Study Begins To Define How Long HCV Patients May Need Treatment
As new treatments for hepatitis C virus are approved, Andrew H. Talal, MD, is exploring their mechanisms and revealing how the virus responds.
Groundbreaking Study Tracks Viral Decay in Patients with Hepatitis C
June 24, 2014
A study led by Andrew H. Talal, MD, is the first to trace in real time how the drug telaprevir inhibits viral replication in the liver and clears hepatitis C virus (HCV) from the cells and plasma of infected patients.
“Our findings begin to define for how long patients may need to be
treated in order to achieve viral eradication,” says Talal, professor of medicine in
the Division
of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition.
“Until now, there has been no precise definition of the duration of
treatment based upon serial measurements of the virus in the liver,” he
explains. “This is the first time such measurements have been performed during
antiviral therapy.”
Treating Chronic HCV Infection With Protease Inhibitor
The study, conducted at Weill
Cornell Medical
College in New York City, involved 15 patients with
chronic HCV infection who were treated with telaprevir-based triple
therapy.
The researchers sampled their livers at various intervals before and after treatment. They measured viral kinetics, resistance patterns, drug concentrations and host transcription profiles.
The researchers sampled their livers at various intervals before and after treatment. They measured viral kinetics, resistance patterns, drug concentrations and host transcription profiles.
The triple therapy is an HCV treatment regimen approved by the Food
and Drug Administration in 2011.
RNA Decay in Liver Lags Behind That in Blood
Findings regarding the rate of decay for viral ribonucleic acid
(RNA) — an indicator of how quickly the virus is being eradicated — are of
particular interest.
“We found that HCV RNA decay in the liver lagged behind that in the
peripheral blood, which has implications for how long the virus may persist in
the body and the possible duration of treatment needed,” Talal says.
Researchers also found higher levels of telaprevir in blood
than in the liver.
“These findings can affect the duration of therapy,” said Talal,
adding that they can also help identify when drug-resistant variants of the
virus emerge in the blood and liver.
The findings also may have relevance for the development of other
methods of treating HCV, such as vaccines to control the infection, he adds.
Fine-Needle Aspiration Allows Repeat Sampling
Talal and his team used fine-needle aspiration to sample the livers
and blood of patients in the study.
Compared to more invasive core needle biopsy used in previous
studies, this technique is better tolerated by patients and allows for repeated
sampling at more time points.
“Fine-needle aspiration enables us to sample the liver repeatedly
during the course of treatment to better understand what’s happening with the
virus, how these drugs work and how to tailor therapy to the patient,” says
Talal.
Study Published in Hepatology
The study, Telaprevir-Based
Treatment Effects on Hepatitis C Virus in Liver and Blood, has been
published in Hepatology.
Other UB co-authors are:
- Rositsa B. Dimova, PhD, research assistant professor of medicine and biostatistics
- Marija Zeremski, PhD, research assistant professor of medicine
Additional co-authors are from Weill Cornell, InnovaTID
Pharmaceuticals and Vertex Pharmaceuticals.
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