Currently available antiretroviral (ARV) formulations necessitate lifelong, daily dosing, and after prolonged periods of time, patients can encounter pill fatigue and frequently miss doses of their medication. This can have detrimental consequences for the success of therapy, increasing likelihood of the virus developing resistance to the drugs used. Two pharmaceutical companies have developed sustained-release formulations, rilpivirine LA and S/GSK744, that can be administered once a month or even less frequently. However, a major limitation for these two formulations is that they are not optimally designed to be combined with each other. Additionally, the current standard of care is to administer three ARVs simultaneously. Most current ARV regimens include a class of drugs known as nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). A major obstacle to developing long-acting injectable combination ARVs is that NRTIs are not compatible with the technologies being utilized to produce these formulations. Using our recent developments in solid drug nanoparticle (SDN) technology, we propose to optimize a sustained-release backbone regimen consisting of NRTIs to match current standard of care and compliment sustained-release formulations in late stage development. Since NRTIs are inherently water soluble, they are not compatible with the nanomilling approaches used to create rilpivirine LA and S/GSK744. Using our new and proprietary technology we will assess two strategies for sustained-release NRTI-formulations and establish the utility for NRTI sustained- release over an extended period of time, defining a new platform technology for water soluble drugs. Iteration between pharmacology and chemistry will ensure stable nanoparticles with sufficiently high drug-loading to make viable dosage sizes with scalable and reproducible synthesis validated for sterility, stability and cost effectiveness. Nanoparticles will undergo a sequential and detailed preclinical evaluation of their pharmacology and safety, to enable optimization of favorable properties. Lead candidates will be selected for analysis in humanized mice by integrating laboratory data through mathematical modeling. We will assess candidate formulations for stability in biological fluids, release kinetic, delivery to cells and antiviral activity. This new platform for sustained-release NRTIs will benefi patients by increasing options for long-acting ARV's, thus simplifying therapy. Our collaboration combines the unique expertise of one of the world's leading centers for nanoformulation research, protected by 25 patent families, with one of the world's leading centers for ARV pharmacology research.

Public Health Relevance

Current treatment for HIV necessitates daily dosing over a lifetime commitment to therapy. We will utilize state- of-the-art chemistry and pharmacology research to develop therapies containing particles of HIV drugs that are one millionth of the size of a basketball. The properties of these medicines will be optimized for sustained- release of HIV drugs to provide therapeutic options for once monthly administration to patients.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AI114405-04
Application #
9298548
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Livnat, Daniella
Project Start
2014-07-15
Project End
2019-06-30
Budget Start
2017-07-01
Budget End
2019-06-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Pharmacology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21205
Rajoli, Rajith K R; Back, David J; Rannard, Steve et al. (2018) In Silico Dose Prediction for Long-Acting Rilpivirine and Cabotegravir Administration to Children and Adolescents. Clin Pharmacokinet 57:255-266
Bakshi, Rahul P; Tatham, Lee M; Savage, Alison C et al. (2018) Long-acting injectable atovaquone nanomedicines for malaria prophylaxis. Nat Commun 9:315
Owen, Andrew; Rannard, Steve (2016) Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and challenges for long acting injectable therapies: Insights for applications in HIV therapy. Adv Drug Deliv Rev 103:144-56
Owen, Andrew; Rannard, Steve (2015) Considerations for clinically-relevant nanomedicine therapies for chronic diseases. Nanomedicine (Lond) 10:3103-7
Rajoli, Rajith K R; Back, David J; Rannard, Steve et al. (2015) Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modelling to Inform Development of Intramuscular Long-Acting Nanoformulations for HIV. Clin Pharmacokinet 54:639-50