Rekambys

Rekambys

rilpivirine

Manufacturer:

Janssen

Distributor:

Zuellig

Marketer:

GlaxoSmithKline
Full Prescribing Info
Contents
Rilpivirine.
Description
Each 3 mL vial contains 900 mg rilpivirine.
Excipients/Inactive Ingredients: poloxamer 338, citric acid monohydrate, glucose monohydrate, sodium dihydrogen phosphate monohydrate, sodium hydroxide (to adjust pH and ensure isotonicity), water for injection.
Action
Pharmacotherapeutic group: Antiviral for systemic use, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. ATC code: J05AG05.
Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics: Mechanism of action: Rilpivirine is a diarylpyrimidine non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) of HIV-1. Rilpivirine activity is mediated by non-competitive inhibition of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT). Rilpivirine does not inhibit the human cellular DNA polymerases α, β and γ.
Antiviral activity in vitro: Rilpivirine exhibited activity against laboratory strains of wild-type HIV-1 in an acutely infected T-cell line with a median EC50 value for HIV-1/IIIB of 0.73 nM (0.27 ng/mL). Although rilpivirine demonstrated limited in vitro activity against HIV-2 with EC50 values ranging from 2,510 to 10,830 nM (920 to 3,970 ng/mL), treatment of HIV-2 infection with rilpivirine is not recommended in the absence of clinical data.
Rilpivirine also demonstrated antiviral activity against a broad panel of HIV-1 group M (subtype A, B, C, D, F, G, H) primary isolates with EC50 values ranging from 0.07 to 1.01 nM (0.03 to 0.37 ng/mL) and group O primary isolates with EC50 values ranging from 2.88 to 8.45 nM (1.06 to 3.10 ng/mL).
Resistance: Considering all of the available in vitro data and in vivo data generated with oral rilpivirine in previously untreated patients, the following resistance-associated mutations, when present at baseline, may affect the activity of rilpivirine: K101E, K101P, E138A, E138G, E138K, E138R, E138Q, V179L, Y181C, Y181I, Y181V, Y188L, H221Y, F227C, M230I, M230L, and the combination of L100I and K103N.
In cell culture: Rilpivirine-resistant strains were selected in cell culture starting from wild-type HIV-1 of different origins and subtypes as well as NNRTI resistant HIV-1. The most commonly observed resistance-associated mutations that emerged included L100I, K101E, V108I, E138K, V179F, Y181C, H221Y, F227C and M230I.
Virologically suppressed patients: The number of subjects who met confirmed virologic failure (CVF) criteria was low across the pooled Phase 3 studies ATLAS and FLAIR. There were 7 CVFs on rilpivirine plus cabotegravir (7/591, 1.2%) and 7 CVFs on current antiretroviral regimen (7/591, 1.2%) through week 48. In the rilpivirine plus cabotegravir group in the pooled analysis, 5/591 (0.8%) subjects had resistance development: 5/591 (0.8%) and 4/591 (0.7%) with resistance-associated mutations to rilpivirine (K101E [n=1], E138A/E/K/T [n=1], E138A [n=1], or E138K [n=2]) and/or cabotegravir (G140R [n=1], Q148R [n=2], or N155H [n=1]), respectively. The 4 CVFs on cabotegravir plus rilpivirine in FLAIR had HIV-1 subtype A1 (n=3) or AG (n=1). One CVF in FLAIR never received an injection. The 3 CVFs on cabotegravir plus rilpivirine in ATLAS had HIV-1 subtype A, A1, or AG. In 2 of these 3 CVFs the rilpivirine resistance-associated mutations observed at failure were also observed at baseline in PBMC HIV-1 DNA.
In the ATLAS-2M study 10 subjects met CVF criteria through week 48: 8/522 (1.5%) in the Q8W arm and 2/523 (0.4%) in the Q4W arm. In the Q8W group 5/522 (1.0%) had resistance development: 4/522 (0.8%) and 5/522 (1.0%) with resistance-associated mutations to rilpivirine (E138A [n=1], E138K [n=1], K101E [n=2], or Y188L [n=1]) and/or cabotegravir (Q148R [n=3] or N155H [n=4]), respectively. In the Q4W group 2/523 (0.4%) had resistance development: 1/523 (0.2%) and 2/523 (0.4%) had rilpivirine (K101E [n=1], M230L [n=1]) and/or cabotegravir (E138K [n=1], Q148R [n=1], or N155H [n=1]) resistance-associated mutations, respectively. At baseline in the Q8W arm, 5 subjects had rilpivirine resistance-associated mutations and 1 of those subjects carried a cabotegravir resistance-associated mutation. Neither subject in the Q4W arm had any rilpivirine or cabotegravir resistance-associated mutation at baseline. The 10 CVFs on cabotegravir plus rilpivirine in ATLAS-2M had HIV-1 subtype A (n=1), A1 (n=2), B (n=4), C (n=2), or Complex (n=1).
Cross-resistance: Site-directed NNRTI mutant virus: In a panel of 67 HIV-1 recombinant laboratory strains with one mutation at RT positions associated with NNRTI resistance, including the most commonly found K103N and Y181C, rilpivirine showed antiviral activity against 64 (96%) of these strains. The single resistance-associated mutations associated with a loss of susceptibility to rilpivirine were: K101P, Y181I and Y181V. The K103N mutation did not result in reduced susceptibility to rilpivirine by itself, but the combination of K103N and L100I resulted in a 7-fold reduced susceptibility to rilpivirine.
Recombinant clinical isolates: Rilpivirine retained sensitivity (fold change ≤ biological cut-off) against 62% of 4,786 HIV-1 recombinant clinical isolates resistant to efavirenz and/or nevirapine.
Virologically suppressed patients: In the week 48 analysis of the Phase 3 studies ATLAS and FLAIR, 5/7 CVFs had phenotypic resistance against rilpivirine at failure. Among these 5 patients, phenotypic cross-resistance was observed against efavirenz (n=4), etravirine (n=3), and nevirapine (n=4).
Effects on electrocardiogram: No effect on QTcF interval was shown for oral rilpivirine at the recommended dose of 25 mg once daily in a randomised, placebo and active (moxifloxacin 400 mg once daily) controlled crossover study in 60 healthy adults, with 13 measurements over 24 hours at steady-state. Plasma rilpivirine concentrations after REKAMBYS injections are comparable to those achieved with oral rilpivirine at dose of 25 mg qd. REKAMBYS at the recommended dose of 600 mg monthly or 900 mg every 2 months is not associated with a clinically relevant effect on QTc.
When supratherapeutic doses of 75 mg once daily and 300 mg once daily of oral rilpivirine were studied in healthy adults, the maximum mean time-matched (95% upper confidence bound) differences in QTcF interval from placebo after baseline correction were 10.7 (15.3) and 23.3 (28.4) ms, respectively. Steady-state administration of oral rilpivirine 75 mg once daily and 300 mg once daily resulted in a mean Cmax approximately 4.4-fold and 11.6-fold, respectively, higher than the mean steady-state Cmax observed with the recommended 600 mg once monthly dose of REKAMBYS. Steady state administration of oral rilpivirine 75 mg once daily and 300 mg once daily resulted in a mean Cmax approximately 4.1-fold and 10.7-fold, respectively, higher than the mean steady state Cmax observed with the recommended 900 mg every 2 months dose of REKAMBYS.
Clinical efficacy and safety: Every 1 month dosing: The efficacy of REKAMBYS plus cabotegravir injection has been evaluated in two Phase 3 randomised, multicentre, active-controlled, parallel-arm, open-label, non-inferiority studies, FLAIR (201584) and ATLAS (201585). The primary analysis was conducted after all subjects completed their week 48 visit or discontinued the study prematurely.
Patients virologically suppressed (on prior dolutegravir-based regimen for 20 weeks): In FLAIR, 629 HIV-1-infected, antiretroviral treatment (ART)-naïve subjects received a dolutegravir integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INI) containing regimen for 20 weeks (either dolutegravir/abacavir/lamivudine or dolutegravir + 2 other nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors if subjects were HLA-B*5701 positive). Subjects who were virologically suppressed (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies per mL, n=566) were then randomised (1:1) to receive either a rilpivirine plus cabotegravir regimen or remain on the CAR. Subjects randomised to receive the rilpivirine plus cabotegravir regimen, initiated treatment with oral lead-in dosing with a cabotegravir (30 mg) tablet plus a rilpivirine (25 mg) tablet once daily for at least 4 weeks, followed by treatment with cabotegravir injection (month 1: 600 mg, month 2 onwards: 400 mg injection) plus rilpivirine injection (month 1: 900 mg injection, month 2 onwards: 600 mg injection), monthly, for up to 96 weeks.
Patients virologically suppressed (stable on prior ART for at least 6 months): In ATLAS, 616 HIV-1-infected, ART-experienced, virologically-suppressed (for at least 6 months) subjects (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies per mL) were randomised (1:1) and received either a rilpivirine plus cabotegravir regimen or remained on the CAR. Subjects randomised to receive the rilpivirine plus cabotegravir regimen initiated treatment with oral lead-in dosing with a cabotegravir (30 mg) tablet plus a rilpivirine (25 mg) tablet once daily for at least 4 weeks, followed by treatment with cabotegravir injection (month 1: 600 mg, month 2 onwards: 400 mg injection) plus rilpivirine injection (month 1: 900 mg injection, month 2 onwards: 600 mg injection), monthly, for an additional 44 weeks. In ATLAS, 50%, 17%, and 33% of subjects received an NNRTI, PI, or INI (respectively) as their baseline third treatment agent class prior to randomisation and this was similar between treatment arms.
Pooled Phase 3 studies: At baseline, in the pooled analysis, in the rilpivirine plus cabotegravir arm the median age of subjects was 38 years, 27% were female, 27% were non-white, 1% were ≥65 years and 7% had CD4+ cell count less than 350 cells per mm3; these characteristics were similar between treatment arms.
The primary endpoint of both studies was the proportion of subjects with plasma HIV-1 RNA ≥50 copies/mL at week 48 (snapshot algorithm for the ITT-E population).
In a pooled analysis of the two Phase 3 studies, rilpivirine plus cabotegravir was non-inferior to CAR on the proportion of subjects having plasma HIV-1 RNA ≥50 c/mL (1.9% and 1.7% respectively) at week 48. The adjusted treatment difference between rilpivirine plus cabotegravir and CAR (0.2; 95% CI: -1.4, 1.7) met the non-inferiority criterion (upper bound of the 95% CI below 4%) [see Table 1].
The primary endpoint and other week 48 outcomes, including outcomes by key baseline factors, for FLAIR, ATLAS, and pooled data are shown in Table 1 and Table 2. (See Tables 1 and 2.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image


Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

In the FLAIR and ATLAS studies, treatment differences across baseline characteristics (CD4+ count, gender, age, race, BMI, baseline third agent treatment class) were comparable.
In the FLAIR study at 96 Weeks, the results remained consistent with the results at 48 Weeks. The proportion of subjects having plasma HIV-1 RNA ≥50 c/mL in rilpivirine plus cabotegravir (n=283) and CAR (n=283) was 3.2% and 3.2% respectively (adjusted treatment difference between REKAMBYS plus cabotegravir and CAR [0.0; 95% CI: -2.9, 2.9]). The proportion of subjects having plasma HIV-1 RNA <50 c/mL in REKAMBYS plus cabotegravir and CAR was 87% and 89%, respectively (adjusted treatment difference between REKAMBYS plus cabotegravir and CAR [-2.8; 95% CI: -8.2, 2.5]).
Every 2 months dosing: Patients virologically suppressed (stable on prior ART for at least 6 months): The efficacy and safety of rilpivirine injection given every 2 months, has been evaluated in one Phase 3b randomised, multicentre, parallel-arm, open-label, non-inferiority study, ATLAS-2M (207966). The primary analysis was conducted after all subjects completed their week 48 visit or discontinued the study prematurely.
In ATLAS-2M, 1045 HIV-1 infected, ART-experienced, virologically suppressed subjects were randomised (1:1) and received a rilpivirine plus cabotegravir injection regimen administered either every 2 months or monthly. Subjects initially on non-cabotegravir/rilpivirine treatment received oral lead-in treatment comprising one rilpivirine tablet (25 mg) plus one cabotegravir tablet (30 mg), daily, for at least 4 weeks. Subjects randomised to monthly rilpivirine injections (month 1: 900 mg injection, month 2 onwards: 600 mg injection) and cabotegravir injections (month 1: 600 mg injection, month 2 onwards: 400 mg injection administered) received treatment for an additional 44 weeks. Subjects randomised to every 2 months rilpivirine injections (900 mg injection at months 1, 2, 4 and every 2 months thereafter) and cabotegravir injections (600 mg injection at months 1, 2, 4 and every 2 months thereafter) received treatment for an additional 44 weeks. Prior to randomisation, 63%, 13% and 24% of subjects received rilpivirine plus cabotegravir for 0 weeks, 1 to 24 weeks and >24 weeks, respectively.
At baseline, the median age of subjects was 42 years, 27% were female, 27% were non-white, 4% were ≥65 years, and 6% had a CD4+ cell count less than 350 cells per mm3; these characteristics were similar between the treatment arms.
The primary endpoint in ATLAS-2M was the proportion of subjects with a plasma HIV-1 RNA ≥50 c/mL at week 48 (snapshot algorithm for the ITT-E population).
In ATLAS-2M, rilpivirine plus cabotegravir administered every 2 months was non-inferior to cabotegravir and rilpivirine administered every month on the proportion of subjects having plasma HIV-1 RNA ≥50 c/mL (1.7% and 1.0% respectively) at week 48. The adjusted treatment difference between cabotegravir plus rilpivirine administered every 2 months and every month (0.8; 95% CI: -0.6, 2.2) met the non-inferiority criterion (upper bound of the 95% CI below 4%). (See Tables 3 and 4.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image


Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

In the ATLAS-2M study, treatment differences on the primary endpoint across baseline characteristics (CD4+ lymphocyte count, gender, race, BMI, age and prior exposure to cabotegravir/rilpivirine) were not clinically meaningful.
Post-hoc analysis: Multivariable analyses of pooled phase 3 studies (ATLAS, FLAIR, ATLAS-2M), including data from 1039 HIV-infected adults with no prior exposure to rilpivirine plus cabotegravir, examined the influence of the following covariates: baseline viral and participants characteristics, dosing regimen (Q4W or Q8W), and post-baseline plasma drug concentrations on CVF using regression modeling with a covariate selection procedure. Through Week 48 in these studies, 13/1039 (1.25%) participants had CVF while receiving rilpivirine plus cabotegravir.
Four covariates were significantly associated (P < 0.05 for each adjusted odds ratio) with increased risk of CVF: rilpivirine resistance associated mutations (RAMs) at baseline identified by proviral DNA genotypic assay, HIV-1 subtype A6/A1 (associated with integrase L74I polymorphism), rilpivirine trough concentration 4 weeks following initial injection dose, BMI of at least 30 kg/m2 (associated with cabotegravir pharmacokinetics). Other covariates including Q4W or Q8W dosing, female gender, or other viral subtypes (non A6/A1) had no significant association with CVF. No baseline factor, when present in isolation, was predictive of virologic failure. However, a combination of at least 2 of the following baseline factors was associated with increased risk of CVF: rilpivirine resistance associated mutations, HIV-1 subtype A6/A1, or BMI ≥30 kg/m2 (Table 5). (See Table 5.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Pharmacokinetics: The pharmacokinetic properties of REKAMBYS have been evaluated in healthy and HIV-1 infected adults. (See Table 6.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Absorption: Rilpivirine prolonged-release injection exhibits absorption rate-limited kinetics (ie, flip-flop pharmacokinetics) resulting from slow absorption from the gluteal muscle into the systemic circulation resulting in sustained rilpivirine plasma concentrations.
Following a single intramuscular dose, rilpivirine plasma concentrations are detectable the first day and gradually rise to reach maximum plasma concentrations after a median of 3-4 days. Rilpivirine has been detected in plasma up to 52 weeks or longer after administration of a single dose of REKAMBYS. After 1 year of monthly or every 2 months injections, approximately 80% of the rilpivirine pharmacokinetic steady-state exposure is reached.
Plasma rilpivirine exposure increases in proportion or slightly less than in proportion to dose following single and repeat IM injections of doses ranging from 300 to 1200 mg.
Distribution: Rilpivirine is approximately 99.7% bound to plasma proteins in vitro, primarily to albumin. Based on population pharmacokinetics analysis, the typical apparent volume of the central compartment (Vc/F) for rilpivirine after IM administration was estimated to be 132 L, reflecting a moderate distribution to peripheral tissues.
Rilpivirine is present in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). In HIV-1-infected subjects receiving a regimen of rilpivirine injection plus cabotegravir injection, the median rilpivirine CSF to plasma concentration ratio (n=16) was 1.07 to 1.32% (range: not quantifiable to 1.69%). Consistent with therapeutic rilpivirine concentrations in the CSF, CSF HIV-1 RNA (n=16) was <50 c/mL in 100% and <2 c/mL in 15/16 (94%) of subjects. At the same time point, plasma HIV-1 RNA (n=18) was <50 c/mL in 100% and <2 c/mL in 12/18 (66.7%) of subjects.
Biotransformation: In vitro experiments indicate that rilpivirine primarily undergoes oxidative metabolism mediated by the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A system.
Elimination: The mean apparent half-life of rilpivirine following REKAMBYS administration is absorption rate-limited and was estimated to be 13-28 weeks.
The apparent plasma clearance (CL/F) of rilpivirine was estimated to be 5.08 L/h.
After single dose administration of oral 14C-rilpivirine, on average 85% and 6.1% of the radioactivity could be retrieved in faeces and urine, respectively. In faeces, unchanged rilpivirine accounted for on average 25% of the administered dose. Only trace amounts of unchanged rilpivirine (<1% of dose) were detected in urine.
Special patient populations: Gender: No clinically relevant differences in the rilpivirine exposure after intramuscular (IM) administration have been observed between men and women.
Race: No clinically relevant effect of race on the rilpivirine exposure after intramuscular administration has been observed.
BMI: No clinically relevant effect of BMI on the rilpivirine exposure after intramuscular administration has been observed.
Elderly: No clinically relevant effect of age on the rilpivirine exposure after intramuscular administration has been observed. Pharmacokinetic data for rilpivirine in subjects of >65 years old are limited.
Renal impairment: The pharmacokinetics of rilpivirine have not been studied in patients with renal insufficiency. Renal elimination of rilpivirine is negligible. No dose adjustment is needed for patients with mild or moderate renal impairment. In patients with severe renal impairment or end-stage renal disease, REKAMBYS should be used with caution, as plasma concentrations may be increased due to alteration of drug absorption, distribution and/or metabolism secondary to renal dysfunction. In patients with severe renal impairment or end-stage renal disease, the combination of REKAMBYS with a strong CYP3A inhibitor should only be used if the benefit outweighs the risk. As rilpivirine is highly bound to plasma proteins, it is unlikely that it will be significantly removed by haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis (see Dosage & Administration).
Hepatic impairment: Rilpivirine is primarily metabolised and eliminated by the liver. In a study comparing 8 patients with mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score A) to 8 matched controls, and 8 patients with moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score B) to 8 matched controls, the multiple dose exposure of oral rilpivirine was 47% higher in patients with mild hepatic impairment and 5% higher in patients with moderate hepatic impairment. However, it may not be excluded that the pharmacologically active, unbound, rilpivirine exposure is significantly increased in moderate hepatic impairment. No dose adjustment is suggested but caution is advised in patients with moderate hepatic impairment. REKAMBYS has not been studied in patients with severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score C). Therefore, REKAMBYS is not recommended in patients with severe hepatic impairment (see Dosage & Administration).
HBV/HCV Co-infected Patients: Population pharmacokinetic analysis indicated that hepatitis B and/or C virus co-infection had no clinically relevant effect on the rilpivirine exposure after oral rilpivirine intake.
Paediatric Patients: The phamacokinetics of rilpivirine in children and adolescents aged <18 years have not been established with REKAMBYS.
Toxicology: Preclinical safety data: All studies were performed with rilpivirine for oral use except for the studies on local tolerance with REKAMBYS injections.
Repeated dose toxicity: Liver toxicity associated with liver enzyme induction was observed in rodents. In dogs, cholestasis-like effects were noted.
Reproductive toxicology studies: Studies in animals have shown no evidence of relevant embryonic or foetal toxicity or an effect on reproductive function. There was no teratogenicity with oral rilpivirine in rats and rabbits. The exposures at the embryo-foetal No Observed Adverse Effects Levels (NOAELs) in rats and rabbits were respectively ≥12 times and ≥57 times the exposure in humans at the maximum recommended human daily dose of 25 mg once daily in HIV-1 infected patients or 600 mg or 900 mg intramuscular injection dose of rilpivirine long-acting injectable suspension.
Carcinogenesis and mutagenesis: Oral rilpivirine was evaluated for carcinogenic potential by oral gavage administration to mice and rats up to 104 weeks. At the lowest tested doses in the carcinogenicity studies, the systemic exposures (based on AUC) to rilpivirine were ≥17 times (mice) and ≥2 times (rats) the exposure in humans at the maximum recommended human daily dose of 25 mg once daily in HIV-1 infected patients or 600 mg or 900 mg intramuscular injection dose of rilpivirine long-acting injectable suspension. In rats, there were no drug-related neoplasms. In mice, rilpivirine was positive for hepatocellular neoplasms in both males and females. The observed hepatocellular findings in mice may be rodent-specific.
Rilpivirine has tested negative in the absence and presence of a metabolic activation system in the in vitro Ames reverse mutation assay and the in vitro clastogenicity mouse lymphoma assay. Rilpivirine did not induce chromosomal damage in the in vivo micronucleus test in mice.
Local tolerance for REKAMBYS: After long-term repeated IM administration of REKAMBYS in dogs and minipigs, slight, short-lasting (ie, 1-4 days in minipigs) erythema was observed, and white deposits were noted at the injection sites at necropsy, accompanied by swelling and discoloration of draining lymph nodes. Microscopic examination showed macrophage infiltration and eosinophilic deposits at the injection sites. A macrophage infiltration response was also noted in the draining/regional lymph nodes. These findings were considered to be a reaction to the deposited material rather than a manifestation of local irritation.
Indications/Uses
REKAMBYS is indicated, in combination with cabotegravir injection, for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in adults who are virologically suppressed (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL) on a stable antiretroviral regimen without present or past evidence of viral resistance to, and no prior virological failure with, agents of the NNRTI and INI class (see Dosage & Administration, Precautions, and Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics under Actions).
Dosage/Direction for Use
Therapy should be prescribed by a physician experienced in the management of HIV infection. Each injection should be administered by a healthcare professional.
Prior to starting REKAMBYS, the healthcare professional should carefully select patients who agree to the required injection schedule and counsel patients about the importance of adherence to scheduled dosing visits to help maintain viral suppression and reduce the risk of viral rebound and potential development of resistance associated with missed doses.
Following discontinuation of REKAMBYS in combination with cabotegravir injection, it is essential to adopt an alternative, fully suppressive antiretroviral regimen no later than one month after the last every 1 month injection of REKAMBYS or two months after the last every 2 months injection of REKAMBYS (see Precautions).
The prescribing information for cabotegravir injection should be consulted for recommended dosing.
Posology: Oral lead-in: Prior to the initiation of REKAMBYS, rilpivirine oral tablets, together with cabotegravir oral tablets, should be taken for approximately 1 month (at least 28 days) to assess tolerability to rilpivirine and cabotegravir (see Precautions). One rilpivirine 25-mg tablet should be taken with a meal with one cabotegravir 30-mg tablet once daily.
Every 1 month dosing: Initiation injection (900 mg corresponding to 3 mL): On the final day of oral lead-in, the recommended initiation injection dose of rilpivirine in adults is a single 900 mg intramuscular injection.
Continuation injection (600 mg corresponding to 2 mL): After the initiation injection, the recommended continuation injection dose of rilpivirine in adults is a single 600 mg monthly intramuscular injection. Patients may be given injections up to 7 days before or after the date of the monthly injection schedule. (See Table 7.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Every 2 months dosing: Initiation Injections - 1 month apart (900 mg corresponding to 3 mL): On the final day of oral lead-in, the recommended initial rilpivirine injection dose in adults is a single 900 mg intramuscular injection (month 2).
One month later (month 3), a second 900 mg intramuscular injection should be administered. Patients may be given the second 900 mg injection up to 7 days before or after the scheduled dosing date.
Continuation Injections - 2 months apart (900 mg corresponding to 3 mL): After the initiation injections, the recommended rilpivirine continuation injection dose in adults is a single 900 mg intramuscular injection administered every 2 months beginning at month 5. Patients may be given injections up to 7 days before or after the date of the every 2 months injection schedule. (See Table 8.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Dosing Recommendations When Switching From Monthly to Every 2 Months Injections: Patients switching from a monthly continuation injection schedule to an every 2 months continuation injection schedule should receive a single 900 mg intramuscular injection of REKAMBYS one month after the last 600 mg REKAMBYS continuation injection dose and then 900 mg every 2 months thereafter.
Dosing Recommendations When Switching From Every 2 Months to Monthly Injections: Patients switching from an every 2 months continuation injection schedule to a monthly continuation injection schedule should receive a single 600 mg intramuscular injection of REKAMBYS two months after the last 900 mg REKAMBYS continuation injection dose and then 600 mg monthly thereafter.
Missed doses: Patients who miss an injection visit should be clinically reassessed to ensure resumption of therapy is appropriate. See Tables 9 and 10 for dosing recommendations after a missed injection.
Missed every 1 month injection (Oral Dosing to Replace Up to 2 Consecutive Monthly Injections): If a patient plans to miss a scheduled injection by more than 7 days, daily oral therapy (one rilpivirine tablet [25 mg] and one cabotegravir tablet [30 mg]) may be used to replace up to 2 consecutive monthly injection visits. The first dose of oral therapy should be taken 1 month (±7 days) after the last injection doses of REKAMBYS and cabotegravir. Injection dosing should be resumed on the day oral dosing completes, as recommended in Table 9.
In case more than two months need to be covered for, ie, missing more than two monthly injections, an alternative oral regimen should be initiated one month (±7 days) after the final injection of REKAMBYS. (See Table 9.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Missed every 2 months injection (Oral Dosing to Replace 1 Every 2 Months Injection): If a patient plans to miss a scheduled injection visit by more than 7 days, daily oral therapy (one rilpivirine tablet [25 mg] and one cabotegravir tablet [30 mg]) may be used to replace one 'every 2 months' injection visit. The first dose of oral therapy should be taken approximately two months (±7 days) after the last injection doses of REKAMBYS and cabotegravir. Injection dosing should be resumed on the day oral dosing completes, as recommended in Table 10.
In case more than two months need to be covered for, ie, missing more than one 'every 2 months' injection, an alternative oral regimen should be initiated two months (±7 days) after the final injection of REKAMBYS. (See Table 10.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Special populations: Elderly: There is limited information regarding the use of REKAMBYS in patients >65 years of age. No dose adjustment of REKAMBYS is required in older patients (see Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics under Actions).
Renal impairment: No dose adjustment is required in patients with mild or moderate renal impairment. In patients with severe renal impairment or end stage renal disease, the combination of REKAMBYS with a strong CYP3A inhibitor should only be used if the benefit outweighs the risk. Subjects with estimated creatinine clearance <50 mL/min/1.73 m2 were not included in the Phase 3 studies. No data are available in subjects receiving dialysis although differences in pharmacokinetics are not expected in this population (see Pharmacology: Pharmacokinetics under Actions).
Hepatic impairment: No dose adjustment is required in patients with mild or moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score A or B), but caution is advised in patients with moderate hepatic impairment. No data are available in patients with severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score C); therefore REKAMBYS is not recommended in these patients (see Pharmacology: Pharmacokinetics under Actions).
Paediatric population: The safety and efficacy of REKAMBYS in children and adolescents aged <18 years have not been established. No data are available.
Method of administration: For intramuscular use.
Care should be taken to avoid inadvertent injection of REKAMBYS into a blood vessel.
REKAMBYS should be administered by a healthcare professional. For instructions on administration, see Cautions for Usage.
REKAMBYS should always be co-administered with a cabotegravir injection. REKAMBYS and cabotegravir injections should be administered at separate gluteal injection sites during the same visit. The order of injections is not important.
When administering REKAMBYS, the healthcare professional should take into consideration the body mass index (BMI) of the patient to ensure that the needle length is sufficient to reach the gluteus muscle.
The vial should be held firmly and shaken vigorously for a full 10 seconds. The vial should be inverted and the resuspension should be checked. It should look uniform. If the suspension is not uniform, the vial should be shaken again. It is normal to see small air bubbles.
Injections must be administered to the ventrogluteal (recommended) or the dorsogluteal sites.
Overdosage
There is currently limited experience with REKAMBYS overdose. If overdose occurs, the patient should be treated supportively and as clinically indicated, with monitoring of vital signs and ECG (QT interval), as necessary. Since rilpivirine is highly bound to plasma protein, dialysis is unlikely to result in significant removal of the active substance.
Contraindications
Hypersensitivity to the active substance or to any of the excipients listed in Description.
REKAMBYS must not be co-administered with the following medicinal products, as significant decreases in rilpivirine plasma concentrations may occur (due to CYP3A enzyme induction), which may result in loss of therapeutic effect of REKAMBYS (see Interactions): the anticonvulsants carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin; the antimycobacterials rifabutin, rifampicin, rifapentine; the systemic glucocorticoid dexamethasone, except as a single dose treatment; St John's wort (Hypericum perforatum).
Special Precautions
Risk of resistance following treatment discontinuation: To minimise the risk of developing viral resistance it is essential to adopt an alternative, fully suppressive antiretroviral regimen no later than one month after the last every 1 month injection of REKAMBYS or two months after the last every 2 months injection of REKAMBYS.
If virologic failure is suspected, an alternative regimen should be adopted as soon as possible.
Long-acting properties of rilpivirine injection: Residual concentrations of rilpivirine may remain in the systemic circulation of patients for prolonged periods (up to 4 years in some patients) and should be considered upon discontinuation of REKAMBYS (see Effects on ability to drive and use machines as follows, Interactions, Use in Pregnancy & Lactation, and Overdosage).
Baseline factors associated with virological failure: Before starting the regimen, it should be taken into account that multivariable analyses indicate that a combination of at least 2 of the following baseline factors may be associated with an increased risk of virological failure: archived rilpivirine resistance mutations, HIV-1 subtype A6/A1, or BMI ≥30 kg/m2. In patients with an incomplete or uncertain treatment history without pre-treatment resistance analyses, caution is warranted in the presence of either BMI ≥30 kg/m2 or HIV-1 subtype A6/A1 (see Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics under Actions).
Post-injection reactions: Partial intravenous administration may result in AEs due to temporarily high plasma concentrations. In clinical studies, serious post-injection reactions were reported within minutes after the injection of rilpivirine, including dyspnoea, agitation, abdominal cramping, flushing, sweating, oral numbness, and changes in blood pressure. These events were very rare and began to resolve within a few minutes after the injection.
Carefully follow the Instructions for Use when preparing and administering REKAMBYS to avoid accidental intravenous administration. Observe patients briefly (approximately 10 minutes) after the injection. If a patient experiences a post-injection reaction, monitor and treat as clinically indicated.
Cardiovascular: REKAMBYS should be used with caution when co-administered with a medicinal product with a known risk of Torsade de Pointes. At supra-therapeutic doses (75 and 300 mg once daily), oral rilpivirine has been associated with prolongation of the QTc interval of the electrocardiogram (ECG) (see Interactions, Adverse Reactions, and Pharmacology: Pharmacokinetics under Actions). Oral rilpivirine at the recommended dose of 25 mg once daily is not associated with a clinically relevant effect on QTc. Plasma rilpivirine concentrations after REKAMBYS injections are comparable to those during such oral rilpivirine therapy.
HBV/HCV co-infection: Patients with hepatitis B co-infection were excluded from studies with REKAMBYS. It is not recommended to initiate REKAMBYS in patients with hepatitis B co-infection. In patients co-infected with hepatitis B receiving oral rilpivirine, the incidence of hepatic enzyme elevation was higher than in patients receiving oral rilpivirine who were not hepatitis B co-infected. Physicians should refer to current treatment guidelines for the management of HIV infection in patients co-infected with hepatitis B virus.
Limited data is available in patients with hepatitis C co-infection. In patients co-infected with hepatitis C receiving oral rilpivirine, the incidence of hepatic enzyme elevation was higher than in patients receiving oral rilpivirine who were not hepatitis C co-infected. The pharmacokinetic exposure of oral and injectable rilpivirine in co-infected patients was comparable to that in patients without hepatitis C co-infection. Monitoring of liver function is recommended in patients with hepatitis C co-infection.
Interactions with other medicinal products: REKAMBYS should not be administered with other antiretroviral medicinal products, except for cabotegravir injection for the treatment of HIV-1 infection (see Interactions).
Immune reactivation syndrome: In HIV-infected patients with severe immune deficiency at the time of institution of combination antiretroviral therapy (CART), an inflammatory reaction to asymptomatic or residual opportunistic pathogens may arise and cause serious clinical conditions, or aggravation of symptoms. Typically, such reactions have been observed within the first few weeks or months of initiation of CART. Relevant examples are cytomegalovirus retinitis, generalised and/or focal mycobacterial infections, and Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia. Any inflammatory symptoms should be evaluated and treatment instituted when necessary. Autoimmune disorders (such as Graves' disease and autoimmune hepatitis) have also been reported to occur in the setting of immune reconstitution, however, the reported time to onset is more variable and these events can occur many months after initiation of treatment.
Transmission of HIV: While effective viral suppression with antiretroviral therapy has been proven to substantially reduce the risk of sexual transmission, a residual risk cannot be excluded. Precautions to prevent transmission should be taken in accordance with national guidelines.
Opportunistic infections: Patients should be advised that REKAMBYS or any other antiretroviral therapy does not cure HIV infection and that they may still develop opportunistic infections and other complications of HIV infection. Therefore, patients should remain under close clinical observation by physicians experienced in the treatment of these associated HIV diseases.
Excipients: This medicine contains less than 1 mmol sodium (23 mg) per injection, that is to say essentially 'sodium-free'.
Effects on ability to drive and use machines: Patients should be informed that fatigue, dizziness and somnolence could occur when treated with REKAMBYS (see Adverse Reactions).
Use in Pregnancy: There are limited data of REKAMBYS in pregnant women. REKAMBYS is not recommended during pregnancy unless the expected benefit justifies the potential risk. Lower exposures of oral rilpivirine were observed when rilpivirine 25 mg once daily was taken during pregnancy. In the Phase 3 studies with oral rilpivirine, lower rilpivirine exposure, similar to that seen during pregnancy, has been associated with an increased risk of virological failure, therefore viral load should be monitored closely. Alternatively, switching to another ART regimen could be considered (see Use in Pregnancy & Lactation and Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics under Actions).
Use In Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy: The effect of REKAMBYS on human pregnancy is unknown.
A moderate amount of data with oral rilpivirine in pregnant women (between 300-1000 pregnancy outcomes) indicate no malformative or foetal/neonatal toxicity of rilpivirine.
A study of 19 pregnant women treated with oral rilpivirine in combination with a background regimen during the second and third trimesters, and postpartum, showed lower exposures of oral rilpivirine during pregnancy, therefore viral load should be monitored closely if REKAMBYS is used during pregnancy.
Animal studies do not indicate reproductive toxicity (see Pharmacology: Toxicology: Preclinical safety data under Actions).
REKAMBYS is not recommended during pregnancy unless the expected benefit justifies the potential risk.
An alternative oral regimen should be considered in line with current treatment guidelines. After discontinuation of REKAMBYS, rilpivirine may remain in systemic circulation for up to 4 years in some patients (see Precautions).
Breast-feeding: It is expected that rilpivirine will be secreted into human milk based on animal data, although this has not been confirmed in humans. Rilpivirine may be present in human milk for up to 4 years in some patients after discontinuation of REKAMBYS.
It is recommended that HIV infected women do not breast-feed their infants under any circumstances in order to avoid transmission of HIV.
Fertility: No human data on the effect of rilpivirine on fertility are available. No clinically relevant effects on fertility were seen in animal studies (see Pharmacology: Toxicology: Preclinical safety data under Actions).
Adverse Reactions
Summary of the safety profile: The most frequently reported ARs from every 1 month dosing studies were injection site reactions (up to 84%), headache (up to 12%) and pyrexia (10%).
The most frequently reported ARs from every 2 months dosing were injection site reactions (76%), headache (7%) and pyrexia (7%).
Tabulated summary of adverse reactions: The ARs identified for rilpivirine and/or cabotegravir are listed by system organ class (SOC) and frequency (see Table 11). Frequencies are defined as very common (≥1/10), common (≥1/100 to <1/10) and uncommon (≥1/1,000 to <1/100). (See Table 11.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

Description of selected adverse reactions: Local Injection Site Reactions (ISRs): Up to 1% of subjects discontinued treatment with rilpivirine and cabotegravir injections because of ISRs.
Injection site reactions were generally mild (Grade 1, 70% - 75% of subjects) or moderate (Grade 2, 27% - 36% of subjects). 3-4% of subjects experienced severe (Grade 3) ISRs. The median duration of ISR events was 3 days. The percentage of subjects reporting ISRs decreased over time.
Weight increased: At the Week 48 time point, subjects in Phase 3 Studies FLAIR and ATLAS, who received rilpivirine plus cabotegravir gained a median of 1.5 kg in weight; subjects continuing on their current antiretroviral regimen (CAR) group gained a median of 1.0 kg (pooled analysis).
In the individual studies FLAIR and ATLAS, the median weight gains in the rilpivirine plus cabotegravir arms were 1.3 kg and 1.8 kg respectively, compared to 1.5 kg and 0.3 kg in the CAR arms.
At the 48 week timepoint, in ATLAS-2M the median weight gain in both the monthly and every 2 months rilpivirine+cabotegravir dosing arms was 1.0 kg.
Changes in laboratory chemistry: Elevated transaminases (ALT/AST) were observed in subjects receiving rilpivirine plus cabotegravir during the clinical studies. These elevations were primarily attributed to acute viral hepatitis. A few subjects on oral rilpivirine plus oral cabotegravir treatment had transaminase elevations attributed to suspected drug-related hepatotoxicity; these changes were reversible upon discontinuation of treatment.
Small, non-progressive increases in total bilirubin (without clinical jaundice) were observed with treatment with rilpivirine plus cabotegravir. These changes are not considered clinically relevant as they likely reflect competition between cabotegravir and unconjugated bilirubin for a common clearance pathway (UGT1A1).
Elevated lipases were observed during clinical trials with rilpivirine plus cabotegravir. Grade 3 and 4 lipase increases occurred at a higher incidence with rilpivirine plus cabotegravir compared with CAR. These elevations were generally asymptomatic and did not lead to rilpivirine plus cabotegravir discontinuation. One case of fatal pancreatitis with Grade 4 lipase and confounding factors (including history of pancreatitis) has been reported in study ATLAS-2M for which the causality to the injection regimen could not be ruled out.
Reporting of suspected adverse reactions: Reporting suspected adverse reactions after authorisation of the medicinal product is important. It allows continued monitoring of the benefit/risk balance of the medicinal product. Healthcare professionals are asked to report any suspected adverse reactions.
Drug Interactions
REKAMBYS, in combination with cabotegravir injection, is intended for use as a complete regimen for the treatment of HIV-1 infection and should not be administered with other antiretroviral medicinal products for the treatment of HIV-1. Therefore, information regarding drug-drug interactions with other antiretroviral medicinal products is not provided. From a drug interaction perspective, there are no limitations on the use of other antiretroviral medicinal products after discontinuing REKAMBYS.
For the oral lead-in rilpivirine treatment and in case missed doses are replaced by oral rilpivirine treatment, refer to the oral rilpivirine tablet package insert for information about drug interactions.
Medicinal products that affect rilpivirine exposure: Rilpivirine is primarily metabolised by cytochrome P450 (CYP)3A. Medicinal products that induce or inhibit CYP3A may thus affect the clearance of rilpivirine (see Pharmacology: Pharmacokinetics under Actions).
Co-administration of rilpivirine and medicinal products that induce CYP3A has been observed to decrease the plasma concentrations of rilpivirine, which could reduce the therapeutic effect of rilpivirine.
Co-administration of rilpivirine and medicinal products that inhibit CYP3A has been observed to increase the plasma concentrations of rilpivirine.
When using oral rilpivirine, proton pump inhibitors are contraindicated (see rilpivirine tablet package insert, Contraindications).
Medicinal products that are affected by the use of rilpivirine: Rilpivirine is not likely to have a clinically relevant effect on the exposure of medicinal products metabolised by CYP enzymes.
Rilpivirine inhibits P-glycoprotein in vitro (IC50 is 9.2 μM). In a clinical study, oral rilpivirine (25 mg once daily) did not significantly affect the pharmacokinetics of digoxin.
Rilpivirine is an in vitro inhibitor of the transporter MATE-2K with an IC50 of <2.7 nM. The clinical implications of this finding are currently unknown.
Interaction table: Selected established and theoretical interactions between rilpivirine and co-administered medicinal products are listed in Tables 12a and 12b and are based on the studies conducted with oral rilpivirine or are potential drug interactions that may occur (increase is indicated as "↑", decrease as "↓", no change as "↔", not applicable as "NA", confidence interval as "CI"). (See Tables 12a and 12b.)

Click on icon to see table/diagram/image


Click on icon to see table/diagram/image

QT prolonging medicinal products: Oral rilpivirine at the recommended dose of 25 mg once daily is not associated with a clinically relevant effect on QTc. Rilpivirine plasma concentrations after REKAMBYS injections at the recommended dose of 600 mg monthly or 900 mg every 2 months, are comparable to those achieved with oral rilpivirine at a dose of 25 mg qd. In a study of healthy subjects, supratherapeutic doses of oral rilpivirine (75 mg once daily and 300 mg once daily) have been shown to prolong the QTc interval of the ECG (see Pharmacology: Pharmacodynamics under Actions). REKAMBYS should be used with caution when co-administered with a medicinal product with a known risk of Torsade de Pointes (see Precautions).
Caution For Usage
Special precautions for disposal and other handling: Any unused medicinal product or waste material should be disposed of in accordance with local requirements.
Full instructions for use and handling of REKAMBYS are provided as follows.
Instructions for Use: The following information is intended for medical or healthcare professionals only.
Overview: A complete dose requires two injections: 3 mL of cabotegravir and 3 mL of rilpivirine.
Cabotegravir and rilpivirine are suspensions that do not need further dilution or reconstitution. The preparation steps for both medicines are the same.
Cabotegravir and rilpivirine are for intramuscular use only. Both injections must be administered to the gluteal sites. The administration order is not important.
Note: The ventrogluteal site is recommended.
The pack contains: 1 vial of rilpivirine.
Also needed: 1 vial adaptor; 1 syringe; 1 injection needle (23 gauge, 1½ inch) (consider the patient's build and use medical judgment to select an appropriate injection needle length); Non-sterile gloves; 2 alcohol swabs; 2 gauze pads; A suitable sharps container; 1 cabotegravir 3 mL pack (make sure to have the cabotegravir pack close by before starting).
Preparation: 1. Inspect vial.
Check that the expiry date has not passed. Inspect the vials immediately. If foreign matter can be seen, do not use the product. Do not use if the expiry date has passed.
2. Wait 15 minutes.
Wait at least 15 minutes before the injection is ready to be given to allow the medicine to come to room temperature.
3. Shake vigorously.
Hold the vial firmly and vigorously shake for a full 10 seconds. Invert the vial and check the resuspension. It should look uniform. If the suspension is not uniform, shake the vial again. It is also normal to see small air bubbles.
4. Remove vial cap.
Remove the cap from the vial. Wipe the rubber stopper with an alcohol swab. Do not allow anything to touch the rubber stopper after wiping it.
5. Peel open vial adaptor.
Peel off the paper backing from the vial adaptor packaging.
Note: Keep the adaptor in place in its packaging for the next step.
6. Attach vial adaptor.
Press the vial adaptor straight down onto the vial using the packaging. The vial adaptor should snap securely into place. When ready, lift off the vial adaptor packaging.
7. Prepare syringe.
Remove the syringe from its packaging. Draw 1 mL of air into the syringe. This will make it easier to draw up the liquid later.
8. Attach syringe.
Hold the vial adaptor and vial firmly. Screw the syringe firmly onto the vial adaptor. Press the plunger all the way down to push the air into the vial.
9. Slowly draw up dose.
Invert the syringe and vial, and slowly withdraw as much of the liquid as possible into the syringe. There might be more liquid than dose amount.
10. Unscrew syringe.
Screw the syringe off the vial adaptor.
Note: Keep the syringe upright to avoid leakage. Check that the suspension looks uniform and milky white.
11. Attach needle.
Peel open the needle packaging part way to expose the needle base. Keeping the syringe upright, firmly twist the syringe onto the needle. Remove the needle packaging from the needle.
Injection: 12. Prepare injection site.
Injections must be administered to the gluteal sites. Select from the following areas for the injection: Ventrogluteal (recommended); Dorsogluteal (upper outer quadrant).
Note: For gluteal intramuscular use only. Do not inject intravenously.
13. Remove cap.
Fold the needle guard away from the needle. Pull off the injection needle cap.
14. Remove extra liquid.
Hold the syringe with the needle pointing up. Press the plunger to the 3 mL dose to remove extra liquid and any air bubbles.
Note: Clean the injection site with an alcohol swab. Allow the skin to air dry before continuing.
15. Stretch skin.
Use the z-track injection technique to minimise medicine leakage from the injection site. Firmly drag the skin covering the injection site, displacing it by about an inch (2.5 cm). Keep it held in this position for the injection.
16. Insert needle.
Insert the needle to its full depth, or deep enough to reach the muscle.
17. Inject dose.
Still holding the skin stretched - slowly press the plunger all the way down. Ensure the syringe is empty. Withdraw the needle and release the stretched skin immediately.
18. Assess the injection site.
Apply pressure to the injection site using a gauze. A small bandage may be used if a bleed occurs. Do not massage the area.
19. Make needle safe.
Fold the needle guard over the needle. Gently apply pressure using a hard surface to lock the needle guard in place. The needle guard will make a click when it locks.
After injection: 20. Dispose safely.
Dispose of used needles, syringes, vials and vial adaptors according to local health and safety laws.
Repeat for 2nd medicine: If both medicines have not yet been injected, use the steps for preparation and injection for Cabotegravir which has its own specific Instructions for Use.
Incompatibilities: This medicinal product must not be mixed with other medicinal products or diluents.
Storage
Store in a refrigerator (2°C - 8°C).
Do not freeze.
Prior to administration, the vial should be brought to room temperature (not to exceed 25°C). The vial may remain in the carton at room temperature for up to 6 hours. If not used after 6 hours, it must be discarded.
Shelf life: Chemical and physical in-use stability has been demonstrated for 6 hours at 25°C.
Once the suspension has been drawn into the syringe, the injection should be administered as soon as possible, but may remain in the syringe for up to 2 hours. If 2 hours are exceeded, the medicine, syringe, and needle must be discarded.
MIMS Class
Antivirals
ATC Classification
J05AG05 - rilpivirine ; Belongs to the class of non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Used in the systemic treatment of viral infections.
Presentation/Packing
Form
Rekambys PR susp for inj 900 mg/3 mL
Packing/Price
1's
Exclusive offer for doctors
Register for a MIMS account and receive free medical publications worth $768 a year.
Already a member? Sign in
Exclusive offer for doctors
Register for a MIMS account and receive free medical publications worth $768 a year.
Already a member? Sign in