Search

  1. Site map
  1. Contrast:
Organisation's logo linking to the home page

Search the Barts Health NHS Trust website

Advanced options
Accessibility Translate
Menu
  1. Now viewing:
  2. Home
  3. Search
  1. A-Z of services
    1. Accident & emergency
    2. Barts Heart Centre
    3. Barts Cancer Centre
    4. Dental Hospital
    5. Maternity
    6. Imaging
    7. Young Barts Health
    8. Phlebotomy (blood tests) and other lab test samples
    9. All of our services
    10. Find a consultant
    11. Patient information leaflets
  2. Patients and visitors
    1. What should I bring to hospital?
    2. Our hospitals
      1. Newham Hospital
      2. Mile End Hospital
      3. St Bartholomew's Hospital
      4. Whipps Cross Hospital
      5. The Royal London Hospital
    3. Advice and support for patients and visitors
      1. Call for Concern - Martha's Rule
      2. Advice, support and making a complaint
      3. Chaplaincy
      4. Meeting your accessibility needs
    4. Appointments
      1. Video appointments
      2. Waiting for your appointment
      3. Managing your appointment
      4. Your follow-up appointments
      5. Your visit
    5. Health records
    6. Online payments
    7. Overseas patients
    8. Private patients
    9. Help with travel
    10. Share your thoughts
  3. Get involved
    1. Barts Charity
    2. NHS Retirement Fellowship
    3. Barts Health Heroes
    4. Research at Barts Health
      1. Take part in research
      2. Shape our research
      3. Barts Life Sciences
      4. Academic Centre for Healthy Ageing
    5. Thank you Barts Health
    6. Volunteer with us
      1. FAQs
      2. How to apply to be a volunteer
    7. Youth Empowerment Squad
  4. Information for GPs and health partners
    1. Referrals
      1. Referral forms
    2. Occupational health services
  5. Work with us
    1. #Shapeyourstory in A&E
    2. Beginning your career
    3. Career development
    4. Current vacancies
    5. Shape your story at Newham Hospital
    6. Shape your story at St Bartholomew's Hospital
    7. Shape your story at The Royal London and Mile End hospitals
    8. Shape your story at Whipps Cross Hospital
    9. Staff benefits
  6. Our news
    1. Press office
      1. Fast facts
      2. We're in the news
      3. Media spokespeople
    2. #TeamBartsHealth blogs
  7. About us
    1. Delivering our vision
      1. Future Whipps
    2. Freedom of Information
      1. Freedom of information publication scheme
    3. Joint Research Management Office
    4. Key documents
      1. Annual reports
    5. Our background and history
      1. Barts Health Archives
      2. Mile End Hospital: Our history
      3. St Bartholomew's Hospital: Our history
      4. Newham Hospital: Our history
      5. The Royal London Hospital: Our history
      6. Whipps Cross Hospital: Our history
    6. Our values
    7. Our board
      1. Non-executive directors
      2. Executive directors
      3. Newham Hospital executive board
      4. The Royal London and Mile End hospitals executive board
      5. St Bartholomew's Hospital executive board
      6. Whipps Cross Hospital executive board
      7. Board meetings and papers
    8. Sustainability
    9. WeBelong
  8. Contact us
    1. Engaging with us on social media

Search the Barts Health NHS Trust website

First ever injectable HIV drug is a 'paradigm-shift' for patients

First ever injectable HIV drug is a 'paradigm-shift' for patients

A new injectable HIV drug could mean that patients no longer have to medicate themselves on a daily basis, according to a clinical trial that included six patients from Barts Health and sponsored by Viiv healthcare. 

The principal investigator for the study was  based at Queen Mary University of London and Barts Health NHS Trust. The positive results, presented at the 2019 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Seattle, Washington on Thursday, shows that a monthly injection of an HIV drug combination is as effective as the standard daily oral treatment for suppressing the HIV virus, and a preferable choice in 90 per cent of patients surveyed.

Professor Chloe Orkin from Queen Mary University of London and Barts Health NHS Trust said: "This is the first ever injectable treatment for HIV, which reduces therapy days from 365 to 12 per year.

"It is a paradigm shift for people living with HIV, as it finally liberates them from the cycle of a daily pill, which has been a defining characteristic of HIV therapy for several decades.

"The efficacy of the new drug is outstanding, and patients overwhelmingly preferred it to the standard pill combination."

The FLAIR (First Long-Acting Injectable Regimen) trial, sponsored by ViiV Healthcare, compared a new long-acting drug combination (containing the drugs cabotegravir and rilpivirine) injected every four weeks, with the standard daily oral treatment which contains a combination of three drugs.

The study involved 566 men and women living with HIV in the UK (including six patients recruited from Barts Health NHS Trust), Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Russia, South Africa, Spain and the United States.

The team found that suppression rates of HIV at Week 48 of the trial were similarly high in both treatments (over 93 percent).

Patient preference data at Week 48 showed that 90.8 per cent of patients preferred the long-acting injectable, compared to 0.7 per cent of patients who preferred their previous oral therapy.

Failure to suppress the virus was infrequent in both treatments, and the three confirmed failures in the long-acting injectable treatment arm were in people who had an uncommon subtype of HIV and had developed resistance to treatment.

Treatment with the long-acting injectable was generally well-tolerated, with low rates of serious adverse events (6.4 per cent) and adverse events leading to withdrawal from the study (3.2 per cent).

Side effects of the new injectable drug combination included injection site reactions (inflammation or damage occuring in surrounding tissue, sometimes due to an allergic reaction) but nearly all of these were mild or moderate, had an approximate duration of three days, and a decreasing frequency over time.

John C. Pottage, Jr., M.D., Chief Scientific and Medical Officer of ViiV Healthcare, said: "If approved, this two-drug regimen would give people living with HIV one month between each dose of antiretroviral therapy, changing HIV treatment from 365 dosing days per year, to just 12. We look forward to submitting applications to regulatory authorities later this year."

Back to top of page Print this page Email this page Site map

Popular pages

This sits in the footer of the site, placed at site-level so it's available on all pages.
Popular pages
  1. Find a consultant
  2. Barts Charity
  3. Barts Health Heroes
  4. Volunteer with us
  5. Work with us

Important links

This sits in the footer, set at site-level so it's available on all pages.
Important links
  1. Advice and support for patients and visitors
  2. Health records
  3. Delivering our vision
  4. Our board
  5. Press office
  6. Referrals
  7. Take part in research
  8. Share your thoughts
  • Accessibility |
  • Site map |
  • Privacy |
  • Cookies |
  • Using social media

Barts Health NHS Trust © 2025

Powered by VerseOne Group Ltd

Cookies help us deliver the best experience for you on our website. Some of them are essential, and others are there to help make it easier and more secure for you to use our site. We also use analytics cookies to help us understand how people use our website so we can make it better. If you choose not to accept these cookies, our site will still work correctly but some third party services (such as our web chat service, videos and social media feeds) may not display.

Please choose a setting: