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March 15, 2021
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Gilead, Merck partner to develop long-acting two-drug HIV regimen

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Gilead Sciences and Merck announced a partnership to codevelop lenacapavir and islatravir as a long-acting two-drug regimen for patients with HIV.

The collaboration will focus on the development of long-acting oral and injectable formulations of the two investigational drugs, with clinical trials set to begin in the second half of 2021, the companies said.

Hiv under a microscope
Gilead Sciences and Merck will codevelop a long-acting two-drug regimen of lenacapavir (Gilead) and islatravir (Merck) for patients with HIV.
Credit: Adobe Stock

Lenacapavir, which was developed by Gilead Sciences, and Merck’s islatravir are among several long-acting agents that have produced encouraging results in clinical trials as HIV PrEP, treatment, or both.

Lenacapavir, a novel investigational capsid inhibitor, was effective in a small phase 2/3 trial when given as a subcutaneous injection treatment every 6 months.

“Our work in HIV over the past decades has been shaped by listening to people living with HIV and the physicians who treat them,” Gilead CEO Daniel O’Day said in a press release. “Now we are taking the same approach with long-acting therapies, combining the most advanced science from both companies to accelerate progress.”

Once-monthly oral islatravir showed promise as PrEP in a phase 2a trial and is scheduled to enter phase 3 development by itself. It is a novel investigational nucleoside reverse transcriptase translocation inhibitor.

“This collaboration with Gilead brings together two companies dedicated to the fight against HIV to develop potential new long-acting treatment options and is an important step forward in our strategy to harness the full potential of islatravir for the treatment of HIV,” Merck CEO Kenneth C. Frazier, said in the release.