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Home » Gilead’s experimental HIV treatment shows low discontinuation rates in studies
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Gilead’s experimental HIV treatment shows low discontinuation rates in studies

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIAFebruary 25, 2026No Comments1 Min Read
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Feb 25 (Reuters) – Gilead Sciences on Wednesday said its experimental single-tablet HIV treatment was ‌generally well tolerated with low discontinuation rates, ‌positioning the single-tablet regimen as a potential option for patients ​to switch to after the virus is already suppressed.

Detailed results from another late-stage trial were presented on Wednesday at a conference in Denver, as ‌Gilead prepares regulatory ⁠filings for the experimental combination.

In one trial, discontinuation rates due to adverse events ⁠were 1.6% and 0.5% in the two treatment arms respectively. Both data were considered low.

In the ​same trial, ​0.8% of patients ​taking the combination pill ‌had detectable virus in their blood after 48 weeks, compared with 1.1% of those who remained on multi-tablet regimens.

The company studied the pill in HIV patients whose virus was already suppressed, including ‌those switching from complex ​multi-tablet regimens or from a ​guideline-recommended single-tablet treatment.

Participants ​also reported higher treatment satisfaction after ‌switching to the experimental regimen, ​according to ​a paper published in The Lancet.

Gilead said it plans to submit data from both trials ​to regulators. ‌The combination has not been approved by ​any regulatory authority.

(Reporting by Siddhi Mahatole and ​Sriparna Roy in Bengaluru)



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