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Fuzeon

Enfuvirtide, with trade name FuzeonĀ®, is a novel antiretroviral drug used in combination therapy for the treatment of HIV-1 infection. It is currently marketed by Hoffmann-La Roche under the trade name Fuzeon. more...

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Enfuvirtide is available only in injectable form since it is a peptide and would not survive digestion. The injections must be taken twice a day. This makes it inconvenient to take. With an estimated U.S. price of more than $25,000 for a year of Fuzeon, it is relatively expensive for an antiretroviral drug. Its inconvenience and price reserve it mostly for salvage therapy in patients with multi-drug resistant HIV.

The most common side effect is injection site reaction.

History

Trimeris Inc. began development on enfuvirtide in 1996 and initially designated it T-20. Trimeris partnered with Hoffmann-La Roche in 1999 to complete the drug's development. The medication has several disadvantages that resulted in its slow progress. It is difficult to manufacture, and is only available in an injectable form. The injections must be taken twice a day.

Its approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on March 13, 2003 made it the first of the new Fusion inhibitor class of antiretroviral drugs to be approved for use in the United States. It was approved on the basis of two studies (TORO 1 and TORO 2) which compared the effect of optimized regimens of antiretroviral medication with and without the addition of Fuzeon on serum viral load.

Mode of action

Enfuvirtide works by disrupting the HIV-1 molecular machinery at the final stage of fusion with the target cell, preventing uninfected cells from becoming infected. A biomimetic peptide, Enfuvirtide was rationally designed to mimic components of the HIV-1 fusion machinery and displace them, preventing normal fusion. Drugs that disrupt fusion of virus and target cell are termed entry inhibitors.


Greenberg, M. L. and N. Cammack (2004). "Resistance to enfuvirtide, the first HIV fusion inhibitor." J Antimicrob Chemother 54(2): 333-40.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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T-20 gets priority review - FUZEON - Brief Article
From AIDS Treatment News, 10/18/02

On October 11 Roche and Trimeris, Inc. announced that the FDA had granted priority review to FUZEON (TM) (generic name enfuvirtide, formerly known as T-20). This means that the FDA plans to review the application for approval in six months, and announce the results by March 16, 2003 (six months after the application for approval was submitted).

Enfuvirtide works differently from any currently approved HIV drugs: it blocks a step in the process by which HIV fuses with a cell membrane and enters the cell. Since it has an entirely different mechanism of action, virus that has become resistant to approved drugs will not automatically be resistant to this one. However, resistance to enfuvirtide does develop, as with other antiretrovirals. This drug also must only be used in combination treatments, never alone.

Enfuvirtide must be injected twice a day, can be difficult to use, and is difficult to manufacture so it will probably be expensive. For these reasons it will likely be used mainly by patients who do not have other good options.

COPYRIGHT 2002 John S. James
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gale Group

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