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An Ultra-Long-Acting Dimeric Bictegravir Prodrug Defined by a Short Pharmacokinetic Tail
Journal article

An Ultra-Long-Acting Dimeric Bictegravir Prodrug Defined by a Short Pharmacokinetic Tail

Benson Edagwa, Mohammad Ullah Nayan, Brady Sillman, Srijanee Das, Brandon Hanson, Ashrafi Sultana, Nam Thai Hoang Le, Suyash Deodhar, Alekha Dash, Samuel Cohen, …
Research square
02/19/2025
PMID: 40034436

Abstract

Ultra-long-acting (ULA) antiretroviral parenteral formulations, with low injection volumes, high resistance barriers, and short pharmacokinetic (PK) tails, can transform HIV-1 therapeutics. Here, we converted bictegravir (BIC), a potent daily oral antiretroviral drug, into monomeric and homodimeric ester prodrugs. The homodimeric prodrug nanosuspension, NMXBIC, shows sustained plasma BIC levels >16 times the protein-adjusted 95% inhibitory concentration (PA-IC ) for six months after a single injection in Sprague Dawley rats. The results paralleled a short PK tail with the potential for late dose forgiveness. The monomeric prodrug nanosuspension, NM2BIC, shows lower year-long plasma BIC concentrations above PA-IC after a single injection in Sprague Dawley rats. After repeated injections, NMXBIC and NM2BIC are well tolerated in New Zealand White rabbits. NMXBIC's physicochemical properties and high BIC loading/unit mass of the prodrug contribute to its unique ULA PK profile. These results support its development as a ULA formulation for HIV-1 treatment and prevention.

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