to once-daily glargine in reducing HbA1c among insulin-naïve adults with type 2 diabetes, offering a simplified fixed-dose regimen with fewer hypoglycemic events and less treatment burden.
Unifying Industry to Better Understand GCP Guidance
May 7th 2025In this episode of the Applied Clinical Trials Podcast, David Nickerson, head of clinical quality management at EMD Serono; and Arlene Lee, director of product management, data quality & risk management solutions at Medidata, discuss the newest ICH E6(R3) GCP guidelines as well as how TransCelerate and ACRO have partnered to help stakeholders better acclimate to these guidelines.
Arcus’ Quemliclustat Earns Orphan Drug Designation as Phase III Pancreatic Cancer Trial Advances
July 11th 2025The FDA has granted orphan status to Arcus Biosciences’ CD73 inhibitor quemliclustat for metastatic pancreatic cancer, as the global PRISM-1 Phase III trial nears full enrollment following promising survival data from ARC-8.
QWINT-1 Trial: Once-Weekly Efsitora Matches Daily Glargine in Type 2 Diabetes Management
July 10th 2025Results from the Phase III QWINT-1 trial show that Eli Lilly’s once-weekly insulin efsitora is noninferior to once-daily glargine in reducing HbA1c among insulin-naïve adults with type 2 diabetes, offering a simplified fixed-dose regimen with fewer hypoglycemic events and less treatment burden.
2 Commerce Drive
Cranbury, NJ 08512