Long-acting injection boosts hopes for GSK's HIV business

LONDON: A long-acting injection developed by GlaxoSmithKline and given once a month has proved as effective as standard daily pills for controlling the AIDS virus, lifting prospects for the British drugmaker's key HIV business.
GSK's majority-owned ViiV Healthcare unit said on Wednesday the experimental two-drug injection of cabotegravir and rilpivirine maintained similar rates of viral suppression compared with a standard three-drug oral regimen, after 48 weeks of a clinical trial.
The result is a boost for GSK's goal of developing two-drug HIV treatments that are easier to tolerate than conventional triple-drug therapies. If follows recent positive data from combining two oral drugs.
GSK hopes its new approach will allow it to compete more effectively against Gilead Sciences, the U.S. drugmaker that currently dominates the HIV market.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing by David Evans)
AIDS viruscabotegravirClinical Trialexperimental two-drug injectionGilead SciencesGlaxoSmithKlineGSKHIVInjectionLong-actingrilpivirinethree-drug oral regimenViiV Healthcare
Source : REUTERSNext Story
NO DATA FOUND
Disclaimer: This site is primarily intended for healthcare professionals. Any content/information on this website does not replace the advice of medical and/or health professionals and should not be construed as medical/diagnostic advice/endorsement or prescription. Use of this site is subject to our terms of use, privacy policy, advertisement policy. © 2020 Minerva Medical Treatment Pvt Ltd