Showing posts with label GS-9451. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GS-9451. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2013

EASL 2013: 'Quad' HCV Tx Works but No More Trials Planned

'Quad' HCV Tx Works but No More Trials Planned

By Michael Smith, North American Correspondent, MedPage Today
Published: April 29, 2013

Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

AMSTERDAM – A four-drug regimen was effective in hard-to-treat hepatitis C (HCV) patients who had previously failed therapy, a researcher said here, but the drug combination is not being further developed.

Action Points
  • This study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered to be preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
  • The combination of an NS5A inhibitor, a protease inhibitor, and pegylated interferon plus ribavirin appeared to be effective in treatment experienced, genotype 1 HCV-infected patients.

    In a phase II study, 70% of patients had undetectable HCV virus 12 weeks after ending the so-called "quad regimen," according to Gregory Everson, MD, of the University of Colorado in Aurora.

    The drug protocol consisted of an NS5A inhibitor dubbed ledipasvir and a protease inhibitor, GS-9451, along with pegylated interferon and ribavirin.

    Among those who responded to the four-drug regimen quickly and persistently, the rate was even higher at 87%, Everson reported at the meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver.

    But despite the promise of what he called a "re-treatment protocol," Everson said further development of the regimen is not in the cards.

    He did not immediately respond to an email from MedPage Today seeking clarification, but other experts here suggest it may have to do with the perception that pegylated interferon and ribavirin are on the way out.

    Meanwhile, ledipasvir and GS-9451 remain in clinical development, according to a spokesman for the developer, Gilead Sciences of Forest City, Calif.

    The results of the trial "are not entirely unexpected," commented Heiner Wedemeyer, MD, of Hannover Medical School in Hannover, Germany, who was not involved with the study.

    "This specific regimen is not being further developed," he said, but what investigators "learned is that if we add more potent drugs, we can treat more difficult patients. We confirmed that concept."

    It seems likely, he said, that the two drugs will continue to be developed for use without interferon and perhaps ribavirin. "The question will be whether we can shorten treatment," Wedemeyer said.

    Until 2011, standard therapy for HCV genotype 1 was 48 weeks of pegylated interferon with ribavirin, a regimen regarded as difficult to tolerate with a substantial proportion of treatment failures.

    Current standard therapy adds a third drug, one of the protease inhibitors telaprevir (Incivek) or boceprevir (Victrelis), but those medications have their own side effects and risks.

    Patients who fail standard treatment – either relapsing or not responding in the first place – need better options, Everson said here.

    He and colleagues tested the four drugs (ledipasvir, GS-9451, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin) in a response-guided fashion, enrolling 163 patients, including 52 who had not responded to previous therapy, 28 who had a partial response, and 83 who either relapsed or had viral breakthrough on treatment.

    Patients who had undetectable viral RNA at weeks four through 20 of treatment stopped therapy after 24 weeks, while the others stopped ledipasvir and GS-9451 but continued the other two drugs for another 24 weeks.

    The 70% rate of undetectable virus 12 weeks after the end of therapy (SVR12) indicated a "fairly robust antiviral effect," Everson said, and response during therapy was "highly predictive " of treatment success.

    Among those who had a so-called extended rapid virologic response – no detectable virus from weeks four through 20 – the SVR12 rate was 87%, compared with just 28% among those who did not have such a response.

    Everson said that patients with genotype 1b did better than those with genotype 1a, while those with the favorable CC variant of the IL-28B gene did better than those with other versions.

    He added that 5% of patients had a serious adverse event during the study and 7.3% stopped treatment because of adverse events, all attributed to the interferon or ribavirin.

    The overall pattern of adverse events, he said, was "typical" of what is seen with the two older drugs.


    The study was supported by Gilead. Everson reported financial links with the company as well as BMS, Abbott, Roche/Genentech, Vertex, Merck/Schering-Plough Novartis, Janssen/Tibotec, GSK, Eisai, and BioTest.

    Wedemeyer reported financial links with Abbott, Achillion, Biolex, BMS, Gilead, Janssen-Cilag, Merck, Novartis, Roche, Siemens, Transgene, and ViiV.

    Primary source: European Accociation For the Study of the Liver
    Source reference:
    Everson GT, et al "Combination of the NS5A inhibitor, GS-5885, the NS3 protease inhibitor, GS-9451, and pegylated interferon plus ribavirin in treatment experienced patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C infection" EASL 2013; Abstract 13.

  • EASL Conference Coverage @ MedPage Today

    Drug Trio Helps Treat HCV After Transplant
    4/29/2013
    AMSTERDAM -- Three-drug therapy appears to help liver transplant patients whose hepatitis C (HCV) recurs, a researcher said here. 
     
    4/29/2013
    AMSTERDAM -- High levels of hemoglobin may be dangerous in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), with bleeding a potential remedy, researchers said here. 
     

    Saturday, April 27, 2013

    EASL 2013 Highlights - CCO's independent conference coverage

     
    Program Overview
     
    2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver*
     
    April 24-28, 2013 | Amsterdam, The Netherlands
       
    CCO's independent conference coverage of the 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver includes 2 CME-certified slidesets with faculty analysis and downloadable slidesets that focuses on key issues highlighted at the conference.
     
    **Free registration required
     
    Latest Content
    Daclatasvir Plus Asunaprevir Plus BMS-791325 Achieves ≥ 88% SVR Rates in Noncirrhotic Treatment-Naive Patients With Genotype 1 HCV
    The all-oral regimen combining an NS5a inhibitor, a protease inhibitor, and a nonnucleoside polymerase inhibitor was well tolerated at both doses of BMS-791325 studied.
    Date Posted: 5/3/2013

    HBV DNA Seroclearance Significantly Reduces Risk of HCC in Patients With High Baseline Viral Loads
    Seroclearance of HBeAg, HBsAg did not significantly decrease HCC risk in adjusted analysis.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 5/2/2013

    CONCISE: Interim Results Show High SVR Rates With Either 12 or 24 Weeks of Telaprevir Plus Peginterferon/Ribavirin in Patients With HCV Genotype 1 and IL28B CC Genotype
    Among patients who completed 12 weeks of triple therapy, 100% SVR12 rate among patients who continued to receive peginterferon/ribavirin through 24 weeks vs 89% SVR4 rate among patients who stopped all therapy at 12 weeks.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 5/2/2013

    QUEST-1: Simeprevir Plus PegIFN/RBV Significantly Improves SVR12 Rate vs PegIFN/RBV Alone in Treatment-Naive Patients With Genotype 1 HCV
    Triple therapy was well tolerated and 85% of patients were able to shorten treatment to 24 weeks, of whom 91% achieved SVR12.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 5/1/2013

    COMMAND: Daclatasvir Plus PegIFN/RBV Improves SVR24 Rate vs PegIFN/RBV Alone in Treatment-Naive Patients With Genotype 2/3 HCV
    The triple-drug regimen allowed 83% of patients to receive shorter treatment durations of only 12 or 16 weeks, and safety and tolerability was comparable to pegIFN/RBV alone.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/30/2013

    QUEST-2: Simeprevir Plus PegIFN/RBV Superior to PegIFN/RBV for SVR12 in Treatment-Naive Patients With Genotype 1 HCV
    Triple therapy was well tolerated and enabled most patients (91%) to shorten the duration of therapy to 24 weeks while maintaining a high SVR12 rate of 86% in this subgroup.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/30/2013

    POSITRON: Sofosbuvir/Ribavirin Superior to Placebo With 78% SVR12 Rate in Genotype 2/3 HCV–Infected Patients Intolerant of, Ineligible for, or Unwilling to Receive IFN
    Sofosbuvir plus ribavirin is a safe, effective, IFN-free alternative for patients chronically infected with genotype 2/3 HCV who have no other treatment options available.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/30/2013

    Observed HCC Incidence Lower Than Predicted in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B Receiving Tenofovir in Phase III Clinical Trials
    The effect of tenofovir was more noticeable in noncirrhotic patients, emerging at 2 years of treatment and reaching statistical significance by 6 years of treatment.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/30/2013

    Prolonged Tenofovir-Based Antiviral Therapy Maintains HBV DNA Suppression in Patients With Chronic HBV, Normal ALT Levels, and High HBV DNA Levels
    HBV DNA suppression was increased with tenofovir plus emtricitabine vs tenofovir alone, but safety profiles of both regimens were favorable through 192 weeks of study.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/30/2013

    Ledipasvir, GS-9451, and Peginterferon/Ribavirin Achieves 70% SVR12 With Good Tolerability in Treatment-Experienced Patients With Genotype 1 HCV Infection
    In this single-arm study, 71% of patients were eligible to received truncated 24-week therapy; safety profile was consistent with that of peginterferon/ribavirin alone.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013

    FISSION: Sofosbuvir/Ribavirin Noninferior to Peginterferon/Ribavirin for SVR12 in Treatment-Naive Patients With HCV Genotype 2/3
    Efficacy was similar between the 2 treatment arms, but sofosbuvir/ribavirin demonstrated superior safety and tolerability with shorter therapy compared with peginterferon/ribavirin.
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013
     
    NEUTRINO: Sofosbuvir Plus Peginterferon/Ribavirin Achieves High SVR12 Rate, Well Tolerated in Treatment-Naive Patients With Genotype 1, 4, 5, or 6 HCV
    The triple-therapy regimen yielded 90% SVR12 in the overall population, and all patient subgroups attained at least 80% SVR12 rate, including patients with cirrhosis and those with IL28B non-CC genotype.
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013

    FUSION: Sofosbuvir/Ribavirin Superior to Historical Controls for SVR12 in Treatment-Experienced Patients With Genotype 2/3 HCV
    Significantly better rates of SVR12 with both 12 and 16 weeks of therapy compared with historical controls, with better outcomes with 16 weeks of therapy among patients with genotype 3 HCV
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013
     
    STARTVerso1: Faldaprevir Plus Peginterferon/Ribavirin Highly Effective, Well Tolerated in Treatment-Naive Patients Infected With Genotype 1 HCV
    Most patients receiving faldaprevir (88%) were able to shorten therapy to 24 weeks total, without compromising sustained virologic response, which was 88% in this subgroup.
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013 

    Daclatasvir Plus Sofosbuvir ± Ribavirin Achieves 95% to 100% SVR12 Rate in Patients With Previous Virologic Failure on Telaprevir or Boceprevir            
    Virologic response rates to all-oral, once-daily 24-week regimen unaffected by baseline NS3 variants conferring protease inhibitor resistance
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013

    QUANTUM: Interferon-Free Sofosbuvir/Ribavirin Regimen Achieves 52% to 72% SVR12 Rate in Treatment-Naive Patients With Chronic HCV Infection
    QUANTUM also identified marked elevations in ALT and/or AST associated with the guanidine nucleotide analog GS-0938, which resulted in GS-0938—containing arms being halted.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013
     
    Ledipasvir, GS-9451, and Peginterferon/Ribavirin Achieves 70% SVR12 With Good Tolerability in Treatment-Experienced Patients With Genotype 1 HCV Infection
    In this single-arm study, 71% of patients were eligible to received truncated 24-week therapy; safety profile was consistent with that of peginterferon/ribavirin alone.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/28/2013

    AVIATOR: ABT-450/Ritonavir, ABT-267 and/or ABT-333, and RBV Achieves SVR24 Rates ≥ 90% in Treatment-Naive Patients and Previous Null Responders With Genotype 1 HCV
    The 4-drug peginterferon-free regimens also yielded SVR rates ≥ 89% in treatment-naive patients and previous null responders regardless of sex, HCV subtype, baseline HCV RNA, IL28B genotype, and fibrosis severity.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/26/2013

    High Rate of Advanced Fibrosis in Patients With HBV/HIV Coinfection, Despite HBV Suppression With Antiretroviral Therapy
    Patients with HBV/HIV coinfection treated with HBV-suppressing antiretrovirals continue to demonstrate high rates of advanced fibrosis.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
    Date Posted: 4/26/2013

    ELECTRON: Addition of Second DAA to Sofosbuvir and Ribavirin Yields Rapid, Sustained Antiviral Suppression in Both Treatment-Naive Patients and Previous Null Responders With Genotype 1 HCV
    Combining ledipasvir with sofosbuvir/ribavirin yielded SVR12 rates of 100% in both treatment-naive patients and previous null responders, lending further support to ongoing development of the sofosbuvir/ledipasvir fixed-dose combination tablet.
    Source: 2013 Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver