New HIV pill simplifies treatment for complex cases

A new combination pill containing bictegravir and lenacapavir shows promise for people with HIV who require complex regimens. The phase three ARTISTRY 1 study found it performed as well as existing multi-pill options. Experts note its impact in South Africa will likely remain limited.

The ARTISTRY 1 study, published in The Lancet in February, involved 557 adults who had been on HIV treatment for an average of 28 years. Participants switched to the bictegravir-lenacapavir pill or stayed on their existing regimens. The new pill proved non-inferior, with no drug resistance observed and higher treatment satisfaction reported.

Chloe Orkin, the study’s principal investigator, highlighted an unmet need for those on complex regimens often due to resistance or intolerance. Side effects remained similar across groups, with no drug-related deaths.

Local experts Francois Venter and Graeme Meintjes described the findings as a breakthrough for a small group of patients, mostly in the private sector. They noted that dolutegravir-based regimens like TLD continue to serve most people in South Africa effectively.

The results also support calls to move away from first-, second- and third-line terminology in favour of initial and subsequent regimens, given the potency of current treatments.

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Clinical illustration of nurse giving single-dose zilebesiran injection to hypertension patient, with blood pressure monitor showing reduction from KARDIA-2 trial results.
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Single-dose zilebesiran as add-on therapy lowers systolic blood pressure in KARDIA-2 trial

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A single, under-the-skin dose of the investigational RNA-interference drug zilebesiran lowered blood pressure when added to standard therapy in adults whose hypertension remained uncontrolled, according to results from the global Phase 2 KARDIA-2 trial of 663 participants published in JAMA.

UNAIDS has welcomed South Africa’s rollout of Lenacapavir as a landmark step in HIV prevention. The injectable is now available at 360 public health facilities across six provinces. The drug has also been added to the national essential medicines list.

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A new NGO report warns that lingering effects of 2025 US Pepfar funding cuts are undermining South Africa's rollout of the six-monthly HIV prevention injection lenacapavir, despite recent US funding restoration efforts and initial shipments. Community infrastructure losses hinder uptake among high-risk groups, even as rollout begins late May.

Scientists at Scripps Research have developed a nanodisc platform that mimics viral membranes, uncovering hidden interactions in HIV and Ebola proteins that traditional methods miss. The technology allows for more accurate study of antibody responses, potentially accelerating vaccine development. The findings appear in Nature Communications.

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