Friday, May 3, 2013

May Is Hepatitis Awareness Month: Hepatitis Testing Day – May 19


Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C can become chronic, life-long infections which can lead to liver cancer. Millions of Americans are living with chronic viral hepatitis, and many do not know they are infected.

CDC’s Division of Viral Hepatitis is leading a national education initiative called Know More Hepatitis.  The initiative aims to decrease the burden of chronic viral hepatitis by increasing awareness about this hidden epidemic and encouraging people who may be chronically infected to get tested.

Online Hepatitis Risk Assessment

Since chronic hepatitis often does not cause any symptoms until serious liver damage has been done, testing for hepatitis is crucial. Find out if you should be tested by taking a 5 minute online Hepatitis Risk Assessment

The online assessment is designed to determine an individual’s risk for viral hepatitis and asks questions based upon CDC’s guidelines for testing and vaccination.  The Hepatitis Risk Assessment allows individuals to answer questions privately, either in their home or in a health care setting, and print their recommendations to discuss with their doctor.

Hepatitis Testing Day – May 19

May 19th has been designated as a national “Hepatitis Testing Day” in the United States. The CDC will use the second annual Hepatitis Testing Day on May 19, 2013 as an opportunity to remind health care providers and the public who should be tested for chronic viral hepatitis. Help us build our hepatitis testing resources by registering your Hepatitis Testing Day event for May 19th or throughout the month.

Hepatitis Overview

Illustration of liver's location in human body.The word “hepatitis” means inflammation of the liver. Hepatitis is most often caused by one of several viruses, which is why it is often called viral hepatitis. In the United States, the most common types of viral hepatitis are Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, and Hepatitis C.

Chronic Hepatitis can lead to Liver Cancer

Unlike Hepatitis A, which does not cause a long-term infection, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C can become chronic, life-long infections. Chronic viral hepatitis can lead to serious liver problems including liver cancer. More than 4 million Americans are living with chronic Hepatitis B or chronic Hepatitis C in the United States, but most do not know they are infected.  Every year, approximately 15,000 Americans die from liver cancer or chronic liver disease associated with viral hepatitis.
Both Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C can cause liver cancer and have contributed to the increase in rates of liver cancer in recent decades. At least half of new cases of liver cancer are from chronic Hepatitis C.

Priority Populations and Liver Cancer

Some population groups are disproportionately affected by viral hepatitis-related liver cancer. The number of new cases of liver cancer is highest in Asian and Pacific Islanders and is increasing among African Americans, baby boomers, and men.
With early detection, many people can get lifesaving care and treatment that can limit disease progression, and prevent cancer deaths.

Vaccine-preventable: Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B
Hepatitis A and Hepatitis B can both be prevented with vaccines.  Cases of Hepatitis A have dramatically declined in the U.S. over the last 20 years largely due to vaccination efforts.  The Hepatitis A vaccine is recommended for all children at one year of age and for adults who may be at increased risk.

Unfortunately, many people became infected with Hepatitis B before the Hepatitis B vaccine was widely available.  The hepatitis B vaccine is now recommended for all infants at birth and for adults who may be at increased risk.

Twitter
Follow CDC’s Division of Viral Hepatitis on Twitter @cdchep.

  • To join in the conversation about viral hepatitis during the month of May, please use the hashtags #HepAware for Hepatitis Awareness Month, #HTD for Hepatitis Testing Day, #HepRisk for the Hepatitis Risk Assessment, and #KMH for the Know More Hepatitis Campaign.

View Map Of Hepatitis C Testing Facilities

The HCCAP HCV Testing Sites map lists only facilities offering free or low cost hepatitis C screening services for those with limited resources due to lack of health insurance, lack of coverage for such testing, and/or limited financial resources.

People with health insurance coverage who want to be screened for hepatitis C are advised to see their doctor to request a hepatitis C screening test.

Availability of hepatitis C testing at a given site is subject to change. HCCAP recommends calling a facility to verify the current availability of hepatitis C testing and the process involved before scheduling or visiting that facility. Be aware that many facilities have limited hours or require appointments.

Click here to find testing facilities.....

HCV Treatment — No More Room for Interferonologists?


Editorial

HCV Treatment — No More Room for Interferonologists?

Joost P.H. Drenth, M.D., Ph.D.

April 23, 2013 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMe1303818

This article was published on April 23, 2013, at NEJM.org.

The landscape of therapy for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is changing rapidly. Until recently, the standard of care for HCV infection was a combination of peginterferon and ribavirin. Our increased understanding of the basic biology of HCV led to the identification of specific proteins involved in the replication of the virus. These proteins can be targeted by protease and polymerase inhibitors.

Two years ago, the advent of protease inhibitors, such as telaprevir and boceprevir, profoundly affected the field.1,2 These agents improved the likelihood of cure but came with a number of inherent limitations. Protease inhibitors do not have antiviral activity in HCV genotypes other than the predominant genotype 1, which leaves at least five other HCV genotypes without coverage. Moreover, protease inhibitors can promote viral resistance, which usually signals therapeutic failure, and have multiple pharmacokinetic interactions with other drugs. Finally, protease inhibitors need to be administered with peginterferon and ribavirin, two drugs with extensive and well-established side-effect profiles that are aggravated by the addition of telaprevir or boceprevir.

Clinicians who treat patients with HCV infection have learned to accept and treat adverse effects as an integral part of patient care, but the inclusion of protease inhibitors in the therapeutic arsenal has added a layer of complexity. Indeed, the major challenge of contemporary interferon therapy is adequate management of side effects. Physicians and patients are ready for less toxic therapeutic options.

Two groups of investigators (Jacobson et al.3 and Lawitz et al.4) now suggest in the Journal that change is about to happen. They describe the use of sofosbuvir, a novel polymerase inhibitor, in a series of four experimental studies targeting patients with HCV infection. In three randomized trials — FISSION, POSITRON, and FUSION — investigators focused on patients with HCV genotype 2 or 3, as seen in everyday clinical practice, including patients who had received no previous treatment, those who were unwilling to take interferon or had unacceptable side effects, and those who did not have a response to previous therapy. All the studies had a similar end point: a sustained virologic response at 12 weeks after the end of therapy. In addition, in the single-group, open-label NEUTRINO study, investigators studied the use of a sofosbuvir-based regimen in patients with genotype 1, 4, 5, or 6 infection.

The FISSION study examined the efficacy of 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin, as compared with the standard of care, peginterferon alfa-2a plus ribavirin, administered for 24 weeks. Standard therapy was successful in 78% of patients with genotype 2 infection and 63% of those with genotype 3 infection, as compared with rates of 97% and 56%, respectively, with the sofosbuvir-based regimen.

The POSITRON study evaluated a population that was not deemed to be eligible for interferon-based therapy and compared 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin with placebo. The primary reasons for ineligibility were a preexisting psychiatric disorder (57%) or autoimmune disorder (19%). None of the patients in the placebo group achieved the end point, but 93% of those with genotype 2 infection and 61% of those with genotype 3 infection had a sustained virologic response with sofosbuvir plus ribavirin.

The FUSION study, which targeted patients without a sustained response to interferon-based therapy, compared a 12-week regimen of sofosbuvir–ribavirin with a 16-week regimen. Four additional weeks of treatment made a difference, with an increase in the rate of sustained virologic response from 86% to 94% in patients with genotype 2 infection and from 30% to 62% in those with genotype 3 infection.

Finally, the investigators captured some evidence for the pangenotypic anti-HCV properties of sofosbuvir. In the NEUTRINO study, patients with genotype 1 infection (89%), genotype 4 infection (9%), or genotype 5 or 6 infection (2%) who received 12 weeks of treatment with a combination of sofosbuvir, peginterferon, and ribavirin had a collective rate of sustained virologic response of 90%.

The speed of development of drugs to treat HCV infection is unprecedented. The publication of clinical data with respect to sofosbuvir comes only 3 years after the publication of the chemical discovery of the compound.5 Although the data from the four trials discussed here are encouraging, the design of the trials may have suffered from the intense competition that drug companies face in this market. In the tower of evidence-based medicine, randomized clinical trials are superior to open-label studies. However, of the four studies that are discussed here, only three were randomized, and only one was placebo-controlled. In addition, the results for sofosbuvir in these studies falls short of the findings reported for the drug in an earlier study by Gane et al.,6 in which the rate of sustained virologic response was 100%. One of the reasons for the difference may be that the design of the study by Gane et al. was less rigorous than the designs of the studies discussed here. Also of note, the end point that was used in the four studies differed from that used in the study by Gane et al. The Food and Drug Administration only recently approved an end point of a sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (rather than the previously approved 24 weeks) as acceptable for HCV trials.7

Our current therapy for HCV infection revolves around side-effect management in patients receiving interferon, who require intense monitoring. Current therapies are typically offered in dedicated centers by physicians (aptly termed interferonologists) who are well versed in dealing with the toxic effects of interferon. Without alternatives to interferon therapy, we are pushing the envelope in the acceptance of risks to certain patients (e.g., those with a psychiatric history). The data from the sofosbuvir trials suggest that a radical change in clinical practice is imminent. But it may be premature to start dismantling the dedicated centers now that interferon is in retreat, since ribavirin is still part of the most successful interferon-free regimens. Data from the study by Gane et al. suggest that excluding ribavirin comprom

The landscape of therapy for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is changing rapidly. Until recently, the standard of care for HCV infection was a combination of peginterferon and ribavirin. Our increased understanding of the basic biology of HCV led to the identification of specific proteins involved in the replication of the virus. These proteins can be targeted by protease and polymerase inhibitors.

Two years ago, the advent of protease inhibitors, such as telaprevir and boceprevir, profoundly affected the field.1,2 These agents improved the likelihood of cure but came with a number of inherent limitations. Protease inhibitors do not have antiviral activity in HCV genotypes other than the predominant genotype 1, which leaves at least five other HCV genotypes without coverage. Moreover, protease inhibitors can promote viral resistance, which usually signals therapeutic failure, and have multiple pharmacokinetic interactions with other drugs. Finally, protease inhibitors need to be administered with peginterferon and ribavirin, two drugs with extensive and well-established side-effect profiles that are aggravated by the addition of telaprevir or boceprevir.

Clinicians who treat patients with HCV infection have learned to accept and treat adverse effects as an integral part of patient care, but the inclusion of protease inhibitors in the therapeutic arsenal has added a layer of complexity. Indeed, the major challenge of contemporary interferon therapy is adequate management of side effects. Physicians and patients are ready for less toxic therapeutic options.

Two groups of investigators (Jacobson et al.3 and Lawitz et al.4) now suggest in the Journal that change is about to happen. They describe the use of sofosbuvir, a novel polymerase inhibitor, in a series of four experimental studies targeting patients with HCV infection. In three randomized trials — FISSION, POSITRON, and FUSION — investigators focused on patients with HCV genotype 2 or 3, as seen in everyday clinical practice, including patients who had received no previous treatment, those who were unwilling to take interferon or had unacceptable side effects, and those who did not have a response to previous therapy. All the studies had a similar end point: a sustained virologic response at 12 weeks after the end of therapy. In addition, in the single-group, open-label NEUTRINO study, investigators studied the use of a sofosbuvir-based regimen in patients with genotype 1, 4, 5, or 6 infection.

The FISSION study examined the efficacy of 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin, as compared with the standard of care, peginterferon alfa-2a plus ribavirin, administered for 24 weeks. Standard therapy was successful in 78% of patients with genotype 2 infection and 63% of those with genotype 3 infection, as compared with rates of 97% and 56%, respectively, with the sofosbuvir-based regimen.

The POSITRON study evaluated a population that was not deemed to be eligible for interferon-based therapy and compared 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin with placebo. The primary reasons for ineligibility were a preexisting psychiatric disorder (57%) or autoimmune disorder (19%). None of the patients in the placebo group achieved the end point, but 93% of those with genotype 2 infection and 61% of those with genotype 3 infection had a sustained virologic response with sofosbuvir plus ribavirin.

The FUSION study, which targeted patients without a sustained response to interferon-based therapy, compared a 12-week regimen of sofosbuvir–ribavirin with a 16-week regimen. Four additional weeks of treatment made a difference, with an increase in the rate of sustained virologic response from 86% to 94% in patients with genotype 2 infection and from 30% to 62% in those with genotype 3 infection.

Finally, the investigators captured some evidence for the pangenotypic anti-HCV properties of sofosbuvir. In the NEUTRINO study, patients with genotype 1 infection (89%), genotype 4 infection (9%), or genotype 5 or 6 infection (2%) who received 12 weeks of treatment with a combination of sofosbuvir, peginterferon, and ribavirin had a collective rate of sustained virologic response of 90%.

The speed of development of drugs to treat HCV infection is unprecedented. The publication of clinical data with respect to sofosbuvir comes only 3 years after the publication of the chemical discovery of the compound.5 Although the data from the four trials discussed here are encouraging, the design of the trials may have suffered from the intense competition that drug companies face in this market. In the tower of evidence-based medicine, randomized clinical trials are superior to open-label studies. However, of the four studies that are discussed here, only three were randomized, and only one was placebo-controlled. In addition, the results for sofosbuvir in these studies falls short of the findings reported for the drug in an earlier study by Gane et al.,6 in which the rate of sustained virologic response was 100%. One of the reasons for the difference may be that the design of the study by Gane et al. was less rigorous than the designs of the studies discussed here. Also of note, the end point that was used in the four studies differed from that used in the study by Gane et al. The Food and Drug Administration only recently approved an end point of a sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (rather than the previously approved 24 weeks) as acceptable for HCV trials.7

Our current therapy for HCV infection revolves around side-effect management in patients receiving interferon, who require intense monitoring. Current therapies are typically offered in dedicated centers by physicians (aptly termed interferonologists) who are well versed in dealing with the toxic effects of interferon. Without alternatives to interferon therapy, we are pushing the envelope in the acceptance of risks to certain patients (e.g., those with a psychiatric history). The data from the sofosbuvir trials suggest that a radical change in clinical practice is imminent. But it may be premature to start dismantling the dedicated centers now that interferon is in retreat, since ribavirin is still part of the most successful interferon-free regimens. Data from the study by Gane et al. suggest that excluding ribavirin compromises the efficacy of sofosbuvir. The use of ribavirin has been associated with hemolytic anemia, a condition that requires close attention, especially in patients with the most pressing need for treatment, such as those with cirrhosis. Even so, the studies by Jacobson et al. and Lawitz et al. suggest an acceptable safety profile for sofosbuvir plus ribavirin, with low rates of anemia and leukopenia among patients receiving this regimen, as compared with standard-of-care therapy. On the other hand, a note of caution is appropriate, since long-term data in larger populations are lacking, and rare but irreversible adverse events still may emerge with wider use of sofosbuvir.

What are we to conclude from these studies? The low incidence of side effects, the relatively short duration of treatment, and the pangenotypic properties of the drugs are strong selling points of a sofosbuvir–ribavirin regimen and will probably lower the threshold for HCV treatment for both patients and physicians. The likely next step is to combine sofosbuvir with other direct-acting antivirals to enhance its potency. Is the interferonologist down and out? I do not think so, but it is surely time for reeducation.

Disclosure forms provided by the author are available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org.

This article was published on April 23, 2013, at NEJM.org.

Source Information

From the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.ises the efficacy of sofosbuvir. The use of ribavirin has been associated with hemolytic anemia, a condition that requires close attention, especially in patients with the most pressing need for treatment, such as those with cirrhosis. Even so, the studies by Jacobson et al. and Lawitz et al. suggest an acceptable safety profile for sofosbuvir plus ribavirin, with low rates of anemia and leukopenia among patients receiving this regimen, as compared with standard-of-care therapy. On the other hand, a note of caution is appropriate, since long-term data in larger populations are lacking, and rare but irreversible adverse events still may emerge with wider use of sofosbuvir.

What are we to conclude from these studies? The low incidence of side effects, the relatively short duration of treatment, and the pangenotypic properties of the drugs are strong selling points of a sofosbuvir–ribavirin regimen and will probably lower the threshold for HCV treatment for both patients and physicians. The likely next step is to combine sofosbuvir with other direct-acting antivirals to enhance its potency. Is the interferonologist down and out? I do not think so, but it is surely time for reeducation.

Disclosure forms provided by the author are available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org.

This article was published on April 23, 2013, at NEJM.org.

Source Information

From the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.

 Atypon - PDF

Thursday, May 2, 2013

EASL 2013 - Internet Symposium: Watch Advances in Chronic Hepatitis C Management and Treatment

ViralEd Presents
 
The 48th Annual EASL: Advances in Chronic Hepatitis C Management and Treatment
 

 

Today, ViralEd released a 2-hour Internet symposium reviewing key studies on chronic hepatitis C management and treatment presented at this years meeting.

Watch and listen to Mark Sulkowski, MD, K. Rajender Reddy, MD, Fred Poordad, MD and Nezam Afdhal, MD review and discuss the following topics:
 
Updates On Current Status Of HCV Therapy
 
Boceprevir And Telaprevir
 
Novel Therapies And Strategies With Interferon
 
What's In The Near Future?
More Triple Therapy
 
Introduction To Faldaprevir
 
Interferon Free, All Oral Regimens 
 
 
NO registration required!
Takes only a few moments to load 
 
ViralEd, LLC is a physician-owned and directed medical education company whose mission is to provide thought-provoking, effective, and evidence-based CME to help improve health care provider knowledge and professional development. For over a decade, ViralEd's team of dedicated professionals have specialized in using a blended learning approach that combines innovative technology with live programming to provide programs and medical education content that is unique and of high quality.
 

Surveyed Gastroenterologists Agree - Gilead's interferon-free regimen has Advantages Over Current Hepatitis C Therapies

Also View - Gilead Sofosbuvir and ledipasvir: Plans to initiate a third Phase 3 clinical trial with and without ribavirin

In Treatment-Naive Hepatitis C Virus, Thought Leaders' Opinions and Clinical Data Indicate That Sofosbuvir plus Ledipasvir plus Ribavirin Has Advantages Over Current Therapies

An All-Oral/Interferon-Free Regimen is One of the Great Unmet Needs in Treatment-Naive HCV, According to a New Report from Decision Resources

BURLINGTON, Mass., May 2, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Decision Resources, one of the world's leading research and advisory firms for pharmaceutical and healthcare issues, finds that surveyed gastroenterologists in the United States and Europe agree that the percentage of genotype-1 hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients achieving a sustained virological response (SVR) is one of the attributes that most influences their prescribing decisions. Clinical data and interviewed thought leaders indicate that Gilead's interferon-free regimen of the nucleoside polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir plus the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir plus ribavirin has advantages over the current sales-leading regimen on efficacy, safety and delivery attributes. For the treatment of HCV, the current sales-leading regimen is telaprevir (Vertex's Incivek, Johnson & Johnson's Incivo, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma's Telavic) in combination with peg-IFN-alpha (Roche's Pegasys or Roche/Merck's PegIntron) and ribavirin (Roche's Copegus, Merck's Rebetol, generics).

The Decision Base report entitled Substantial Opportunity and Fierce Competition Await Developers of Interferon-Free Therapies for Treatment-Naive Patients also finds that surveyed U.S. and European gastroenterologists and managed care organization (MCO) pharmacy directors consider an all-oral/interferon-free regimen is one of the greatest unmet needs in treatment-naive HCV. Clinical data and thought leader opinion indicate that several emerging regimens from developers such as Gilead (sofosbuvir plus lepidasvir plus ribavirin), AbbVie (ritonavir-boosted ABT450 plus ABT-333 plus ABT-267 plus ribavirin) and Boehringer-Ingelheim (faldaprevir plus BI-207127 plus ribavirin) have demonstrated the potential to fulfill this unmet need.

The report also finds that surveyed MCO pharmacy directors would reimburse a new HCV regimen that is ribavirin-free and interferon-free if it achieved a SVR rate that is up to 10 percent lower than a comparably priced regimen that is free of interferon but not of ribavirin. This finding suggests that emerging regimens that dispense with both ribavirin and interferon will face a somewhat less-stringent reimbursement review and/or receive more-favorable formulary status.

"Although U.S. gastroenterologists cited improved SVR in the absence of ribavirin as an area of high unmet need, they do not assign high weight to this attribute in making treatment decisions," said Decision Resources Analyst Seamus Levine-Wilkinson, Ph.D. "The low weight of this attribute is likely due to the current lack of highly efficacious ribavirin-free antiviral therapies for HCV infection. The high unmet need and lack of current treatment options indicates that this is an important area of differentiation that Bristol-Myers Squibb is seeking to capitalize on with their interferon- and ribavirin-free regimen of daclatasvir plus asunaprevir plus BMS-791325."

About Decision Resources
Decision Resources (www.decisionresources.com) is a world leader in market research publications, advisory services and consulting designed to help clients shape strategy, allocate resources and master their chosen markets. Decision Resources is a Decision Resources Group company.

About Decision Resources Group
Decision Resources Group is a cohesive portfolio of companies that offers best-in-class, high-value information and insights on important sectors of the healthcare industry. Clients rely on this analysis and data to make informed decisions. Please visit Decision Resources Group at www.DecisionResourcesGroup.com.

All company, brand, or product names contained in this document may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.

Gilead Sofosbuvir and ledipasvir: Plans to initiate a third Phase 3 clinical trial with and without ribavirin

Gilead Reports Interim Data From Phase 2 LONESTAR Study
 
-- Company Plans to Initiate Phase 3 Study Evaluating Eight and 12 Weeks of Therapy with Sofosbuvir and Ledipasvir for the Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C --

   
FOSTER CITY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May. 2, 2013-- Gilead Sciences (Nasdaq: GILD) today announced plans to initiate a third Phase 3 clinical trial of the company’s investigational fixed-dose combination tablet of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. The study, called ION-3, will evaluate the once-daily fixed-dose combination of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir for eight weeks with and without ribavirin (RBV) and for 12 weeks without RBV in 600 non-cirrhotic, treatment-naïve genotype 1 HCV-infected patients.
   
The design of ION-3 was based on interim results from the Phase 2 LONESTAR study, which evaluated eight- and 12-week courses of therapy with the once-daily fixed-dose combination of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir with and without RBV in 60 treatment-naïve, non-cirrhotic patients.


In this study, 19/19 patients in the 12-week arm had a sustained virologic response four weeks after completing therapy (SVR4) and 40/41 in the eight-week arms had a sustained virologic response eight weeks after stopping therapy (SVR8), with one relapse occurring in the arm receiving sofosbuvir/ledipasvir without RBV.
   
Two additional cohorts in the LONESTAR study evaluated a 12-week course of the fixed-dose combination of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir with or without RBV in 40 patients who had previously failed therapy with an HCV-specific protease inhibitor-based regimen. Half of these treatment-experienced patients have documented, compensated cirrhosis. Ninety-five percent of patients in both arms achieved SVR4, one cirrhotic patient in the sofosbuvir and ledipasvir arm relapsed and one patient in the sofosbuvir and ledipasvir plus RBV arm was lost to follow-up. 


Interim results from LONESTAR are summarized in the table below. Further details from this study will be presented at a future scientific meeting.
   
Treatment  
Treatment
Duration
  Population   Results
Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir 8 weeks GT 1 treatment-naïve 95% (19/20) SVR 8
Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir + RBV 8 weeks GT 1 treatment-naïve 100% (21/21) SVR 8
Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir 12 weeks GT 1 treatment-naïve 100% (19/19) SVR 4
Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir 12 weeks GT 1 treatment-experienced 95% (18/19) SVR 4
Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir + RBV 12 weeks GT 1 treatment-experienced 95% (20/21) SVR 4

“The LONESTAR results suggest that once-daily all-oral therapy with the nucleotide NS5B inhibitor sofosbuvir and the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir may have the potential to cure most genotype 1 HCV infected patients with a remarkably short treatment duration,” said Eric Lawitz, MD, President and Medical Director, The Texas Liver Institute, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, and Principal Investigator for the LONESTAR study. 


Both sofosbuvir in combination with ledipasvir, and sofosbuvir in combination with ledipasvir and RBV were well tolerated in the LONESTAR study.

“Based upon the encouraging data derived from LONESTAR, we are continuing to advance our research evaluating new drug combinations and shorter durations of all-oral therapy that have the potential to simplify treatment for those living with hepatitis C,” commented Norbert Bischofberger, PhD, Executive Vice President, Research and Development and Chief Scientific Officer at Gilead Sciences.
   
About ION-3
ION-3 is a randomized, open label Phase 3 clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir for the treatment of chronic HCV in non-cirrhotic, treatment-naïve genotype 1 infected patients. Participants will be randomized to receive sofosbuvir and ledipasvir for eight weeks (n=200), sofosbuvir and ledipasvir plus RBV for eight weeks (n=200), or sofosbuvir and ledipasvir for 12 weeks (n=200). The primary endpoint of the study is SVR12, defined as maintaining undetectable HCV RNA 12 weeks post-treatment and considered a cure for HCV infection. The study is designed to assess non-inferiority of the eight-week treatment duration arms to the 12-week treatment duration arm.
   
Two other ongoing Phase 3 studies are examining all-oral HCV therapy with sofosbuvir and ledipasvir. ION-1 and ION-2 are testing 12- and 24-week courses of the fixed-dose combination with and without RBV among treatment-naïve and treatment-experienced genotype 1 HCV patients, including those with compensated cirrhosis. Based on the results of the LONESTAR trial, Gilead has amended ION-2 to shorten the duration of therapy in one of the two fixed-dose combination arms without RBV from 24 to 12 weeks.
   
Additional information about ION-1, ION-2, ION-3 and LONESTAR can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov.
   
Sofosbuvir, ledipasvir and the fixed-dose combination tablet are investigational products and their safety and efficacy have not yet been established.
   
About Gilead Sciences
Gilead Sciences is a biopharmaceutical company that discovers, develops and commercializes innovative therapeutics in areas of unmet medical need. The company’s mission is to advance the care of patients suffering from life-threatening diseases worldwide. Headquartered in Foster City, California, Gilead has operations in North America, Europe and Asia Pacific.
   
Forward-Looking Statement
This press release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors, including the possibility of unfavorable results from the clinical studies evaluating sofosbuvir and the sofosbuvir and ledipasvir fixed-dose combination, including from the ION-1, ION-2 and ION-3 and LONESTAR studies. Gilead also faces risks related to its ability to enroll patients in the ION-3 study, the need to modify or delay the study and the risk of failing to obtain approval of sofosbuvir and/or the sofosbuvir and ledipasvir fixed-dose combination from regulatory authorities. As a result, sofosbuvir and the sofosbuvir and ledipasvir fixed-dose combination may never be successfully commercialized. In addition, Gilead may make a strategic decision to discontinue development of these products if, for example, Gilead believes commercialization will be difficult relative to other opportunities in its pipeline. These risks, uncertainties and other factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those referred to in the forward-looking statements. The reader is cautioned not to rely on these forward-looking statements. These and other risks are described in detail in Gilead’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2012, as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. All forward-looking statements are based on information currently available to Gilead, and Gilead assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements.
   
For more information on Gilead Sciences, please visit the company’s website at www.gilead.com, follow Gilead on Twitter (@GileadSciences) or call Gilead Public Affairs at 1-80-GILEAD-5 or 1-650-574-3000.

   

Source: Gilead Sciences
Gilead Sciences
Patrick O’Brien, 650-522-1936 (Investors)
Amy Flood, 650-522-5643 (Media)


Gilead combo hepatitis C pill effective in small trial

Thu May 2, 2013 12:18pm EDT
       
(Reuters) - Gilead Sciences Inc on Thursday said almost all patients taking a fixed-dose combination of two of its experimental hepatitis C drugs appeared to have eliminated the liver virus after either eight weeks or 12 weeks of treatment in a small mid-stage study.

 
The data should strengthen the widely held perception that Gilead is leading the race among many companies to bring to market a highly curative, all-oral regimen with shorter treatment durations for the serious liver disease. Gilead shares rose 5 percent after the data was released.

Calling them "excellent results," Stifel analyst Joel Sendek said in a research note, "We see Gilead further increasing the pressure on its hepatitis C competitors with positive Phase II Lonestar trial data evaluating a short 8-week regimen of sofosbuvir plus ledipasvir."

AbbVie and Bristol-Myers Squibb are also developing highly promising all-oral hepatitis C treatments, seen as not far behind Gilead. But those regimens require patients to take many more pills each day than does Gilead's.

The Gilead combination pill is taken once a day and is being tested with and without the older drug ribavirin, which is typically taken twice a day.

Current treatments introduced in 2011 must still be taken with ribavirin and the injected drug interferon, which causes miserable flu-like symptoms and leads many patients to delay or discontinue treatment. The current standard treatment takes either 24 or 48 weeks. The new combinations are attempting to cut the duration to 12 weeks, or as few as eight.

Gilead is expected to have a new hepatitis C treatment approved next year.

Based on the favorable interim data from the Lonestar trial of 60 previously untreated patients, Gilead said it plans to conduct a third late-stage study of the once-daily fixed-dose combination tablet pairing sofosbuvir and ledipasvir.

The new Phase III trial, called ION-3, will enroll 600 patients new to treatment who have the most common and difficult to treat genotype 1 form of hepatitis C, Gilead said.

It will evaluate the combination tablet for eight weeks of treatment, with and without ribavirin, as well as for 12 weeks without ribavirin. An all-oral combination with high cure rates that does not include ribavirin, which also has some tough to tolerate side effects, would be viewed by doctors and patients as a huge advantage over those that include the older drug.

Wall Street expects any approved oral regimen for hepatitis C to garner billions of dollars in annual sales.

Gilead said all 19 patients in the Lonestar trial who took its combo pill for 12 weeks had a sustained virologic response (SVR), meaning they had no detectable signs of the virus, as assessed by blood tests given four weeks after completing therapy. They will be followed for a further 20 weeks. Any patient in whom the virus is undetectable 24 weeks after completing treatment is deemed to be cured.

In another arm of the trial, 40 of 41 patients who took the tablet for eight weeks were deemed free of the virus eight weeks after they completed treatment. The one patient who relapsed was from a group that took the combo tablet but not ribavirin, the company said. That may suggest that 12 weeks of treatment will be necessary if ribavirin is not part of the regimen.

Gilead also tested 40 patients who had failed to be helped by current treatments, half of them with cirrhosis - an indication of advanced disease. Ninety-five percent of those more difficult to treat patients had no sign of the virus four weeks after completing 12 weeks of the combination pill either with or without ribavirin, according to preliminary results.

Hepatitis C affects an estimated 170 million people worldwide, and if left untreated can lead to cirrhosis, liver cancer or the need for a new liver. Current treatments include use of interferon, an injectable drug that causes flu-like symptoms.

Gilead shares were up $2.49 at $52.62 in midday trading on Nasdaq.
(Reporting By Ransdell Pierson and Bill Berkrot; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Nick Zieminski)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/02/us-gilead-hepatitis-idUSBRE9410QM20130502?feedType=RSS

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

EASL 2013: NEW Oral Hepatitis C Drugs - Three Part Series @ NATAP



Mr. Jules Levin is the founder of NATAP, an Internet resource for global HIV and hepatitis conference coverage and scientific information. For almost two decades Mr. Levin has kept the HCV community informed on the development of investigational drugs and FDA approved drugs to treat hepatitis C by providing breaking news, data on clinical studies, newsletters and exceptional conference coverage.

EASL Coverage

You won't want to miss this years coverage of The International Liver Congress 2013. Check out Mr. Levin's three part series which include slides and commentary. View new data on treatment-naive patients, null responders, patients with cirrhosis, genotypes 1-3, in addition to interferon (IFN)-free therapies on the horizon. Once again the conference coverage at NATAP is outstanding.

EASL 48th Annual Meeting
April 24th - 28th 2013
The Netherlands, Amsterdam


Links and Summary:

Part One
Abbvie reported results from a phase 2b study of their oral IFN-free 4-drug regimen with 99% SVR rate with 12 weeks therapy in genotype 1 and 98% SVR with 24 weeks in null responders.
SVR results with the BMS 3-oral drug IFN/-Rbv free regimen including their protease Asunaprevir+the NS5A BMS052 (declatavir)+ their non-nuc polymerase inhibitor BMS325 showing high SVR rates of 94%
Both Janssen & Gilead have just recently submitted New Drug Applications to the FDA for indications for the use of GS7977 and for TMC435 with approvals expected by the end of the year. Other companies are completing phase 3 now & will be submitting NDAs to the FDA soon...

Part Two
This report is an updated version that was originally distributed live in real-time from EASL on April 28.
Daclatasvir, TMC435, Faldaprevir and MK5172
- GS7977(nucleotide)+Peg/Rbv for 12 weeks for genotypes 1/4/5/6 in the phase 3 NEUTRINO Study
- TMC435 (protease)+Peg/Rbv for GT1 in the phase 3 QUEST-2 Study
- Faldaprevir (BI335, protease)+Peg/Rbv in the phase 3 study STARTVERS01
- NS5A BMS052+GS7977 in GT1 patients who previously did not achieve an SVR with boceprevir or telaprevir (this captured a lot of attention)
- Daclatasvir (BMS052) + Peg/Rbv for GT2/3 for 12 or 16 weeks
- Phase 2 study on MK5172 (Merck 2nd generation protease) + Peg/Rbv for Gt1

Part Three
ELECTRON Study phase 2: GS7977+Rbv GT1 -The ELECTRON Study is a phase 2 of about 94 patients looking at both treatment-naives & null responders with each of 3 treatment arms for 12 weeks therapy: GS7977+Rbv, GS7977+GS5885 (NS5A)+Rbv and GS7977+GS9669 (non-nuc)+Rbv. These were 90% Gt1a patients without cirrhosis, phase 3 will include cirrhotics. You can view the ELECTRON slide presentation here at EASL with the link above. Here is the results slide just below showing 100% in naives (25/25) with the 3-drug regimen of GS7977+GS5885+Rbv & 100% in nulls with the same regimen, phase 3 ION studies will look at with & without Rbv with the coformulation of GS7977+GS5885. You can see this study also looked at GS7977+GS9669 (non-nuc)+Rbv with 92% SVR in naives (23/25) & 3/3 SVR in nulls all with 12 weeks, ION-2 will look at treatment-experienced with 12 and 24 weeks therapy.

View Complete Coverage @ NATAP

EASL - Addition of simeprevir to peginterferon/ribavirin improves SVR rate among HCV patients



Addition of simeprevir to peginterferon/ribavirin improves SVR rate among HCV patients

May 1, 2013

Simeprevir improves rates of sustained virologic response and may allow for a 24-week treatment duration when added to interferon-based therapy for chronic hepatitis C, according to data presented at the International Liver Congress in Amsterdam.

In the double blind, phase 3 QUEST-1 study, researchers randomly assigned 394 treatment-naive patients with HCV genotype 1 to either 150 mg oral HCV NS3/4A protease inhibitor simeprevir or placebo, for 12 weeks, plus 48 weeks of pegylated interferon alfa-2a with ribavirin (PR). Patients with HCV RNA below 25 IU/mL after 4 weeks of treatment and undetectable RNA at 12 weeks stopped treatment at 24 weeks. All placebo recipients received 48 weeks of PR therapy.
Full Story »

EASL - Meeting News Coverage @ Healio

Addition of simeprevir to peginterferon/ribavirin improves SVR rate among HCV patients
May 1, 2013
Simeprevir improves rates of sustained virologic response and may allow for a 24-week treatment duration when added to interferon-based therapy for...More »

Alcohol consumption, metabolic risk factors tied to cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma
April 30, 2013
Heavy alcohol consumption and obesity increase the risk for liver-related morbidity and death, while metabolic risk factors also elevate the risk for...More »

Daclatasvir/asunaprevir/NS5B inhibitor effective in treatment-naive HCV patients
April 30, 2013
Treatment-naive patients with chronic hepatitis C experienced high rates of sustained virologic response from a combination of three direct-acting...More »

Probiotics may prevent hepatic encephalopathy among cirrhotic patients
April 29, 2013
Patients with cirrhosis were less likely to develop overt hepatic encephalopathy when taking probiotics than controls in a study presented at the...More »

Faldaprevir/peginterferon/ribavirin improved SVR, shortened therapy for chronic HCV
April 29, 2013
The addition of faldaprevir to pegylated interferon/ribavirin therapy significantly improved rates of sustained virologic response and allowed for shorter...More »
Meeting News Coverage

Everolimus-based immunosuppression post-liver transplant as effective as tacrolimus with better renal function
April 26, 2013
Liver transplant recipients who received everolimus-based immunosuppression with reduced tacrolimus experienced similar results to those treated with...More »

Interferon-free, triple-DAA regimen safe, effective for chronic HCV
April 26, 2013
Nearly all patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with an interferon-free drug regimen for 12 or 24 weeks experienced sustained virologic response in a...More »

Gene variants linked to steatosis, fibrosis, steatohepatitis
April 25, 2013
Variants in the PNPLA3, GCKR, TRIB1 and PPP1R3B genes are associated with histological factors of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, according to data...More »

Nature- Targeted drugs to tackle hepatitis C

Targeted drugs to tackle hepatitis C

But experts debate US screening recommendations.

Beth Mole
 
John strains to recall the gap between learning that he had hepatitis C and deciding to get treated: it was either four years or five. His thinking is clouded by the combination of three drugs that he is taking to clear the infection. After the treatments’ other side effects set in — severe flu-like symptoms, depression and exhaustion — he took leave from his job as a chef in New York. John, whose name has been changed to protect his privacy, was at high risk of catching the virus, having once been addicted to crystal methamphetamine. But as a 51-year-old, he is also a baby boomer — a member of the generation born between 1945 and 1965 — millions of whom will face the disease and its sometimes harrowing treatment.
 
Better drugs are on the way. But the possibility of improved treatment is intensifying a debate about whether to screen a broad swathe of the US population for hepatitis C.