Safety, pharmacokinetics, and antiviral activity of AMD3100, a selective CXCR4 receptor inhibitor, in HIV-1 infection

Craig W. Hendrix, Ann C. Collier, Michael M. Lederman, Dominique Schols, Richard B. Pollard, Stephen Brown, J. Brooks Jackson, Robert W. Coombs, Marshall J. Glesby, Charles W. Flexner, Gary J. Bridger, Karin Badel, Ronald T. MacFarland, Geoffrey W. Henson, Gary Calandra

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

308 Scopus citations

Abstract

AMD3100 is a CXCR4 receptor inhibitor with anti-HIV-1 activity in vitro. We tested the safety, pharmacokinetics, and antiviral effect of AMD3100 administered for 10 days by continuous intravenous infusion in an open-label dose escalation study from 2.5 to 160 μg/kg/h. Forty HIV-infected patients with an HIV RNA level >5000 copies/mL on stable antiretroviral (ARV) regimens or off therapy were enrolled. Syncytium-inducing (SI) phenotype in an MT-2 cell assay was required in higher dose cohorts. Most subjects were black (55%), male (98%), and off ARV therapy. HIV phenotype was SI (30%), non-S1 (45%), or not tested (25%). One patient (5 μg/kg/h) had serious and possibly drug-related thrombocytopenia. Two patients (40 and 160 μg/kg/h) had unexpected, although not serious, premature ventricular contractions. Most patients in the 80- and 160-μg/kg/h cohorts had paresthesias. Steady-state blood concentration and area under the concentration-time curve were dose proportional across all dose levels; the median terminal elimination half-life was 8.6 hours (range: 8.1-11.1 hours). Leukocytosis was observed in all patients, with an estimated maximum effect of 3.4 times baseline (95% confidence interval: 2.9-3.9). Only 1 patient, the patient whose virus was confirmed to use purely CXCR4 and who also received the highest dose (160 μg/kg/h), had a significant 0.9-log10 copies/mL HIV RNA drop at day 11. Overall, however, the average change in viral load across all patients was +0.03 log10 HIV RNA. Given these results, AMD3100 is not being further developed for ARV therapy, but development continues for stem cell mobilization.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1253-1262
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Volume37
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2004

Keywords

  • Anti-retroviral HIV
  • CXCR4 antagonist
  • Chemokine binding inhibitor

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Infectious Diseases
  • Pharmacology (medical)

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