This blog is all about current FDA approved drugs to treat the hepatitis C virus (HCV) with a focus on treating HCV according to genotype, using information extracted from peer-reviewed journals, liver meetings/conferences, and interactive learning activities.
Risk Of Developing Liver Cancer After HCV Treatment
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Monday, November 12, 2012
AASLD-GI-5005 Improves Virologic Clearance of HCV in Combination with PegIFN/Ribavirin in IL28B T/T Patients
BOSTON, Nov. 11, 2012 - GlobeImmune, Inc., today announced Phase 2b clinical data showing that GI-5005, a Tarmogen® product candidate for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, improved virologic clearance of HCV in combination with pegylated-interferon plus ribavirin (P/R) in genotype 1, IL28B T/T patients. IL28B T/T is an unfavorable patient genotype that predicts poor sustained virologic response (SVR24) to P/R.
GI-5005-02 is a randomized Phase 2b clinical trial evaluating GI-5005 plus P/R compared to P/R alone in subjects with chronic genotype 1 HCV infection. Preliminary data from the trial showed that the largest improvement in SVR24 was observed in subjects with the most difficult-to-treat IL28B T/T genotype. GI-5005 enhanced HCV-specific cellular immunity and improved SVR24 [GI-5005+P/R: 3/5 (60%) compared to P/R alone: 0/5 (0%)].
Following this result, the trial was expanded to enroll and treat an additional 17 genotype 1, treatment-naïve subjects having the IL28B T/T genotype. In the study, presented by Dr. M. L. Shiffman, the Liver Institute of Virginia, Bon Secours Virginia Health System, Newport News, VA, GI-5005 in combination with P/R was well tolerated and had a higher end of treatment virologic response rate [GI-5005+P/R; 10/16 (63%) compared to P/R alone; 3/11 (27%)].
"GI-5005 in combination with pegylated interferon + ribavirin appears to have an effect in the most difficult-to-treat IL28B patients," said Dr. Shiffman. "GI-5005 could potentially be used in treatment refractory HCV patient subgroups in future regimens."
GI-5005 contains a fusion of two hepatitis C proteins, NS3 and Core, which are highly conserved across HCV genotypes and are recognized by T cells. GI-5005 is engineered to activate an HCV-specific T cell immune response, resulting in the reduction of cells containing viral antigens.
The World Health Organization estimates that up to 170 million people globally are infected with HCV, with three to four million new infections each year. Approximately 20% to 30% of all HCV patients will face life-threatening complications as a result of their disease. In industrialized countries, HCV accounts for 40% of cases of end-stage cirrhosis, 60% of cases of hepatocellular carcinoma and 30% of liver transplants.
About GlobeImmune
GlobeImmune is a biopharmaceutical company focused on developing therapeutic products for cancer and infectious diseases based on its proprietary Tarmogen® platform. Tarmogens activate the immune system by stimulating cellular immunity, known as T cell immunity, in contrast to traditional vaccines, which stimulate predominately antibody production. To date, Tarmogen product candidates have been generally well tolerated in clinical trials for multiple disease indications and are efficient to manufacture. In May 2009, the company entered into a collaboration agreement with Celgene Corporation focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of product candidates for the treatment of cancer. In October 2011, the company entered into a worldwide, strategic collaboration with Gilead Sciences, Inc., to develop Tarmogens for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B infection. For additional information, please visit the company's website at www.globeimmune.com.
# # #
GLOBEIMMUNE CONTACT:
David Apelian, M.D., Ph.D.
SVP Research & Development and Chief Medical Officer
T: 303-625-2820
information@globeimmune.com
GLOBEIMMUNE MEDIA CONTACTS:
Lena Evans or Tony Russo, Ph.D.
Russo Partners LLC
T: 212-845-4262 or 212-845-4251
lena.evans@russopartnersllc.com
tony.russo@russopartnersllc.com
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
GI-5005 -Therapeutic HCV Vaccine Has Benefit in Some Subgroups
Elsevier Global Medical News
BOSTON – A therapeutic vaccine against the hepatitis C virus was associated
with a significantly higher sustained virologic response rate when added to
standard-of-care treatment, and the findings justify further development of the vaccine, Dr. Paul Pockros, AGAF, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.
In the proof-of-concept trial, 133 patients infected with hepatitis C virus
(HCV) genotype 1 were randomized to either triple therapy comprising the experimental GI-5005 vaccine, which is designed to elicit a T-cell response specific to HCV, along with pegylated interferon
alfa-2b plus ribavirin (P/R), or the standard P/R therapy alone.
The primary outcome measure was sustained virologic response (SVR), defined
as undetectable HCV RNA at 6 months after treatment, said Dr. Pockros
of the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, Calif.
The 68 patients in the experimental group initially received monotherapy with the vaccine, consisting of five weekly injections followed by two monthly injections for a 12-week lead-in period,
before progressing to the standard-of care P/R treatment and once-monthly
injections. The 65 patients in the control group received standard-of-care P/R treatment alone. In both groups, treatment duration was 48 weeks for treatment-naive patients and 72 weeks for those who had a poor or partial response to prior P/R treatment.
Among the study’s treatment-naive patients,58% of those who received the vaccine achieved SVR, compared with 48% of those who received P/R alone. Among the prior poor and partial responders, the respective SVR rates in the vaccine and control groups were 17% and 5%, Dr. Pockros reported. “There was a slight benefit in the treatment-naive and nonresponders, [but] this was numerical only and was not statistically significant,” he said. However, the overall benefit in the
vaccine group vs. control group was statistically significant, with respective SVR rates of 47% and 35%, he noted.
The vaccine strategy appears to be safe. “The most common associated adverse events were mild, transient injection-site reactions,” said Dr. Pockros, and the discontinuation rates due to adverse
events were comparable (13%) in both groups.
Of particular interest, Dr. Pockros noted,was the T-cell response in a subgroupof difficult-to-treat patients receiving the vaccine. Previous studies have suggested that patients carrying the T allele of the IL28 gene are at high risk of treatment failure with the standard interferon-based therapy.
The T-cell response in vaccine-treated patients, as measured by interferon-gamma enzyme-linked ImmunoSpot assay, “mimicked what we saw with a virologic response,” he said. “Four of five T/T allele patients had a T-cell response – one did not actually get treated – but none of
the patients who received standard of care had a T-cell response.”
This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that the GI-5005 vaccine corrects a fundamental deficit in cellular immunity in IL28B T/T genotype patients, he said. Although the findings need to be
confirmed in studies with larger patient populations, the vaccine will likely be genotype specific, he noted.
Because the immune response is similar to that observed in HCV-infected patients who are able to clear the virus without treatment, future studies will evaluate the efficacy of monotherapy with the vaccine in genotype-specific patients, Dr. Pockros said.
The proof-of-concept study was funded by GlobeImmune, manufacturer of
the vaccine. Dr. Pockros disclosed financial relationships with GlobeImmune, Genentech, Vertex, Merck, Gilead, Abbott,
Pfizer, Phenomix, Tibotec, Pharmasset,3RT, Novartis, Johnson &
Johnson, Achillon, Regulus, Debio, Zymogenetics, and Human Genome Sciences.
http://www.gastro.org/journals-publications/gi-hepatology-news/GI_-_Hepatology_News_-_July_2011.pdf
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Hepatitis C GI-5005 Vaccine Elicits Immune Response in Some Patients
Hepatitis C Vaccine Elicits Immune Response in Some Patients
By: DIANA MAHONEY, Internal Medicine News Digital Network
BOSTON – A therapeutic vaccine against the hepatitis C virus was associated with a significantly higher sustained virologic response rate when added to standard-of-care treatment, and the findings justify further development of the vaccine, Dr. Paul Pockros reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.
Dr. Paul J. Pockros
In the proof-of-concept trial, 133 patients infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 were randomized to either triple therapy comprising the experimental GI-5005 vaccine, which is designed to elicit a T-cell response specific to HCV, along with pegylated interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin (P/R), or the standard P/R therapy alone.
The primary outcome measure was sustained virologic response (SVR), defined as undetectable HCV RNA at 6 months after treatment, said Dr. Pockros of the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, Calif.
The 68 patients in the experimental group initially received monotherapy with the vaccine, consisting of five weekly injections followed by two monthly injections for a 12-week lead-in period, before progressing to the standard-of-care P/R treatment and once-monthly injections. The 65 patients in the control group received standard-of-care P/R treatment alone.
In both groups, the treatment duration was 48 weeks for treatment-naive patients and 72 weeks for those who had a poor or partial response to prior P/R treatment, said Dr. Pockros. Patients in whom prior P/R therapy induced no notable decrease in HCV viral load, as well as those in whom prior treatment initially resulted in undetectable HCV RNA followed by a viral rebound, were excluded from the analysis.
Among the study’s treatment-naive patients, 58% of those who received the vaccine achieved SVR, compared with 48% of those who received P/R alone. Among the prior poor and partial responders, the respective SVR rates in the vaccine and control groups were 17% and 5%, Dr. Pockros reported.
"There was a slight benefit in the treatment-naive and nonresponders, [but] this was numerical only and was not statistically significant," he said. However, the overall benefit in the vaccine vs. control groups was statistically significant, with respective SVR rates of 47% and 35%, he noted.
The vaccine strategy appears to be safe. "The most common associated adverse events were mild, transient injection-site reactions," said Dr. Pockros. Additionally, he stated, "the discontinuation rates due to adverse events were comparable [13%] in both the triple-therapy and standard-of-care arms."
Of particular interest, Dr. Pockros noted, was the T-cell response in a subgroup of difficult-to-treat patients receiving the vaccine. Previous studies have suggested that patients carrying the T allele of the IL28 gene are at high risk of treatment failure with the standard interferon-based therapy. The T-cell response in vaccine-treated patients, as measured by interferon-gamma enzyme-linked ImmunoSpot assay, "mimicked what we saw with a virologic response," he said.
"Four of five T/T allele patients had a T-cell response – one did not actually get treated – but none of the patients who received standard of care had a T-cell response."
This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that the GI-5005 vaccine corrects a fundamental deficit in cellular immunity in IL28B T/T genotype patients, he said. Although the findings need to be confirmed in additional studies with larger patient populations, the vaccine will likely be genotype specific, he noted.
Because the immune response is similar to that observed in HCV-infected patients who are able to clear the virus without treatment, future studies will evaluate the efficacy of monotherapy with the vaccine in genotype-specific patients, Dr. Pockros said.
The proof-of-concept study was funded by GlobeImmune, manufacturer of the vaccine. Dr. Pockros disclosed financial relationships with GlobeImmune, Genentech, Vertex, Merck, Gilead, Abbott, Pfizer, Phenomix, Tibotec, Pharmasset, 3RT, Novartis, Johnson & Johnson, Achillon, Regulus, Debio, Zymogenetics, and Human Genome Sciences.
Monday, November 8, 2010
AASLD 2010 Summary Of Hepatitis C Oral Inhibitors
Telaprevir is an investigational oral protease inhibitor used in combination with pegylated interferon plus ribavirin and is being developed by Vertex in collaboration with Johnson & Johnson.
.
Response-guided therapy (Response guided therapy is intended to enable the physician to determine the duration of combination therapy based on a patient's viral response during treatment) was used in ADVANCE, whereby patients whose virus was undetectable at weeks 4 and 12 of treatment with telaprevir-based therapy were eligible to reduce their treatment from 48 weeks to 24 weeks.
The Phase 3 ILLUMINATE trial was designed to confirm both the use of *response-guided therapy and to evaluate whether there was any benefit to extending total treatment duration from 24 to 48 weeks."
In ADVANCE and ILLUMINATE, 58% and 65% of people, respectively, met these criteria for 24-week total treatment. In ILLUMINATE there was no benefit in extending therapy to 48 weeks.
Phase 3 REALIZE
Trial REALIZE was the second pivotal Phase 3 trial and was designed to evaluate telaprevir-based regimens in people who had received pegylated-interferon-based therapy but did not achieve a cure. REALIZE is the only Phase 3 clinical trial to date of an investigational direct-acting antiviral to include all major subgroups of difficult-to-treat patients including null responders, who were defined as people who had a less than a 2 log10 reduction in viral load by week 12 of a prior course of therapy.
The Results
Overall in ADVANCE, 75% of people treated with a telaprevir-based combination regimen for 12 weeks, followed by an additional 12 or 36 weeks of pegylated-interferon and ribavirin alone, achieved SVR, compared to 44% of people treated with 48 weeks of pegylated-interferon and ribavirin alone.
ILLUMINATE
In ILLUMINATE, 72% of people overall achieved SVR with telaprevir-based therapy. New data from this study showed that 60% of African Americans/Blacks and 63% of people with advanced liver fibrosis or cirrhosis achieved SVR with telaprevir-based therapy in the overall study analysis. Of African Americans/Blacks whose virus was undetectable at weeks 4 and 12, 88% of people achieved SVR in both the 24-week and 48-week randomized treatment arms. There was no control arm of pegylated-interferon and ribavirin alone in ILLUMINATE.
REALIZE
Results of the REALIZE trial showed that 65 percent of patients treated with telaprevir plus the standard of care were cured, or sustained viral response compared to 17 percent of patients in the control group who were re-treated with just the standard of care.
SVR In The Three Different Groups Were As Follows:
86 percent of re-lapsers were cured after telaprevir treatment compared to 24 percent in the control arm.
Among the second group, the cure rate for the telaprevir-treated patients was 57 percent compared to 15 percent for the control arm.
Control Arm = *SOC pegylated interferon plus ribavirin
Finally, in the last group which consisted of the most difficult to treat patients, telaprevir achieved a 31 percent cure rate compared to 5 percent for the control arm. Results across all three patients types were statistically significant in favor of telaprevir over standard of care, officials report.
Complete Information
Side Effects :In ADVANCE, discontinuation of telaprevir or placebo only due to adverse events during the telaprevir treatment phase occurred in 11% of people in the 12-week telaprevir arm, 7% of people in the 8-week telaprevir arm and 1% of people in the control arm. In ILLUMINATE, 12% of people overall discontinued telaprevir only due to adverse events during the telaprevir treatment phase.
Discontinuation of all drugs due to either rash or anemia was low in both studies (1% to 3%). Rash was primarily characterized as eczema-like, manageable and resolved upon stopping telaprevir. Ninety-two percent and 95% of rash was mild to moderate in ADVANCE and ILLUMINATE, respectively. Rash was managed with the use of topical corticosteroids and antihistamines, and anemia was primarily managed by reducing the dose of ribavirin. The use of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) were not allowed in any of the Phase 3 clinical studies.
Discontinuation (%) of all drugs during the telaprevir treatment phase
ADVANCE
12-week telaprevir arm ..................................7%
8-week telaprevir arm......................................8%
Control Arm.................................... 4%
ILLUMINATE*
Total .................................................7%*
There was no control arm in ILLUMINATE
Telaprevir may have * fewer side effects (like anemia) than boceprevir.
Vertex announced a new trial which will be called the "OPTIMIZE" and is for genotype 1 patients who have not previously treated.
AASLD/2010 Telaprevir 3 Studies Showed Superior SVR (Viral Cure)Regardless of Race/Stage Of Liver Disease
AASLD:Telaprevir SVR/Decreased Adverse Events Presented Nov 2
Telaprevir will be filing their FDA Application in the next few weeks
Telaprevir® Vertex To File FDA Application “Within Weeks”
The Cost : Telaprevir
Boceprevir
Boceprevir is also an investigational oral HCV protease inhibitor used in combination with pegylated interferon plus ribavirin and is being developed by Merck.
*Excerpt:
Merck released final results from two phase-3 studies of boceprevir, saying it produced “significantly higher” results compared with patients in the control group.
In the "RESPOND 2" trial at 24 weeks after conclusion of treatment, the patients treating in the *control arm with "no telaprevir" or with only *SOC achieved a SVR of 21 percent.
Adding Boceprevir to the treatment increased SVR to 59 percent for the second arm *(Second arm received 4 weeks of lead-in therapy of peginterferon alpha 2b and ribavirin followed by response-guided therapy of peginterferon alpha 2b and ribavirin combined with 800 mg of Boceprevir three times a day) and 67 percent for the third arm *(Third arm received 4 weeks of lead-in therapy of peginterferon alpha 2b and ribavirin followed by 44 weeks of peginterferon alpha 2b and ribavirin combined with 800 mg of Boceprevir).
It was noted that previous relapsers fared better than nonresponders in all arms. The therapy was well-tolerated, and the most common reason for discontinuing treatment was for patients who still had detectable HCV-RNA at week 12.
From HCV Advocate
SPRINT-2
The SPRINT-2 study included 1,097 HCV genotype 1
treatment-naïve patients (never been treated). The treatment
protocol consisted of a 4 week lead-in phase of
PegIntron plus ribavirin (without boceprevir), followed
by the triple combination of boceprevir, PegIntron
and ribavirin. Duration and continuation of treatment
was guided by the type of on-treatment response to the
medications.*
.The SVR or sustained virological response rates (HCVRNA negative 24 weeks after the last dose of medicine is taken) by different treatment arms are listed below:
.a. If HCV RNA (viral load) negative at week 8 through week 24,
triple therapy was continued for a total treatment duration of 28 weeks;
sustained virological response (SVR) = 63%
a. If HCV RNA positive at week 8 but undetectable at week 24, boceprevir was stopped at week 28 and PegIntron/ribavirin combination therapy (without boceprevir) was continued for a total treatment duration of 48 weeks;SVR = 66%
a. The control arm was standard of care – PegIntron plus ribavirin—with a treatment duration of 48weeks;SVR = 38%
.African Americans/Blacks—Treatment Response
There were also 159 African American/Black patients in the study—
African Americans/Blacks comprised 15% of the patient population in this trial.
The SVR rates by different treatment arms are listed below:
.a. If HCV RNA negative at week 8 through week 24,triple therapy was continued for a total treatment duration of 28 weeks: SVR = 42%
a.If HCV RNA positive at week 8 but undetectable at week 24, boceprevir was stopped at week 28 andPegIntron/ribavirin combo therapy without boceprevir) was continued for a total treatment duration of 48weeks; SVR = 53%
a. The control arm was standard of care – PegIntron plus ribavirin—with a treatment duration of 48weeks; SVR = 23%
.
*If any patients were HCV RNA positive at week 24 all treatment was stopped.
HCV RESPOND 2
The RESPOND 2 study included 403 HCV genotype 1
“treatment-failure” patients. The study included a 4
week lead-in phase of PegIntron plus ribavirin
(without boceprevir), followed by the triple combination
of boceprevir, PegIntron and ribavirin1 and treatment
duration was based on type of on-treatment response.
.The SVR rates and duration of treatment periods for all
patients are listed below.
a. If HCV RNA negative at week 8 and at week 12 the total
treatment duration was 36 weeks; SVR = 59%
a. IF HCV RNA positive at week 8, but undetectable at
week 12, boceprevir was stopped at week 36 and the
combination of PegIntron/ribavirin was continued for a
total treatment duration of 48 weeks; SVR = 66%
a. Control arm was standard of care – combination of
PegIntron plus ribavirin—for a total treatment duration
of 48 weeks; SVR = 21%
*If any patients were HCV RNA positive at week 12 all
treatment was stopped.
.It is important to know that the treatment duration in the
boceprevir containing arms were 28, 36 or 48 weeks
depending on the type of on-treatment response.
Side Effects: Treatment appeared to be associated with two side effects compared with placebo -- anemia and a distorted sense of taste, or disgeusia. Overall, patients on treatment had greater use of erythropoietin "Note (rescue drugs)" to treat anemia compared with controls (43% for short- and full-course, versus 24% of those on placebo). More boceprevir patients also had to reduce their treatment dose due to anemia (20% and 21% versus 13%). Other adverse events included nausea, headache, and fatigue, at similar rates across all three groups".
Merck began submission of a new drug application for boceprevir on a rolling basis and expects to complete that process by the end of the year.
AASLD Presented Nov 2/Final Results of Clinical Trial on Boceprevir
AASLD:Hepatitis C Drug Boceprevir Six Months of Novel Agent Works
Boceprevir Achieved Significantly Higher SVR Rates In Treatment-Failure And Treatment-Naïve Adult Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 1 Compare
Telaprevir Over Boceprevir?
AASLD:Telaprevir/Boceprevir/Similar Cure Rates/Shorter Treatment Duration
TMC435
Tibotec is a global pharmaceutical and research development company. The Company's main research and development facilities are in Beerse, Belgium with offices in Titusville, NJ and Cork, Ireland.
The compound is given once a day -- an easier regimen than that of the two protease inhibitors closest to market, boceprevir and telaprevir, which are administered thrice daily.
As well, the new data reported for the Tibotec protease TMC435 shows potency with 95% achieving week 24 response rate.
The results showed that in the four TMC435 treatment groups between 79 and 86 percent of patients were able to stop all therapy at Week-24, according to the response criteria defined in the study protocol. There were no relevant differences for adverse events between TMC435 treatment groups and placebo
The PILLAR study [Protease Inhibitor TMC435 trial assessing the optimaL dose and duration as once daiLy Anti-viral Regimen] (TMC435-C205; NCT00882908) is an ongoing, five-arm, global phase 2b randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study in 386 treatment-naive patients. TMC435 was administered in doses of 75mg or 150mg q.d. for either 12 weeks or 24 weeks in combination with 24 weeks of peg-interferon and ribavirin (PR).
Patients in the placebo arm receive 24 weeks of placebo plus peg-interferon and ribavirin followed by 24 additional weeks of peg-interferon and ribavirin treatment. The primary endpoint of the study is sustained virologic response at Week-72 (SVR24). The PILLAR study is being conducted in 13 countries in Europe, North America, and Australasia.
Patients receiving TMC435 were allowed to stop all treatment at week 24 when a) HCV RNA levels less then 25 IU/mL at week 4 and b) HCV RNA less then 25 IU/mL levels at weeks 12, 16 and 20. Patients who did not meet the above response-guided criteria continued with peg-interferon and ribavirin until Week-48.
(TMC435 is also being studied in HCV genotype-1 treatment-experienced patients who have failed treatment with peg-interferon and ribavirin. The ASPIRE study (Antiviral STAT-C Protease Inhibitor Regimen in Experienced patients; TMC435-C206; NCT00980330) is an ongoing global phase 2b randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study in 463 patients)
Side Effects: The most common adverse events were headache and fatigue, 46 percent and 42 percent in the TMC435 groups and 51 percent and 47 percent in the placebo group respectively. There were no clinically significant differences in frequency of rash, anemia or gastrointestinal events between the TMC435 groups and placebo. Most AEs were mild to moderate in severity. AEs leading to treatment discontinuation were reported in 7.1 percent of patients in TMC435 arms and 7.8 percent in placebo arm. In laboratory parameters, significant decreases in transaminases (ALT and AST) were observed in all treatment groups. Small and transient bilirubin elevations (direct and indirect) were seen in the TMC435 150mg dose groups.
AASLD: TMC435 Rapid Response for Once-Daily Protease Inhibitor
AASLD:TMC435 PILLAR study in treatment-naive patients/ genotype 1
RG7128
RG7128 not associated with treatment-emergent viral breakthrough or resistance
RG7128, a pro-drug of PSI-6130 for the treatment of HCV, is entering a phase 2b clinical trial through a collaboration with Roche;
PSI-7977, an isomer of PSI-7851 is a nucleotide analog for the treatment of HCV, and is currently in a phase 2b trial;
PSI-352938 (PSI-938), a purine nucleotide analog for the treatment of HCV, recently completed a phase 1 trial.
Clinical synergy of an anti-HCV nucleotide analog with SOC: Viral kinetics of PSI-7977 with SOCE. Lawitz et al61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver DiseasesBoston, MAOct 29-Nov 2, 2010
High Rapid Virologic Response (RVR) with PSI-7977 daily dosing plus PEG-IFN/RBV in a 28-day Phase 2a trial
.....
Roche Acquired the rights to InterMune HCV Protease Inhibitor Danoprevir
.*Excerpt:
.Entry criteria were noncirrhotic treatment-naïve adults (predominately genotype 1 virus) with serum HCV RNA levels of 50 000 IU/mL or more and without advanced fibrosis.
.All patients were administered a standard of care regimen of pegylated interferon alpha-2a plus weight-based ribavirin, and were randomized, for 12 weeks, to placebo or 1 of 3 danoprevir groups: 300 mg every 8 hours, 600 mg every 12 hours, or 900 mg every 12 hours. When danoprevir was stopped, all patients continued on standard therapy for an additional 24 or 48 weeks, depending on whether or not they achieved a rapid virologic response
.The second part of the study was a planned continuation of danoprevir to week 24, but that "never was undertaken" because of incidents of reversible grade 4 ALT elevations in 3 patients in the 900 mg group, the highest dose of the study, said Dr. Terrault. Patients already enrolled in the 900 mg group were rerandomized to 300 or 600 mg.
.Viral resistance to danoprevir emerged in the low-dose (300 mg) group in 2 patients at week 2 and in 5 patients at weeks 4 and 12. In the 600 mg group, patients fared better, with 3 developing treatment-emergent resistance by week 12. No patients developed resistance in the highest-dose (900 mg) group, but the cumulative exposure was significantly less because of the emerging toxicity and discontinuation of that dosing regimen. All of the resistance was seen in patients with HCV genotype 1a.
.Side Effects
.AASLD:HCV Protease Inhibitor Danoprevir is Positive
BARACLUDE, BMS-790052, and BMS-650032 were discovered by Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development. PEG-Interferon lambda was discovered by ZymoGenetics, Inc. Bristol-Myers Squibb and ZymoGenetics announced a global collaboration for PEG-Interferon lambda and its related development program in 2009. In September 2010, Bristol-Myers Squibb announced its intent to acquire ZymoGenetics.
*Excerpt: Combination therapy with BMS-790052 and BMS-650032 alone or with pegylated interferon and ribavirin (pegIFNα/RBV) results in undetectable HCV RNA through 12 weeks of therapy in HCV genotype 1 null responders.
To assess the safety and antiviral activity of BMS-790052 and BMS-650032 alone or combined with pegIFNα/RBV in patients with HCV genotype 1 who have not responded to prior standard of care treatment (null responders)
Patients in Group A were treated with BMS-790052 and BMS-650032. Patients in Group B were treated with BMS-790052, BMS-650032 and pegIFNα/RBV. The response rates for both treatment groups are as follows

AEs were mainly mild to moderate in severity. The most common AEs (more than three occurrences) across both study groups were:
Adverse events were mainly mild to moderate in severity.
BMS-790052 and BMS-650032 Coadministration Associated With Undetectable HCV RNA After 12 Weeks of Therapy With or Without PegIFN/RBV in Genotype 1 HCV Null Responders
Adverse events were mild to moderate in severity and led to few treatment discontinuations.



PPI-461
AASLD: Safety and Antiviral Activity of MK-5172, a Novel HCV NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor with Potent Activity Against Known Resistance Mutants, in Genotype 1 and 3 HCV-Infected Patients
M11-602From NATAP Preliminary Results of Study M11-602 in Genotype 1 (GT1) HCV-infected Treatment-naïve Subjects" Abbott also reported 4 weeks data in a poster here in combination with peg/rbv. Subjects were randomized to one of 3 doses of ABT-450/r (50/100 mg, 100/100 mg or 200/100 mg) or placebo once daily for 3 days, followed by ABT-450/r or placebo in combination with standard of care (SOC) consisting of pegylated interferon alfa-2a 180 µg/week + weight-based ribavirin 1000-1200 mg/day through week 1.
From Slides @ NATAP : Sustained Viral Response (SVR) Rates in Genotype 1 Treatment-naïve Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C (CHC) Infection Treated with Vaniprevir (MK-7009), a NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor, in Combination with Pegylated Interferon Alfa-2a and Ribavirin for 28 Days - (11/04/10)
.
IMO-2125
GI-5005
AASLD:SVR for hepatitis C boon to patients 20 yrs down the road
Proof of concept for the therapeutic vaccine GI-5005 (GlobeImmune) against hepatitis C virus
Therapeutic HCV Vaccine Opens Door to Potential Treatment Option
Bob Roehr
Authors and Disclosures
November 8, 2010 (Boston, Massachusetts) — Proof of concept for the therapeutic vaccine GI-5005 (GlobeImmune) against hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, used in combination with standard of care (pegylated-interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin), was presented here at The Liver Meeting 2010: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases 61st Annual Meeting. Results were presented by Paul J. Pockros, MD, from the Scripps Clinic in San Diego, California.
One novel approach to treating hepatitis C is to stimulate the immune system to better attack and clear the infection, Dr. Pockros explained. This approach contrasts with most interventions currently in development that use small molecules to directly attack the virus.
The vaccine strategy incorporates HCV nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) and core antigens into recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a family of budding yeast, and expresses those proteins on the surface of the yeast cell. Dr. Pockros said the mechanism of action is not completely clear, but it is thought that subcutaneous injection of the yeast "stimulates a danger signal, which in turn brings antigen-presenting cells like dendritic cells to the surface."
"Those quickly phagocytose the inactivated yeast. The proteins are broken down, and NS3 and core proteins are expressed on the surface of the dendritic cell. This then stimulates helper and killer T cells," which identify and attack hepatocytes infected with hepatitis C.
"If you give this to patients who are chronically infected, it mimics patients who are acutely infected with HCV — they clear the virus," Dr. Pockros explained. Typically, chronically infected patients do not mount a T cell response against the core, envelop, or nonstructural proteins of HCV, whereas patients who clear the virus "mount a modest response against the envelop proteins and a robust response against nonstructural proteins NS3 and NS5," he added.
The phase 2 study was conducted in 133 patients infected with HCV genotype 1 who were randomized in a 1:1 manner to the vaccine or standard of care. Those assigned to active treatment received 40YU GI-5005 monotherapy (1 YU = 107 yeast particles) 5 times a week, then twice monthly during a 12-week lead-in period before adding standard of care (pegylated-interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin) and reducing the vaccine dosing to once a month. Treatment-naïve patients followed this regimen for 48 weeks, and nonresponders followed it for 72 weeks. The principle end point was end-of-treatment response/sustained viral response (SVR).
Dr. Pockros said that "there was a slight benefit [from the vaccine] in the treatment-naïve and nonresponders; this was numerical only and was not statistically significant. However, when you added the 2 groups together, it became statistically significant" (P = .037).
Stratifying by IL28B gene status in the standard of care group, 2 of 5 patients with the more difficult to treat T/T allele cleared the virus at some point, but 1 subsequently had viral breakthrough while on therapy, and the second relapsed, "so none of the patients had an SVR."
However, "of the T/T patients who received the vaccine, all 5 cleared the virus. Two had to be taken off therapy because of the side effects of [pegylated-interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin], but the remaining 3 had a sustained virologic response," according to Dr. Pockros.
He said there was only a modest response among those who were previous virologic nonresponders.
There was a statistically significant difference in those whose alanine transaminase (ALT) levels normalized. "Some of these responses were durable, although this did not quite reach significance" in this study, which was underpowered for subset analysis. Biopsy of 32 patients strongly suggests that the normalization of ALTs seen in some patients "is associated with the reduction in necroinflammation."
Perhaps the most interesting response among those who received the vaccine was the T cell, measured by ELISPOT assay. "It mimicked what you saw with a virologic response," Dr. Pockros said. "Four of 5 T/T allele patients had a T cell response; 1 did not actually get treated. But none of the patients who received standard of care had a T cell response." During the discussion, Dr. Pockros said the vaccine is likely to be genotype specific.
Adverse events mirrored those seen with standard of care, with the addition of some modest reactions at the site of injection for the therapeutic vaccine. The product has currently been administered to more than 250 study subjects.
Session cochair Douglas R. LaBrecque, MD, director of liver services at University of Iowa Health Care in Iowa City, told Medscape Medical News that the data "are so preliminary and in such small numbers that all you can say is it wasn't a total failure."
But he does see a benefit to the approach "if it would allow you to eliminate some of the medications [in a regimen], be it the interferon or small molecules, which have their own side effects."
The private biopharmaceutical company GlobeImmune sponsored the trial. Dr. Pockros reports ongoing research ties with the company. Dr. LaBrecque has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
The Liver Meeting 2010: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) 61st Annual Meeting: Abstract LB-6. Presented November 1, 2010.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
AASLD:GI-5005 Therapeutic vaccine plus peg-IFN/ribavirin improves SVR

By Michael Smith , North American Correspondent, MedPage Today
Published: November 02, 2010
Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco
BOSTON -- An experimental therapeutic vaccine against hepatitis C improved response rates by 12% compared with standard care in a small clinical trial, a researcher reported here.
The phase II trial included both treatment-naive patients and those who had not responded to previous care with the standard combination of ribavirin and pegylated interferon, according to Paul Pockros, MD, of the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, Calif.
Results in both subgroups were similar to the overall outcome but did not reach statistical significance compared with standard care, Pockros told a late-breaker session at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.
But the findings, based on just 133 patients, are enough to justify continued development of the vaccine, Pockros said, including tests to see if it can be effective without the standard hepatitis C treatment regimen, which has difficult side effects.
The vaccine -- dubbed GI-5005 -- is a recombinant, inactivated yeast that expresses hepatitis antigens, Pockros said.
The immune response generated by the vaccine is similar to that seen among patients who are able to clear the virus without medication -- a modest response to the viral envelope proteins and a robust response to the nonstructural proteins NS3 and NS5.
Patients in the study were randomly assigned to get the vaccine or not. Those getting vaccine first had a 12-week run-in, during which they got five weekly doses of GI-5005, delivered subcutaneously then followed by two monthly doses.
They then got the vaccine on a monthly basis, along with the two standard hepatitis C drugs, ribavirin, and pegylated interferon.
The comparison group, including 65 of the 133 participants, got standard care only.
In both groups, treatment-naive patients were treated for 48 weeks, while previous nonresponders got 72 weeks of treatment. The primary endpoint was sustained virologic response, defined as undetectable virus six months after the end of treatment.
The researchers found:
• 58% of treatment-naive patients who got the vaccine had a sustained virologic response, compared with 48% of those getting standard treatment.
• 17% of previous nonresponders had a sustained virologic response if they got the vaccine compared with 5% of those on standard care.
• And overall, the vaccine yielded a 47% response rate, compared with 35% for standard care.
• The first two results did not reach statistical significance, but the last was significant at P=0.037.
Pockros said that no unexpected adverse effects surfaced during the trial; there was a 13% rate of discontinuation in each study arm due to side effects.
The GI-5005 vaccine, he said, is a "novel approach to hepatitis C" that appears to be safe but needs more study.
A "benign" therapeutic vaccine might be advantageous, according to Douglas LaBrecque, MD, of the University of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa, who was not part of the study but who moderated the session at which the data was presented.
That would be especially true, he told MedPage Today "if you could eliminate some of the other medications, either interferon or the small molecules, which have their own side effects."
But this study was so preliminary and had such small numbers, LaBrecque stressed, that "all you can say is that it wasn't a total failure."
The study was supported by GlobeImmune, of Louisville, Colo. Pockros reported financial links with Genentech, Vertex, Merck, Gilead, Abbott, Pfizer, Phenomix, Tibotec, Pharmasset, 3RT, Novartis, J&J, Achillon, Regulus, GlobeImmune, Debio, Zymogenetics, and Human Genome Sciences.
LaBrecque had no disclosures.
Primary source: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
Source reference:
Pockros P, et al "GI-5005 Therapeutic vaccine plus peg-IFN/ribavirin improves sustained virologic response versus peg-IFN/ribavirin in prior non-responders with genotype 1 chronic HCV Infection" AASLD 2010; Abstract LB-6.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
GI-5005-02 Phase 2b Trial to Include Additional Treatment Naive IL28B T/T Subjects With Genotype 1
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RecruitingA Study of Response-Guided Duration of Combination Therapy With GS-9190, GS-9256, Pegasys® and Copegus® in Previously Untreated Subjects With Genotype 1 Chronic Hepatitis C C.
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LOUISVILLE, CO--(Marketwire - October 28, 2010) - GlobeImmune Inc. today announced the expansion of its Phase 2b clinical trial of GI-5005, an investigational Tarmogen product for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. The Company previously reported data demonstrating a 60% improvement in sustained virologic response (SVR) in chronically infected HCV patients with the hardest-to-treat IL28B T/T genotype when GI-5005 was added to standard of care (SOC) versus SOC alone (60% vs. 0% SVR). The Company plans to enroll 40 additional subjects with the IL28B T/T genotype. Approximately 20% of chronically infected HCV patients have the IL28B T/T genotype, and those patients are least likely to respond to treatment with SOC. Data from the additional 40 subjects will allow for more precise powering of pivotal clinical trials.
"HCV patients with the IL28B T/T genotype have a very poor prognosis with current treatment options," said Timothy C. Rodell, M.D., President and CEO of GlobeImmune. "We believe that GI-5005 addresses a fundamental deficit in patients carrying the T allele of the IL28B gene by augmenting their deficient T cell immune response against HCV. Our phase 2 immunology data indicate that a limited T cell immune response is likely why the current standard of care, which acts primarily by inhibiting viral replication, has limited efficacy in this patient group."
"Patients with the IL28B T/T genotype have the lowest rates of sustained virologic response to today's standard of care and will very likely continue to have lower response rates and a high rate of anti-viral resistance with the addition of a protease inhibitor," said Mitchell L. Shiffman, M.D., Director of The Liver Institute of Virginia. "Preliminary data strongly suggest that GI-5005 enhances the ability of a patient with the IL28B T/T genotype to respond to HCV treatment. This represents the first significant advance in our ability to treat chronic HCV in patients who are genetically less sensitive to interferon. The expansion of the GlobeImmune program to specifically study patients with the IL28B T/T genotype is an important step for successful treatment of these patients in the future."
Additional data from the original 140 subjects enrolled in the trial will be presented this week at 61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of the Liver (AASLD) in Boston.
Paul J. Pockros, M.D. of Scripps Clinic will deliver an oral presentation of the results from the GI-5005-02 trial in patients previously treated with SOC in a late-breaker session Monday November 1, 2010 at 6 p.m. EDT in the Hynes Auditorium.
John M. Vierling, M.D. of Baylor College of Medicine will present immune response data in a poster on Tuesday November 2, 2010 Hynes Exhibit Hall C.
The design of the clinical trial expansion is identical to the original GI-5005-02 trial, and will be conducted in approximately 30 of the participating U.S. sites. The primary endpoint of the randomized, open-label expansion study is sustained virologic response (SVR).
Tarmogens are whole, heat-killed recombinant S. cerevisiae yeast that are engineered to express one or more disease-related proteins. GlobeImmune's GI-5005 Tarmogen is a therapeutic vaccine product candidate that contains conserved HCV proteins and is designed to generate an HCV-specific T-cell response.
About GlobeImmune
GlobeImmune Inc. is a private company developing active immunotherapies called Tarmogens for the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases. Tarmogens generate activated killer T cells that are designed to locate and eliminate cancer cells and/or virally-infected cells. The Company's lead product candidate, GI-5005, is a Tarmogen being developed for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection (HCV). GI-5005 is designed to complement both the current standard of care and emerging novel therapies for HCV. The Company's lead oncology program, GI-4000, targets cancers caused by mutated versions of the Ras oncoprotein. GI-4000 is being investigated in clinical trials for the treatment of pancreas cancer as well as other cancers that contain mutated Ras, including non-small cell lung cancer and colorectal cancer. In May 2009, the Company announced a global partnership with Celgene focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of multiple product candidates for the treatment of cancer.
For additional information, please visit the company's Web site at http://www.globeimmune.com/ .
This news release and the anticipated presentation contain forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties, including statements relating to initiation and progress of the Company's clinical trial programs and the results from the clinical trials. Actual results could differ materially from those projected and the Company cautions readers not to place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements contained in the release and anticipated presentation.