Teens in the United States have another treatment option for HIV.
The FDA on Monday approved an expanded indication for Dovato as the first oral, two-drug, single tablet regimen for HIV in adolescents aged 12 years or older, ViiV Healthcare announced.
Dovato, which contains the drugs dolutegravir and lamivudine, was already approved for ART-naive and virologically suppressed adults with HIV.
It is now also approved for adolescents weighing at least 25 kg with either no ART history or who are virally suppressed on another regimen with no history of treatment failure.
“This expanded indication for Dovato brings an oral, two-drug, single-tablet regimen to adolescents living with HIV, providing a complete HIV therapy with fewer ARV medicines — an important consideration for young people who will require lifelong treatment,” Lynn Baxter, head of North America at ViiV Healthcare, said in a press release.
According to the company, the approval was supported by data from the DANCE study, which evaluated the combination among treatment-naive adolescents, and evidence from three trials conducted among adults.
In the DANCE study, which included adolescents aged between 12 and 18 years weighing at least 25 kg with HIV RNA between 1,000 and 500,000 c/mL, 26 of 30 participants achieved and maintained viral suppression at week 48. The safety and efficacy data in adolescents from the DANCE study were comparable to those observed in adults, the company said.