Saturday, November 2, 2013

AASLD-Gilead Announces Phase 2 Results for Sofosbuvir-Based Regimens in Hepatitis C Patients Before and After Liver Transplantation



Published on Nov 2, 2013
Sofosbuvir regimen in recurrent HCV for patients who undergo liver transplantation is mentioned in this video with Dr. Donald Jensen

AASLD TV interviewed Donald Jensen, MD/AASLD Treasurer and Gary Davis, MD, FACP, AASLD Secretary about some of the exciting new developments surrounding the new treatments coming out for HVC.

Gilead Announces Phase 2 Results for Sofosbuvir-Based Regimens in Hepatitis C Patients Before and After Liver Transplantation

-- Studies Support Efficacy and Safety of an All-Oral Sofosbuvir-Based Regimen for the Prevention and Treatment of Recurrent HCV Infection Following Liver Transplants --

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 2, 2013-- Gilead Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: GILD) today announced results from two Phase 2 studies evaluating an all-oral treatment regimen of the investigational once-daily nucleotide analogue sofosbuvir plus ribavirin (RBV) for both the prevention and treatment of recurrent chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among patients who undergo liver transplantation. The findings will be presented this week at the 64th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (The Liver Meeting 2013) in Washington, D.C.

HCV infection is the most common cause of liver transplantation in the United States and Europe. Recurrence of HCV infection is universal among patients with active disease at the time of transplantation and up to 50 percent develop cirrhosis of the liver within five years. Suppression of HCV RNA prior to liver transplantation should reduce the risk of re-infection and its serious complications, but currently available treatment options are often ineffective and poorly tolerated. Similarly, in the post-transplant setting, treatment is generally poorly tolerated and complicated by strong drug interactions with immunosuppressive agents used to prevent the body's rejection of the transplanted liver.

In a study conducted among pre-transplant HCV patients (Study 2025), up to 48 weeks of sofosbuvir/RBV therapy was administered. Among patients with undetectable HCV (<25 IU/mL) at the time of transplantation, 64 percent (n=25/39) achieved undetectable HCV RNA 12 weeks post-transplant (pTVR12). Patients who achieve pTVR12 are considered cured of HCV infection. In a second study conducted among post-transplant HCV patients (Study 0126), patients with established recurrent HCV infection following liver transplantation received 24 weeks of sofosbuvir/RBV therapy. Seventy-seven percent (n=27/35) of patients in this study have achieved a sustained virologic response four weeks post-treatment (SVR4).

"Recurrence of HCV following liver transplantation almost always occurs in clinical practice. These patients are at higher risk for disease progression, the development of cirrhosis, liver graft failure, re-transplantation and increased morbidity and mortality," said Michael P. Curry, MD, Medical Director, Liver Transplantation at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, and an investigator for the pre- and post-liver transplant trials. "In these studies, sofosbuvir clearly demonstrated the potential to improve patient outcomes by either preventing or effectively treating recurrent HCV infection following liver transplantation."

Three percent and five percent of patients discontinued treatment due to adverse events in the pre- and post-transplant studies, respectively. No serious adverse events reported were associated with sofosbuvir. The most common adverse events observed were consistent with the safety profile of RBV, and included fatigue, anemia, headache and nausea in the pre-transplant study, and fatigue, headache, arthralgia (joint pain) and diarrhea in the post-transplant study.

About the Pre-Transplant Study

Study 2025 is an on-going open-label Phase 2 study evaluating the efficacy and safety of sofosbuvir (SOF) 400 mg once daily plus weight-based ribavirin (RBV) for up to 48 weeks or until liver transplantation. Sixty-one patients with HCV infection (Child-Pugh class A or B cirrhosis) and liver cancer, who were either treatment-naïve or treatment-experienced were enrolled.

About the Post-Transplant Study

Study 0126 is an ongoing open-label Phase 2 study evaluating the efficacy and safety of 24 weeks of treatment with sofosbuvir 400 mg once-daily plus RBV (starting at 400 mg/day) among 40 treatment-naïve and treatment-experienced patients with recurrent HCV infection. Patients in the study had received a transplant a median of four years prior to the study, and 40 percent were cirrhotic.

There were no deaths, graft losses or episodes of organ rejection among post-liver transplantation patients in the study.

Additional information about these studies can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Sofosbuvir is an investigational product and its safety and efficacy have not 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 and South 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 longer-term results from Studies 025 and 126 and other ongoing and subsequent clinical trials involving sofosbuvir, alone or in combination with other products, for the treatment of HCV. In addition, regulatory authorities will not approve sofosbuvir for HCV-related indications and any marketing approval may have substantial limitations on its use. As a result, sofosbuvir may never be successfully commercialized. Further, Gilead may make a strategic decision to discontinue development of sofosbuvir 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 Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2013, 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 1-800-GILEAD-5 or 1-650-574-3000.



Source: Gilead Sciences, Inc.

Gilead Sciences, Inc.
Patrick O'Brien, 650-522-1936 (Investors)
Cara Miller, 650-522-1616 (Media)

AASLD-Gilead Announces Phase 3 Results for an All-Oral, Sofosbuvir-Based Regimen for the Treatment of Hepatitis C in Patients Co-Infected With HIV

Gilead Announces Phase 3 Results for an All-Oral, Sofosbuvir-Based Regimen for the Treatment of Hepatitis C in Patients Co-Infected With HIV

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 2, 2013-- Gilead Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq:GILD) today announced results from a Phase 3 study, PHOTON-1, evaluating the investigational once-daily nucleotide analogue sofosbuvir for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among patients co-infected with HIV. In the trial, 76 percent (n=87/114) of genotype 1 HCV treatment-naïve patients receiving 24 weeks of an all-oral, interferon-free regimen of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin (RBV) achieved a sustained virologic response 12 weeks after completing therapy (SVR12). Patients who achieve SVR12 are considered cured of HCV infection. These data will be presented this week during the 64th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (The Liver Meeting 2013) in Washington, D.C.

Up to one-third of people living with HIV in the United States are co-infected with HCV. Current HCV medicines are associated with suboptimal cure rates among co-infected patients and can cause significant interactions with HIV drugs.

"There is a clear need for HCV treatment regimens that are more effective and safer for patients who are co-infected with HIV," said Douglas Dieterich, MD, Professor of Medicine in the Division of Liver Diseases and Director of Continuing Medical Education in the Department of Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. "In this study, sofosbuvir-based all-oral therapy achieved high SVR rates in a hard-to-treat patient population. This regimen may have the potential to help us overcome the clinical challenge of treating HCV/HIV co-infection."

PHOTON-1 also assessed 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus RBV among genotype 2 and 3 HCV treatment-naïve patients with HIV. Among genotype 2 patients receiving this regimen, 88 percent (n=23/26) achieved SVR12, while 67 percent (n=28/42) of genotype 3 patients achieved SVR12. All patients in PHOTON-1 who did not achieve SVR12 had viral relapse after cessation of therapy, with the exception of two participants who were non-adherent to study drugs.

Treatment discontinuations due to adverse events were reported in three percent of patients receiving 24 weeks of therapy and four percent of patients receiving 12 weeks of therapy. The most common side effects observed in the study were consistent with the safety profile of RBV and included fatigue, nausea, headache and insomnia.

About PHOTON-1

PHOTON-1 is an ongoing open-label Phase 3 study being conducted at sites in the United States and Puerto Rico to evaluate the efficacy and safety of 12 or 24 weeks of sofosbuvir 400 mg once-daily plus weight-based RBV (1,000 or 1,200 mg/day) among HCV treatment-naïve patients with genotype 1, 2 or 3 HCV infection who are also HIV-positive.

Ninety-five percent of PHOTON-1 patients were receiving antiretroviral therapy for their HIV infection. The HIV treatment regimens permitted in the study were based on the results of a separate Phase 2 drug-drug interaction study conducted by Gilead demonstrating that sofosbuvir did not significantly affect the pharmacokinetic parameters of drugs from various classes of antiretrovirals. The most common HIV treatment regimens taken by patients in PHOTON-1 were Gilead's Truvada® (emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate) administered with efavirenz, atazanavir/ritonavir, darunavir/ritonavir or raltegravir.

Additional information about PHOTON-1 can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Sofosbuvir is an investigational product and its safety and efficacy have not 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 and South 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 longer-term resulting from clinical trials evaluating sofosbuvir, including in combination with other products and among patients with HCV/HIV co-infection or HCV monoinfection. In addition, regulatory authorities may not approve sofosbuvir for HCV-related indications and any marketing approval may have substantial limitations on its use. As a result, sofosbuvir may never be successfully commercialized. Further, Gilead may make a strategic decision to discontinue development of sofosbuvir 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 Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2013, 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.

U.S. full prescribing information for Truvada is available at www.gilead.com.

Truvada is a registered trademark of Gilead Sciences, Inc.

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 1-800-GILEAD-5 or 1-650-574-3000.



Source: Gilead Sciences, Inc.

Gilead Sciences, Inc.
Patrick O'Brien, 650-522-1936 (Investors)
Cara Miller, 650-522-1616 (Media)

Friday, November 1, 2013

Cocktails of new oral antiviral drugs to fight hepatitis C have aced clinical trials

Improved treatments offer hope for eradication of viral liver infection

Sara Reardon           


For decades, people with hepatitis C virus (HCV) have had to endure gruelling treatment regimens that include injections of the drug interferon, which can cause severe nausea and depression. But with the imminent approval of several highly effective oral antiviral drugs, and more on the way, researchers say that eradicating the infection worldwide is now a realistic goal.

Unlike previous HCV treatments, which sought to enhance the immune system with interferon and other drugs, the latest group of oral medications interferes with the virus's ability to replicate and make proteins. A US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) board recommended two such drugs - simeprevir, made by Johnson & Johnson in New Brunswick, New Jersey,  and sofosbuvir from Gilead Sciences in Foster City, California - for approval last week. When each is taken in combination with a drug called ribavirin, the treatment eliminates hepatitis C in around 80% of people.

"This is the first time in the history of humankind that we have a cure for a viral disease," says pharmacologist Raymond Schinazi of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.

Findings from trials of different drug combinations are set to be released this week. A phase II study called COSMOS tested a combination of sofosbuvir and simeprevir in 197 people with HCV who had either not responded to interferon or who had advanced liver fibrosis caused by the virus. After 12 weeks of treatment, the drugs completely cleared the virus in more than 90% of participants.

Another study, led by physician Kazuaki Chayama at Hiroshima University in Japan, treated 220 people with a combination of daclatasvir and asunaprevir, two new drugs from Bristol-Myers Squibb in New York. The cocktail cured 85% of participants. Eric Hughes, lead global medical researcher at the company, says that it plans to submit the drugs for FDA approval in 2014.
 
Stopped short
Despite such encouraging results, larger studies of drug combinations involving multiple drug companies seem to be unlikely. Charlotte Edenius, vice-president of development at Medivir, a drug company in Stockholm that collaborated with Johnson & Johnson on the COSMOS study, says that Gilead and Johnson & Johnson do not plan to work together for a phase III trial. Similarly, a Bristol-Myers Squibb spokesperson says the company has no plans to collaborate with Gilead on larger trials of a combined sofosbuvir daclatasvir therapy, despite a phase II trial completed earlier this year in which the drug pairing cured all 41 participants.

Even without phase III trials or FDA approval for this approach, David Thomas, a hepatitis C researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, expects that some physicians will begin prescribing such combinations 'off-label' for difficult-to-treat cases.

And, he says, the impressive cure rates achieved in clinical trials suggest that potent drug combinations could eradicate HCV worldwide - at least in theory. The virus does not have an animal reservoir, meaning that it is not harboured by other animals, and it is not easily spread between people, except through blood. Improved screening of blood supplies used for transfusions and better patient-screening techniques have already greatly cut transmission rates over the last 15 years. Emergence of drug-resistant virus strains could be a hurdle, adds Thomas, but they might be rare because the latest antiviral drugs are so potent in combination.
 
Price problem
Hepatologist Rajender Reddy at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia sees a second stumbling block: getting such treatments to people who need them. Many of the roughly 170 million people worldwide who carry hepatitis C will not be able to afford the drugs, he says. There is also little incentive for drug companies to lower costs - unlike antiviral therapies for HIV, which must be taken for a patient's lifetime, HCV treatment is given for only 12 weeks. Identifying HCV carriers is also challenging, because most people do not know that they have the disease until they develop severe cirrhosis or liver cancer - sometimes decades after being infected.  Mandatory screening of at-risk populations such as the elderly and drug users would need to be a major part of an eradication effort, says virologist Charles Rice of Rockefeller University in New York. Crucial too is education to prevent people from contracting the disease in the first place. Even the most effective oral drugs do not raise a lasting immune response against the virus, and people can be reinfected. That is why the search for a preventative HCV vaccine continues, with the most promising ones currently in phase II clinical trials. "Even if we have all the drugs we need - which is still an open question - it will be decades, if not a century, before it's gone," says Rice.
 

AASLD: President's Press Conference Will Take Place On Saturday November 2 2013


Related @ Healio
Annual Liver Meeting begins this weekend
Healio.com will present live coverage of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases’ annual Liver Meeting running through Tuesday in Washington.

AASLD President's Press Conference 

Saturday, November 2, 2013 – 4:00-5:00 pm
Room 150B, Walter E. Washington Convention Center

AASLD President J. Gregory Fitz, MD, will host a press conference on the first full day of presentations at The Liver Meeting®, the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Dr. Fitz will highlight individual studies and themes from the 2306 abstracts to be presented at this year's meeting from the leading researchers in the field. He has selected to review 13 abstracts in advance of their actual presentation in scientific sessions for the benefit of the media:

Hepatitis C Virus Screening and Prevalence among US Veterans in Department of Veterans Affairs Care in 2012
Screening in Emergency Department Identifies a Large Cohort of Unrecognized Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection among Baby Boomers
Impact of Treatment on Long-Term Morbidity and Mortality in Chronic Hepatitis C Patients Receiving Care Through the U.S. Veterans Health Administration
Phase 2b study of the interferon-free and ribavirin-free combination of daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and BMS-791325 for 12 weeks in treatment-naïve patients with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection
IFNL4-ΔG Genotype and Racial Differences in Treatment Response in Virahep-C
Telaprevir combination therapy in treatment-naïve and experienced patients co-infected with HCV and HIV
Pretransplant Sofosbuvir and Ribavirin to Prevent Recurrence of HCV Infection after Liver Transplantation
Integrative genomic profiling of hepatocellular adenomas identify mutational processes involved in malignant transformation
Interim analysis of hepatitis B reactivation in patients with prior HBV exposure undergoing rituximab-containing chemotherapy: a prospective study
High-dose corticosteroid therapy following portoenterostomy in infants with biliary atresia does not improve outcome: The multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled START Trial
Hepatocyte-derived metabolic danger signals, extracellular ATP and uric acid, synergistically induce inflammatory cell activation and represent therapeutic targets in alcoholic liver disease
Binge Drinking and Weight Gain Accentuate Eicosanoid Mediated Inflammation and Oxidative Injury in Alcoholic Liver Disease – Novel Pathophysiologic Insights from Lipidomic Analysis
Medication Tradeoffs, Non-Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes among Liver Transplant Recipients About Dr. Fitz

Dr. Fitz is the Donald W. Seldin Distinguished professor and chair of the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern (UTSW) School of Medicine. He has been named dean of the UT Southwestern School of Medicine and provost of the medical center, effective October 1, 2009. He received his medical degree from Duke University, and then spent 10 years at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) as a resident, fellow, and faculty member. Subsequently he returned to Duke where he was active in liver transplantation, clinical hepatology, and basic research. Later he moved to the University of Colorado Health Science Center as the Waterman Professor of Liver Research and Chief of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. He has been Chairman of Internal Medicine at UTSW since 2003.

The research interests of Dr. Fitz's laboratory focus on the cellular mechanisms responsible for regulation of the number, type and activity of ion channels in liver cells; and on the role of ATP as an autocrine/paracrine signal regulating bile formation and other liver functions. The long term goals of these studies are to better define the cellular strategies for i) coupling cell metabolism to ion transport, ii) treatment of liver injury in conditions where cell volume regulation appears to be impaired, and iii) regulation of cholangiocytes secretion as a key contributor to the bile secretory unit. These ongoing studies have been supported by the National Institutes of Health for ~20 years, including an active MERIT award.

Dr. Fitz has substantial administrative and organizational experience, including participation in private foundations and NIH study sections. He is a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the Association of American Physicians as well as numerous specialty societies. He has served as Associate Editor of HEPATOLOGY and in other editorial positions, and as Chairman of the Research Committee of the AGA, co-director of national courses in Gastroenterology (AGA) and Hepatology (AASLD), and president of the Gastroenterology Research Group. He continues to be involved actively in medical education of residents, fellows and faculty.

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Founded in 1950, AASLD is the leading organization of scientists and health care professionals committed to preventing and curing liver disease. AASLD has grown into an international society responsible for all aspects of hepatology, and the annual meeting attracts 9,500 physicians, surgeons, researchers, and allied health professionals from around the world.

The Liver Meeting® is the premier meeting in the science and practice of hepatology, including the latest findings on new drugs, novel treatments, and the results from pilot and multicenter studies.

Contact: Please click here to obtain a press pass for this event. Press releases and all abstracts are available online at www.aasld.org.

Sugar intake is not directly related to liver disease


Sugar intake is not directly related to liver disease

Despite current beliefs, sugar intake is not directly associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, according to a new study in Gastroenterology, the official journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. Rather, high-calorie diets promote the progression of this serious form of liver disease.

Researchers conducted a double-blind study of healthy, but centrally overweight men to compare the effects of high intakes of two types of sugar, glucose and fructose, in two conditions — weight-maintaining (moderate-calorie diet) and weight-gaining (high-calorie diet). In the weight-maintaining period, men on neither diet developed any significant changes to the liver. However, in the weight-gaining period, both diets produced equivalent features of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, including steatosis (fatty liver) and elevated serum transaminase and triglycerides. These findings indicate that fructose and glucose have comparable effects on one's liver, and calorie intake is the factor responsible for the progression of liver disease.

"Based on the results of our study, recommending a low-fructose or low-glycemic diet to prevent nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is unjustified," said Professor Ian A. Macdonald, study author and faculty of medicine and health sciences, University of Nottingham, UK. "The best advice to give a patient is to maintain a healthy lifestyle with diet and exercise. Our study serves as a warning that even short changes in lifestyle can have profound impacts on your liver."

During the period of increased calorie intake, all study participants experienced significant increases in body weight, waist circumference and total body fat, as expected. Interestingly, satiety was unaltered in spite of weight gain during the high-calorie diet; this reinforces the notion of "hidden calories" in drinks since participants consumed a portion of their calories in liquid form.

Fructose is a simple sugar commonly found in fruits and vegetables. Glucose, also known as grape or blood sugar, is present in all major carbohydrates, such as starch and table sugar.

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, the most prevalent liver problem in the U.S. and most Western countries, is the buildup of extra fat in liver cells that is not caused by alcohol. For more on how a low-calorie diet is the best prescription for this form of liver disease, read the article "NAFLD Treatment: Is there More to Talk About Other than Diet and Exercise?" from the October/November issue of AGA Perspectives, the AGA Institute's most prominent non-scientific publication.

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About the AGA Institute

The American Gastroenterological Association is the trusted voice of the GI community. Founded in 1897, the AGA has grown to include 17,000 members from around the globe who are involved in all aspects of the science, practice and advancement of gastroenterology. The AGA Institute administers the practice, research and educational programs of the organization. http://www.gastro.org.

About Gastroenterology

Gastroenterology, the official journal of the AGA Institute, is the most prominent scientific journal in the specialty and is in the top 1 percent of indexed medical journals internationally. The journal publishes clinical and basic science studies of all aspects of the digestive system, including the liver and pancreas, as well as nutrition. The journal is abstracted and indexed in Biological Abstracts, Current Awareness in Biological Sciences, Chemical Abstracts, Current Contents, Excerpta Medica, Index Medicus, Nutrition Abstracts and Science Citation Index. For more information, visit http://www.gastrojournal.org.

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The New Paradigm of Hepatitis C Therapy - Integration of Oral Therapies Into Best Practices


The New Paradigm of Hepatitis C Therapy
Integration of Oral Therapies Into Best Practices

N. H. Afdhal, S. Zeuzem, R. T. Schooley, D. L. Thomas, J. W. Ward, A. H. Litwin, H. Razavi, L. Castera, T. Poynard, A. Muir, S. H. Mehta, L. Dee, C. Graham, D. R. Church, A. H. Talal, M. S. Sulkowski, I. M. Jacobson

Disclosures
J Viral Hepat. 2013;20(11):745-760.

Repost
This study was published today @ Medscape, but was previously posted here on the blog.

Abstract and Introduction
Abstract

Emerging data indicate that all-oral antiviral treatments for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) will become a reality in the near future. In replacing interferon-based therapies, all-oral regimens are expected to be more tolerable, more effective, shorter in duration and simpler to administer. Coinciding with new treatment options are novel methodologies for disease screening and staging, which create the possibility of more timely care and treatment. Assessments of histologic damage typically are performed using liver biopsy, yet noninvasive assessments of histologic damage have become the norm in some European countries and are becoming more widespread in the United States. Also in place are new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) initiatives to simplify testing, improve provider and patient awareness and expand recommendations for HCV screening beyond risk-based strategies. Issued in 2012, the CDC recommendations aim to increase HCV testing among those with the greatest HCV burden in the United States by recommending one-time testing for all persons born during 1945–1965. In 2013, the United States Preventive Services Task Force adopted similar recommendations for risk-based and birth-cohort-based testing. Taken together, the developments in screening, diagnosis and treatment will likely increase demand for therapy and stimulate a shift in delivery of care related to chronic HCV, with increased involvement of primary care and infectious disease specialists. Yet even in this new era of therapy, barriers to curing patients of HCV will exist. Overcoming such barriers will require novel, integrative strategies and investment of resources at local, regional and national levels.
Introduction

The treatment landscape for hepatitis C is in flux. From 2002 to 2011, the standard of care treatment for chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) was 24 or 48 weeks of therapy with pegylated interferon-alfa (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV). For patients with genotype 1 virus, the likelihood of achieving a sustained virological response (SVR), defined as having undetectable serum HCV RNA at 24 weeks after cessation of treatment, was only 40–50% after 48 weeks of therapy. In 2011, the HCV protease inhibitors telaprevir and boceprevir entered the market to be used in combination with PEG-IFN and RBV for genotype 1 HCV infection. The protease inhibitors increase the likelihood of SVR to 67–75% in treatment-naïve patients with genotype 1 HCV.[1–4] However, adding a protease inhibitor to a PEG-IFN backbone, which is itself difficult to tolerate, has increased the potential for toxicity and has placed a resource-intensive burden on treating physicians. In addition, the triple therapy regimens have limited efficacy in treatment-experienced null responders.[5]

Several directly acting antiviral agents are being evaluated for their potential use in combination with either RBV or other antivirals of different classes. In early 2013, a small study of the nucleotide sofosbuvir in combination with RBV was reported, and among 25 treatment-naïve, HCV genotype 1 patients, 21 (84%) had an SVR after 12 weeks of therapy.[6] In another small study reported in early 2013, a total of 31 of 33 (94%) previously treatment-naïve genotype 1 patients were HCV RNA negative 12 weeks after cessation of therapy with the NS3 protease inhibitor ABT-450, combined with low-dose ritonavir, the non-nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor ABT-333 and ribavirin.[7] In phase 3 studies of sofosbuvir with RBV, SVR rates have been as high as 78% in HCV genotype 2 and 3 patients,[8] and it is anticipated that in the United States, all-oral combination therapies will be available for HCV genotype 2 or 3 patients by 2014. By 2015, regimens including only directly acting antivirals are expected to be available for persons with any HCV genotype.

At this time of new treatment opportunities, novel changes have been made to improve the methods by which extent of liver disease is diagnosed. Assessment of the extent of histologic damage, an important component of patient evaluation, has been traditionally carried out by liver biopsy. Noninvasive assessments of histologic damage such as elastography have become the norm in several European countries and are becoming more frequently used in the United States. Strategies for HCV screening also have been revised. To improve the identification of persons living with chronic HCV infection, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) expanded its risk-based approach to HCV testing, publishing a recommendation in 2012 that all persons born during 1945–1965 receive one-time testing for HCV. In 2013, the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) adopted similar recommendations for risk-based and birth-cohort-based testing. Growing evidence suggests that in the United States, HCV infections are rapidly increasing among persons aged 15–24 primarily because of injection drug use.[9] This trend suggests that screening efforts should also ensure that young injection drug users are tested and engaged in care.

The 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) will expand opportunities for persons to purchase health insurance and have access to hepatitis C testing, care and treatment. The ACA will facilitate implementation of HCV testing because it requires nongrandfathered private health plans to cover clinical preventive services given an A or B grade by the USPSTF without cost-sharing and provides incentives for Medicaid programmes to cover these services. By prohibiting insurance companies from declining to sell or renew policies because of pre-existing conditions such as hepatitis C, ACA will help more patients access HCV care and treatment services.[10]

Improvements in therapies, diagnostic techniques and screening for HCV will create a new era for HCV treatment. Although the exact effects these changes will have on the future landscape of HCV care cannot be elucidated, certain outcomes are likely. For instance, as methods for diagnosis of liver disease and treatment of HCV become simpler, safer and more effective, primary healthcare providers may manage greater numbers of HCV-infected patients. This expansion into primary care may become necessary if the number of patients undergoing treatment increases because of screening efforts and improved prospects for treatment success for regimens containing all directly acting antivirals. Also subject to change are pricing and reimbursement models, as well as the pharmacoeconomics of curing HCV.

To discuss the new paradigm of HCV therapy, representatives from leading academic medical centres, government agencies, insurance providers and the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries met in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, on March 22 and 23, 2013. The focus of the meeting, or Think Tank, was to predict how shifts in HCV screening, diagnosis and treatment will affect access to and delivery of care; identify barriers to treating HCV; discuss successful strategies for identifying and treating patients; and discuss the pharmacoeconomics of treatment for patients, providers, pharmaceutical companies and healthcare payers. Here, we describe the current challenges and opportunities for curing HCV in the forthcoming era.

Current Evolution of All-Oral Therapies for HCV

Arrays of IFN-free regimens for treating HCV are currently in the later stages of clinical development. At scientific meetings, data have been presented from phase 2 and 3 studies of various all-oral regimens. The results of individual studies will not be described in great detail here but are summarized in Table 1. The more promising regimens have the following characteristics: a strong safety profile, SVR rates approaching or even exceeding 90%, minimal pill burden and minimal potential for drug–drug interactions.

Table 1.  Reported results for all-oral therapies for hepatitis C virus in clinical development
 No. patientsDuration, weeksSVR ratesReference
Treatment-naïve patients
   Genotype 1 (1a or 1b)
      ABT-450/r + ABT-333 + RBV331294% SVR12Poordad et al. [7]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + ABT-333 + RBV80888% SVR12Kowdley et al. [11]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-333 + RBV411285%Kowdley et al. [11]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + RBV791290%Kowdley et al. [11]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + ABT-333791287%Kowdley et al. [11]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + ABT-333 + RBV791298%Kowdley et al. [11]
      Daclatasvir + Asunaprevir + BMS-791325162488%Everson et al. [98]
      Daclatasvir + Asunaprevir + BMS-791325161294%Everson et al. [98]
      Faldaprevir + Deleobuvir462839% SVR12Zeuzem et al. [15]
      Faldaprevir + Deleobuvir + RBV31616, 28, or 4052–69% SVR12Zeuzem et al. [15]
      Mericitabine + Danoprevir + RBV642471% SVR12Gane et al. [99]
      Sofosbuvir + RBV251284%Gane et al. [6]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir5512 or 2498% SVR4Sulkowski et al. [14]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir + RBV5612 or 2496% SVR4Sulkowski et al. [14]
      Sofosbuvir + Ledipasvir + RBV2512100% SVR12Gane et al. [101]
   Genotype 2 or 3
      Sofosbuvir + RBV1012100%Gane et al. [6]
      Sofosbuvir101260%Gane et al. [6]
      Sofosbuvir + RBV2531267% SVR12Gane et al. [100]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir1424100%Sulkowski et al. [14]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir + RBV142493%Sulkowski et al. [14]
Prior nonresponse
   Genotype 1 (1a or 1b)
      ABT-450/r + ABT-333 + RBV171247% SVR12Poordad et al. [7]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + RBV451289%Kowdley et al. [11]
      ABT-450/r + ABT-267 + ABT-333 + RBV451293%Kowdley et al. [11]
      Daclatasvir + Asunaprevir112436%Lok et al. [102]
      Sofosbuvir + RBV101210%Gane et al. [6]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir2112100%Sulkowski et al. [13]
      Sofosbuvir + Daclatasvir + RBV201295%Sulkowski et al. [13]
      Sofosbuvir + Simeprevir + RBV271296% SVR8Lawitz et al. [12]
      Sofosbuvir + Simeprevir141293% SVR8Lawitz et al. [12]
      Sofosbuvir + Ledipasvir + RBV1012100% SVR12Gane et al. [101]
   Genotype 1b
      Daclatasvir + Asunaprevir212491%Suzuki et al. [103]
   Genotype 2 or 3
      Sofosbuvir + RBV20112 or 16SVR12
12 week: 50%
16 week: 73%
Jacobson et al. [8]
IFN-ineligible or intolerant
   Genotype 1b
      Daclatasvir + Asunaprevir222464%Suzuki et al. [103]
   Genotype 2 or 3
      Sofosbuvir + RBV2071278% SVR12Jacobson et al. [8]
ABT-450/r, ritonavir-boosted ABT-450; IFN, interferon; RBV, ribavirin; SVR, viral negativity 24 weeks post-therapy.
SVR12, SVR8 and SVR4 refer to viral negativity at 12, 8 and 4 weeks post-therapy.

Several major conclusions and predictions regarding the future of all-oral therapies were discussed. A reasonable anticipation is that a genotype-specific, all-oral therapy for HCV genotypes 2 and 3 with sofosbuvir and ribavirin will be available by 2014. By 2015, genotype-1-specific therapies should follow, and these will comprise any of three regimens currently under development by AbbVie Pharmaceuticals, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Gilead Sciences (Table 1). True pangenotypic regimens will probably not be available until 2016 or 2017 and will require development of pangenotypic NS5A inhibitors and protease inhibitors that can be combined with each other and with nucleotide polymerase inhibitors. Some of these combinations are in phase 1 or early phase 2 studies across multiple genotypes.

Another major area of discussion was whether pretreatment and on-treatment predictors of response, including those used for PEG-IFN, can help predict response to all-oral therapies. Although there is evidence that many of these factors still predict response to relatively weak interferon-sparing regimens, more potent regimens, with SVR rates >90%, readily overcome the traditional obstacles seen with PEG-IFN. For example, in phase 2 studies of the Abbott multidrug regimen[11] or sofosbuvir plus simeprevir[12] or daclatasvir,[13] prior interferon response was not strongly related to response to all-oral treatment. In fact, interferon null responders did just as well as naïve patients and had SVR rates in the 90% range. It is increasingly apparent that regimens consisting of potent agents that individually or cumulatively impose a high barrier to resistance attenuate or eliminate factors such as 1a/1b subtype, IL28B status, viral load, race, metabolic syndrome, obesity and age as major determinants of response. In addition, with potent directly acting antiviral combinations, nearly all patients are negative within 4 weeks, which means the traditional strategy of using virologic response at week 4 or 12 to determine the duration of treatment may be moot. The presence of cirrhosis, which often excludes patients from early phase trials, may yet be a differentiating factor in SVR rates, but this remains to be further determined for genotype 1, and as with other factors, presence of cirrhosis can probably be overcome by a sufficiently potent regimen or longer treatment duration. In studies of sofosbuvir and RBV in patients with HCV genotypes 2 or 3, cirrhosis was a significant negative predictor of response for treatment-naïve patients with HCV genotype 3 and for prior treatment-failure patients with either genotype 2 or 3, but these studies only included 1 potent directly acting antiviral. The effect of portal hypertension and hepatocellular dysfunction (Child's class B and C) on SVR in patients with more advanced liver disease remains an area requiring additional investigation.

The final major questions for discussion encompassed the need for RBV and duration of therapy, which are in some ways connected. As with the pretreatment predictors, ribavirin use and treatment duration appear to matter with relatively weak regimens but may not with sufficiently potent combinations. In studies of the polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir with either the NS5A inhibitor daclatasvir[14] or the protease inhibitor simeprevir,[12] SVR rates were independent of RBV use. However, in a study combining the protease inhibitor faldaprevir and the non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor deleobuvir, omitting RBV resulted in a marked reduction in efficacy in genotype 1a patients.[15] And for HCV genotype 1a patients in the phase 2 AVIATOR trial,[11] the removal of RBV from a regimen containing the ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor ABT-450/r, the NS5A inhibitor ABT-267 and the non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor ABT-333 resulted in a 10% loss of efficacy. The optimal duration of therapy remains unknown, but with potent regimens, 12 weeks is probably the maximum required for most patients (with the potential exception for patients with advanced cirrhosis). Eight-week treatment regimens can be explored, although this may result in a moderate (~10%) reduction in SVR[11] depending on the regimen.

For regimens containing only direct-acting antivirals, one could imagine a scenario where more potentially difficult-to-treat patients are distinguished from a potentially more easily treatable population. Difficult-to-treat patients may be best served by undergoing an individualized regimen under the care of a specialist. Individualized therapy could be based upon HCV genotype, fibrosis stage, comorbidities, concomitant medications or prior directly acting antiviral drug exposure. Populations of patients who may require individualized therapy but for whom evidence-based treatment data are limited include those with cirrhosis, including decompensated cirrhosis, HIV coinfection, renal failure, an organ transplant or other conditions resulting in being immunocompromised. In the future, it is possible that the population of HCV positive individuals with F0-2 histology will undergo treatment without further stratification such as via HCV genotype or IL28B polymorphisms, because SVR rates will likely be in the 90% range.
 
Screening Strategies for HCV

In the United States, mortality associated with hepatitis C is on the rise and currently exceeds that for HIV.[16] On the basis of survey data from 1999 to 2002, it has been estimated that 3.2 (2.7–3.9) million persons in the United States have chronic HCV infection.[17] The strongest risk of HCV infection is a history of injection drug use.[17] Of persons with chronic infection, 74% were born during the years 1945 through 1965.[18]

In 1998, CDC recommended a risk-based approach to screening, with routine HCV testing for persons with risk factors including injection drug use, having received clotting factor concentrates produced before 1987, being on chronic haemodialysis, having persistently abnormal alanine aminotransferase levels, being a recipient of donated blood from a person who tested positive for HCV, or having received a blood transfusion or organ transplant before July 1992;[19] in 1999, CDC recommended HCV testing for persons with HIV. The 2009 guidelines from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD)[20] and the 2006 guidelines from the American College of Gastroenterology[21] also recommend screening in high-risk patients. However, risk-based screening strategies can be limited either by clinician reluctance to ask about risk factors or by patient unawareness or reluctance to disclose risk behaviours. As a result, use of risk-based strategies alone has resulted in a large proportion of infected persons remaining undiagnosed; in the United States, various estimates indicate that 45–85% of persons with HCV are unaware of their infection status.[22–25] To augment risk-based screening, in 2012 CDC published a recommendation for one-time testing without prior ascertainment of HCV risk for persons born during 1945–1965.[25] This birth-cohort approach was designed to both target persons with the highest prevalence of HCV infection and remove any behavioural stigma from screening. In the state of New York, legislation requiring all patients born within the birth-cohort period to be offered hepatitis C screening when they visit healthcare providers has passed the legislature and is awaiting the governor's approval.

It has been estimated that with implementation of the birth-cohort screening strategy, 121 000 deaths from HCV will be averted.[26] In recognition of these and other data,[27,28] in June 2013 the USPSTF issued a final recommendation regarding HCV testing, assigning a Grade B to two recommendations: screening for HCV infection in persons at high risk for infection and one-time HCV screening for adults born between 1945 and 1965.[29] A USPSTF Grade B designation expands access to clinical preventive services.

For HCV screening to become widely adopted in diverse clinical settings providing care for persons at risk for HCV infection, efforts are needed at local, regional and national levels. Approximately 79 million persons were born during 1945–1965 (the Baby Boom Generation), making birth-cohort based screening a daunting task. However, since the release of the CDC recommendations, multiple independent studies of HCV testing have shown birth-cohort-based approaches superior to risk-based strategies alone.[30,31] To increase the numbers of HCV-infected persons aware of their infection, CDC is implementing a national multimedia campaign, Know More Hepatitis, that includes education for consumers and healthcare providers (http://www.cdc.gov/knowmorehepatitis/). Specific initiatives include messaging on airport dioramas and billboards in cities such as Atlanta, Washington, DC, Salt Lake City, Orlando and Las Vegas; online medical education for health professionals (http://depts.washington.edu/hepstudy/hepC/); and the launch of an annual National Hepatitis Testing Day observed on May 19th.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is also conducting demonstration projects to evaluate the implementation of risk-based and birth-cohort strategies for HCV strategies in over 25 clinical settings. For example, the Hepatitis C Assessment and Testing Project in New York City evaluated community-based screening interventions in three urban primary care clinics.[32] Both risk-based and birth-cohort-based interventions were associated with an increased proportion of patients tested for HCV. Both risk-based and birth-cohort HCV screening approaches can be integrated within electronic medical records.

The new HCV screening recommendations are expected to increase demand for testing to detect current HCV infection. To meet this demand, CDC recently simplified the HCV testing sequence.[33] Patients should first be tested for HCV antibody. Rapid tests for HCV antibody allow access to HCV testing in settings lacking laboratory-based diagnostic services. Rapid tests for HCV antibody detection include OraQuick,[34] which is approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), as well as Chembio,[34,35] MedMira[34,35] and mBio, which are under development.

HCV Diagnostic Testing and Disease Staging

It is likely that the rapid improvements in treatment efficacy and tolerability anticipated with interferon-sparing regimens will also transform our approach to disease staging. The historic low efficacy and safety of interferon-based regimens led to the recommendation for liver staging to determine whether the benefits of treatment would outweigh the risks. For most patients, this required that there be more than just portal fibrosis. Liver biopsy was considered the best test for this purpose, but the procedure is costly, invasive and in a small minority of cases can result in complications such as significant bleeding, organ puncture, or death.[36] And the accuracy in staging disease is often compromised by variability in tissue sampling or in interobserver or intra-observer histopathological scoring.

As treatment efficacy for genotype 2 and 3 infections improved, biopsy was no longer routinely recommended to justify treatment necessity.[20] Likewise, continued improvements in treatment efficacy and safety for all genotypes will change the primary goal of staging from justification of treatment benefit to identification of persons with cirrhosis or bridging fibrosis because they may need longer treatment courses and require hepatocellular carcinoma screening and portal hypertension management. Accordingly, the most important characteristic of a staging test is the negative predictive value for detection of cirrhosis.

Noninvasive methods of assessing histology are becoming more widely used. These include measurement of serum biomarkers of fibrosis and measurement of liver stiffness through elastography (Table 2). The noninvasive methods have practically no complications and can be performed repeatedly to dynamically monitor progression of fibrosis. The rate of adoption of noninvasive diagnostic tests for liver fibrosis differs between international regions, and the United States lags behind Europe in this regard. The 2012 European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) guidelines for treating chronic hepatitis C suggest that while liver biopsy is still regarded as the reference method for grading inflammation and staging fibrosis, transient elastography can be used to assess liver fibrosis, and noninvasive serum markers are recommended for detecting significant fibrosis (METAVIR score F2-F4).[37]

Table 2.  FibroScan and FibroSure* for diagnosis of cirrhosis
 FibroScanFibroSure
AUROC, mean (95% CI)0.94 (0.93–0.95) [41]0.86 (0.71–0.92) [38]
Sensitivity (95% CI)0.83 (0.79–0.86) [104]0.85 [38]
Specificity (95% CI)0.89 (0.87–0.91) [104]0.81 [38]
AdvantagesEvaluates a genuine property of the liverGood reproducibility
High performance for cirrhosisHigh applicability (>95%)
User-friendly, point-of-contact test
Good reproducibility
DisadvantagesDecreased performance in obese patientsNonspecific of the liver
Applicability lower than serum biomarkers: failure in 3% of cases and unreliable results in 16% (obesity, ascites, limited operator experience)
Requires a dedicated device
Inflammation, extra-hepatic cholestatis, and right heart failure can provide false positive results
                       
In 2004, the biomarker assay FibroSure (named FibroTest in Europe) was launched in the United States for assessing fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity. The assay, which can only be performed in validated laboratories, predicts a histology score on the basis of patient age, sex and results for serum haptoglobin, α2-macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, γ-glutamyltransferase and bilirubin analyses.[38] In a review of 25 studies in chronic HCV, FibroTest had an AUROC of 0.79 (0.70–0.89) for diagnosis of significant fibrosis (F ≥ 2) and 0.86 (0.71–0.92) for liver cirrhosis.[38]
                       
If the birth-cohort screening to enhance diagnosis of HCV infection is fully implemented, it has been estimated that as many as 800 000 additional cases of HCV infection would be identified.[26] Should there be such a large-scale influx of newly diagnosed patients, tests of serum biomarkers will likely be a more practical approach to liver disease staging than one restricted to liver biopsy-based staging. In the United States, the FibroSure test costs approximately $250, which is a fraction of the cost of biopsy. The biomarker assay AST-to-Platelet Ratio Index (APRI) is not proprietary and costs no more than a routine blood draw and routine liver function tests. APRI is calculated as (AST/upper limit of normal range)/platelet count (109/L) × 100. However, a recent large meta-analysis suggested that APRI can identify hepatitis C-related fibrosis with only a moderate degree of accuracy (AUROC of 0.77 for significant fibrosis and 0.80 for severe fibrosis).[39] Alternate in vitro diagnostic testing for liver fibrosis was subsequently developed, including FibroIndex and Forns index.[38] For identifying cirrhosis, the age-platelet index, APRI and Hepascore have median AUROCs of 0.80 or greater (range 0.80–0.91).[38]
                       
Transient elastography, using the FibroScan device (Echosens, Paris, France), is widely used in several European countries and has more recently been adopted in Asia and Canada. In April of 2013, FibroScan was approved by the FDA for use in the United States. The main limitation of FibroScan use in practice is its limited applicability (80%), mostly due to patient obesity or limited operator experience.[40] Results of a meta-analysis suggest FibroScan is a reliable method for diagnosing significant fibrosis (AUROC = 0.84), severe fibrosis (0.89) and particularly cirrhosis (0.94).[41]

However, for diagnosing significant fibrosis, a high variation of the AUROC was found depending on the type of underlying liver disease.[41] When compared and validated externally in a multicenter prospective study, FibroScan outperformed serum biomarkers of fibrosis for the prediction of cirrhosis (AUROCS 0.89–90 vs 0.77–0.86) but had similar performance for the diagnosis of significant fibrosis.[42] Both FibroScan and FibroTest have a prognostic value similar to liver biopsy for predicting complications and outcome of liver disease.[43,44] Combining FibroScan with Fibrotest may increase diagnostic performance for significant fibrosis,[45,46] and this approach has been recommended in the 2012 EASL Guidelines as first line evaluation of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C.[37]
                       
The Think Tank recognized that the goals of liver staging are changing and that there is an urgency to revise guidelines accordingly. The accurate exclusion of cirrhosis has been recommended as the most important role for HCV staging in clinical practice, and an algorithm has been proposed on how to best utilize noninvasive tests to achieve this goal.[47]

Barriers to Care and Strategies to Address Them

Among persons infected with HCV, a substantial portion fails to progress towards a cure at every step of treatment, from recognition of disease to viral clearance (Fig. 1).[48] In the United States, at least half of those infected with HCV do not know their status.[22–25] Among patients who are recognized as being positive for HCV antibody, it is estimated that fewer than half are linked to care.[49] Failure to link to care represents both a lack of referral to a specialist for treatment and failure to attend the appointment. Even after being linked to proper caregivers, patients can fail to receive pretreatment work-up, meet eligibility criteria for treatment or agree to initiate treatment.

 
 Figure 1.

The hepatitis C care cascade. Among patients infected with hepatitis C virus, fewer than 10% are treated and cured. Barriers exist in screening methods, patient referral to appropriate providers, attending necessary appointments and initiating treatment.49, 53, 54, 61, 74, 75, 105–113
 
 Reasons for these failures can be attributed to barriers at the level of patients, providers and the healthcare system itself. Patients can have limited access to health care, because of lack of or limited insurance,[50] low health literacy or not having a usual source of medical care. They can also have competing health priorities, such as mental health issues[51] or comorbidities.[52] Issues related to patient behaviours or environment, such as substance abuse,[53,54] lack of drug treatment, lack of social support[55] or unstable employment or housing,[56] may also limit uptake of treatment. Patients may also have limited knowledge of HCV and its treatment and may not perceive it as being something they need to worry about because the disease is largely asymptomatic.[57] Finally, many patients fear the side effects of IFN-based regimens.[57]
                       
Primary care providers can have misconceptions about whom to screen, risk of progression of liver disease or ztherapy itself.[58,59] Even specialists in liver disease may have limited experience treating HCV.[60] Providers also can be selective about which patients they consider as good candidates for therapy and fail to recommend treatment because of concerns about nonadherence, drug use[61] or risk of re-infection.

Governments and payers play key roles in delivering HCV services; surveying infection, testing and treatment rates; and educating the public and as well as healthcare providers. Unfortunately, the United States has poorly developed surveillance systems, inadequate educational initiatives and fragmented viral hepatitis services.[62] Also at issue are insufficient numbers of providers who can and are willing to treat HCV[63] and insufficient resources for case managers, navigators and social workers.

Training community-based healthcare providers to treat HCV may become a key method for broadening access to cure. Community-based health centres often have advantages of being culturally appropriate and accessible to patients in both urban and rural areas. In these settings, ongoing relationships with providers may establish trust and an avenue for communication. The Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes model was developed as a means of using video-conferencing to train primary care providers through interactions with specialists to treat complex diseases, such as HCV. In New Mexico, the programme was successful in generating rates of SVR at 21 sites in rural areas and prisons that were similar to rates of SVR at the University of New Mexico's HCV clinic.[64] Other strategies to improve rates of initiation and completion of therapy include having peer navigators and integrated care programmes.

The Think Tank believed that screening in conjunction with an all-oral treatment paradigm would reduce the barriers to care and allow treatment within primary care and community sites for many HCV-infected patients.

Pharmacoeconomics of Hepatitis C

The sequelae of hepatitis C impose a high economic burden. It has been estimated that in 2012, the healthcare cost of HCV was $6.5 billion, and it has been predicted the cost will peak at $9.1 billion in 2024.[65] A retrospective analysis of data from a large, managed care organization claims database suggested that the annual all-cause medical costs of patients diagnosed with HCV were almost twice as high as enrollees without diagnosed HCV.[66] The health burden of HCV largely relates to the development of advanced liver disease, which can lead to liver transplant. In the United States, HCV is the leading cause of hepatocellular carcinoma,[67] and it is likely that more cases of hepatocellular carcinoma, decompensated cirrhosis and liver transplants due to HCV will be observed in the coming years.[68] The medical cost of hepatocellular carcinoma has been estimated as $23 755–44 200 per year per person, and the cost of liver transplant has been estimated as $201 110 per year per person.[69] Additional disease burden and costs are generated by extrahepatic manifestations of HCV infection including cryoglobulinemic vasculitis, lymphoproliferative disorders, renal disease and rheumatoid-like polyarthritis.[70]

The addition of telaprevir or boceprevir to PEG-IFN plus RBV has changed the pharmacoeconomics of treating HCV. Adding the directly acting antivirals to PEG-IFN and RBV can increase the cost of treatment up to $50 000, depending upon individual regimens needed,[71] yet the antivirals also increase the success rates of therapy. At present, economic evaluations of telaprevir or boceprevir with PEG-IFN and RBV are limited. A decision analysis of telaprevir and boceprevir indicated that triple therapy including telaprevir or boceprevir was cost-effective when compared with dual PEG-IFN and RBV therapy in patients with genotype 1 infection,[72] although the results were dependent on the cost of protease inhibitors, treatment adherence rates and extent of fibrosis. More recently, a study from Mount Sinai in New York has estimated that the real cost of reaching end of therapy with triple therapy may be as high as $147 000 when the cost of side effect management is included.[73]

As new all-oral regimens enter the market, several factors will affect their cost-effectiveness: success rates in patients with advanced liver disease or difficult-to-treat HCV genotypes, costs related to monitoring and managing treatment-related toxicities, extent of clinically relevant viral resistance and duration of therapy. The costs of new agents will also be considered against the costs of current IFN-based therapy, which is challenging to administer and has side effects requiring ongoing management. The dominant factor in cost assessments of treatment should be the efficacy of the treatment because all those who fail experience most or all of the cost and none of the benefit. But high projected costs of new directly acting antiviral treatments may result in lack of access for some patients. Industry-created assistance and co-pay programmes can be instrumental in making treatment more affordable and accessible. Public health programmes to support engaging HCV-infected persons in care should also be explored to provide infrastructure for wrap-around services that may not be reimbursable (e.g. coordination of care or peer support). Given the projected high costs of treatment, relatively minor investments in patient support mechanisms are easily justified but not often implemented because of the nature of the fee-for-service healthcare delivery system in the United States. Enhanced communication between physicians and third-party payers may increase the availability of new therapies to patients.

Special Populations
Patients With Drug Addiction

The majority of prevalent and incident infections of HCV occur among injection drug users. Surveillance data have provided evidence that among persons aged 15–24 years, injection drug use is causing a rapid increase in HCV infections.[9] The increase appears to be occurring predominantly in non-Hispanic white males and females. More effort is needed to better understand this trend and to ensure that young injection drug users are tested and engaged in care.

Fewer than 20% of drug users with HCV initiate antiviral therapy,[49,54,74,75] principally because of lack of knowledge about HCV, an exaggerated concern about treatment-related side effects and a low perceived need for treatment. There has been reluctance among many healthcare providers to treat drug users because of concerns about adherence, potential reinfection even if SVR is attained, and overall lack of experience and consequent discomfort with the care of patients with addiction problems. Despite concerns regarding adherence to HCV treatment, results of a recent meta-analysis suggest that treatment completion rates among drug users who initiate therapy are over 80%.[76] Addiction treatment and support services (including peer support) increase HCV treatment completion rates.[77–80] Multidisciplinary models for the management of HCV among people who inject drugs have been described in community-based clinics, substance abuse treatment clinics and hospital-based clinics.[79,81–83] For example, integrating internist-addiction medicine specialists from a methadone maintenance treatment programme into a hepatitis clinic improved adherence with HCV evaluation and treatment relative to standard referral practices in patients with prior or ongoing drug use.[78] Education of both patients and providers about the disease and close collaboration between HCV treaters and those who treat addiction are important elements to promote successful treatment of this patient population. Evidence-based international recommendations for treating hepatitis C in people who inject drugs were recently released.[84]

As HCV treatment shifts to all-oral regimens, wider uptake among drug users is likely to occur because of decreased side effects, elimination of mental illness as an exclusion for therapy and elimination of needle exposure during therapy. As suggested by modelling data, even modest increases in the numbers of active injection drug users who receive treatment may interrupt HCV transmission enough to result in substantial declines in HCV prevalence.[85,86] If the modelling data are verified by field studies, timely HCV detection and treatment and their integration with other services for drug addiction will take on new urgency. The Think Tank emphasized the need for interventions that facilitate access to HCV therapy for drug users, such as promoting HCV treatment among addiction medicine specialists. In clinical studies of novel therapies, exclusion criteria often limit participation of patients with a history of injection drug use, even if patients have not been using for a long time. Broadening criteria to include such patients would better inform efficacy of treatment in this population.
Patients With Cirrhosis

Diagnosis of cirrhosis in patients with HCV is important in part because these patients have a higher incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma and a potential for bleeding from oesophageal varices. Screening for each of these may result in reductions in morbidity and mortality. Although the presence of cirrhosis decreases the likelihood of response to current triple therapy regimens and increases the risk of side effects,[87] its presence does not rule out the possibility of initiating therapy. Patients with compensated cirrhosis (Childs-Pugh A) may be candidates for triple therapy if they have well-maintained hepatic synthetic function and no complications of portal hypertenstion (as assessed by serum albumin and platelets). Indeed, treatment has traditionally been considered strongly indicated in well-compensated cirrhosis to prevent further disease progression or decompensation. In contrast, patients with decompensated cirrhosis (Childs-Pugh B or C) are no longer considered candidates for receiving current triple therapy regimens. Some of the newer regimens have demonstrated promising rates of efficacy for patients with cirrhosis.[88,89] The most extensively studied oral regimen, with data from a phase 3 programme, is sofosbuvir and ribavirin in patients with genotypes 2 and 3, in which cirrhosis had an impact in patients with genotype 3 that may be ameliorated with longer duration of therapy.[8] With the proliferation of novel drugs and regimens under investigation, studies are needed to address issues such as the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in the setting of cirrhosis; tolerability and efficacy across Childs-Pugh A, B and C patients; and impact of SVR on clinical outcomes. Drug–drug interactions, especially in post-transplant patients, must also be evaluated. There is an urgent need for these issues to be addressed as early in drug development programmes as possible.
Patients With HCV–HIV Coinfection

Persons with HIV infection have a high prevalence of chronic HCV infection with a tendency towards more rapid progression to cirrhosis and potentially less access to liver transplantation. Some reports suggest that relative to HCV mono-infected patients, HIV-HCV coinfected patients also have higher rates of comorbid conditions such as drug use, major depression and anaemia.[90] With HIV therapies, drug interactions may occur and may be difficult to predict; therefore, novel direct antiviral therapies for HCV will need to be evaluated for their potential for interaction with at least some HIV antiretrovirals. Coinfected patients have reduced rates of response to therapy with PEG-IFN and RBV,[91] but adding telaprevir or boceprevir increases efficacy of therapy.[92,93] Some of the newer regimens may have even greater efficacy.[94,95] Curing HCV in coinfected patients is linked to improved clinical outcomes and longer survival.[93,96] Conducting studies of the newer regimens in coinfected patients will be important for generating data needed to develop practice guidelines and justify third-party payment.

Priorities for Education and Research

Although all-oral therapies are likely to be simpler to administer than IFN-based therapies, educating patients and providers will remain a challenge. Both patients and providers need to receive clear messages on the natural history of HCV, with warning signs and an explanation of why diagnosis and treatment is important. Providers will need to be educated regarding best practices for screening, diagnosis and treatment. Partnerships between members of academia, community health centres, the HCV-affected community, the pharmaceutical industry, healthcare payers and federal, state, and local government entities are very useful for performing postmarketing studies and education (Table 3). One example is the CDC Foundation's Viral Hepatitis Action Coalition (http://www.viralhepatitisaction.org/).

Updated treatment guidelines serve as a valuable resource for providers and also influence payer policies. The most recent guidelines for diagnosing, managing and treating hepatitis C in the United States were published by the AASLD in 2009,[20] before FDA approval of telaprevir and boceprevir. A 2011 update revised treatment recommendations for patients with HCV genotype 1,[97] yet the approach to testing and staging was not reassessed. Expert opinion pieces can be helpful when guidelines are outdated and should be considered as a means to provide guidance in a rapidly changing field. In July 2013, the AASLD and Infectious Diseases Society of America announced a collaboration to develop clinical recommendations for managing hepatitis C. To serve the medical community in the next few years, one can anticipate a need for much more frequent revisions by the professional societies to keep pace with the evolution of a diverse group of therapies. The more nimble and rapid methods for updating guidelines in HIV could inform processes for updating guidelines in HCV.

Research in HCV should include evaluations of screening, care and therapy in community healthcare clinics, drug treatment programmes and other settings providing care to persons at risk for HCV infection. Improved and expanded disease surveillance throughout the country is indicated to better understand trends in transmission and diagnosis. Serum biomarker assays to identify patients likely to achieve a successful treatment outcome early on should be incorporated into ongoing clinical trials of novel therapies. As novel approaches towards screening and treatment are developed, especially in rural or underserved settings, it will be important that outcomes be reported so that successful strategies can be imparted to others.

To understand the effects of cure on long-term health outcomes, endpoints other than SVR should be evaluated in clinical studies, and this is particularly true for confirmation of a reduction in the risk of development of hepatocellular carcinoma, liver failure and liver-related and overall mortality in patients with cirrhosis. Registries carefully noting those who achieved viral eradication would be useful for charting areas of success as well as ongoing need. Such registries may also be helpful in identifying less frequent side effects not noted in the registration trials as well as outcomes in specific patient subgroups.

Conclusions

We have outlined the many challenges that lie ahead for healthcare providers as we attempt to reverse the rising morbidity and mortality associated with HCV. The new opportunities afforded by screening and improved diagnostics, education and treatment have created great excitement both in the medical community and in our patients, and the opportunities raise the prospect of eradicating HCV-related liver disease and eventually transmission. In the United States, HCV has all the attributes of an eradicable disease except sufficient public investment. Delivering care effectively, safely and broadly to all patient populations in an economically acceptable fashion must be our goal now and over the next 5–10 years.


  • Abstract and Introduction
  • Current Evolution of All-Oral Therapies for HCV
  • Screening Strategies for HCV
  • HCV Diagnostic Testing and Disease Staging
  • Barriers to Care and Strategies to Address Them
  • Pharmacoeconomics of Hepatitis C
  • Special Populations
  • Priorities for Education and Research
  • Conclusions 

  • References
    Appendix 1
    

    Experimental Hepatitis C Drug Shows Promise in Liver Transplant Patients

    Experimental Hepatitis C Drug Shows Promise in Liver Transplant Patients              

    DETROIT – New drug therapies offer promise to some hepatitis C sufferers whose transplanted livers are threated by a recurrence of the disease, including some patients who have had no treatment options.

    The encouraging findings are contained in two new studies by a collaboration of researchers across the U.S. – as well as in Spain and New Zealand – including Dilip Moonka, M.D., medical director of Liver Transplant at Henry Ford Hospital.

    Both studies are being presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases being held in Washington, DC, Nov. 1-5.

    Both studies focused on the experimental anti-viral drug sofosbuvir, a direct-acting oral medication that may take the place of injectable interferon, which causes severe side effects in some patients.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is expected to decide in early December whether to approve its use for treating hepatitis C. Last week, the Antiviral Drugs Advisory Committee of the FDA voted unanimously in support of approval for sofosbuvir-based therapies for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C.

    Chronic hepatitis C, which afflicts an estimated 3 million people in the U.S. alone, is a blood-borne viral disease that leads to scarring and deterioration of the liver. It is particularly insidious because patients usually don’t develop symptoms until the scarring – or cirrhosis – is well underway.

    Sofosbuvir, which belongs to a class of drugs known as nucleotide analogue polymerase inhibitors, acts at the molecular level by interfering with the RNA of the hepatitis C virus.

    In the first newly released study, researchers tested it as an alternative to interferon, a naturally occurring protein that plays a role in fighting viral infections, but commonly produces a range of serious side effects.

    The researchers used it in combination with ribavirin, which also inhibits the hepatitis C virus by interfering with its RNA to stem the replication of the virus and slow the progression of the disease. They sought to test the drug combination’s effectiveness in preventing recurrence of hepatitis C in liver transplant recipients.

    A total of 61 chronic hepatitis C patients with liver cancer were enrolled in the study and given both sofosbuvir and ribavirin daily for up to 48 weeks before liver transplant. All of the patients had well-compensated cirrhosis, meaning their bodies were still functioning without too much trouble despite liver scarring.

    The researchers found that the new drug combination was both safe and effective in such patients and prevented post-transplant recurrence of the hepatitis C virus in more than 60 percent of them.

    In the second newly released study, researchers focused on liver transplant recipients whose severe hepatitis C recurred after surgery and who either couldn’t tolerate or didn’t respond to approved antiviral therapies – leaving them with no other effective treatment options.

    In such cases, experimental drugs can sometimes be tested under “compassionate use” protocols.

    The researchers reported that as of April, 115 patients were approved for compassionate use of sofosbuvir combined with ribavirin and/or the anti-viral drug peginterferon. At the time of their report, 63 had started treatment.

    After several weeks of treatment and study, the researchers concluded that patients with severe recurrence of hepatitis C after receiving transplanted livers were able to tolerate the drug regimen, which produced strong anti-viral effects.

    They reported “notable clinical improvements and/or disease stabilization in a majority of the patients.”

    Funding Source: Gilead Pharmaceuticals

    More Than Half of Hepatitis C Patients can't withstand current therapies or waiting for new treatments

    Current Hepatitis C Treatments Can’t be Used by More Than Half of Patients

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Oct. 31, 2013

    DETROIT – More than half of chronic hepatitis C patients studied in a new research project led by Henry Ford Hospital were not treated for the potentially fatal disease, either because they couldn’t withstand current therapies or because they, or their doctors, were waiting for new treatments.

    In a second, related study, Henry Ford researchers found that while the disease is not yet curable, there is a significant “lost opportunity” for hepatitis C patients to achieve the current best result of treatment.

    Both studies are being presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases being held in Washington, DC, Nov. 1-5.

    Stuart C. Gordon, M.D., director of the Hepatology section at Henry Ford, and lead author of the first study, said it was launched because of a lack of information about the subject.

    “Limited data exist concerning the clinical disposition of U.S. patients with chronic hepatitis C infection, including the reasons for lack of antiviral treatment,” Dr. Gordon says. “Our goal was to add to that data.”

    The team collected electronic health records from four large American health systems of patients with confirmed chronic hepatitis C, a viral infection that progressively scars the liver and eventually destroys the organ and its vital functions.

    Of these 4,271 patients diagnosed with the infection and still alive through the end of 2011, the median age was 57; 57 percent were male; 29 percent were black and 97 percent were insured.

    Included in the study data were the patients’ histories of antiviral treatments. The researchers found:

    • 543, or 12.7 percent, had previously achieved a sustained virologic response (SVR), meaning the hepatitis C virus was suppressed to the point that it could no longer be detected in their blood for six months after anti-viral treatment.
    • 110, or 2.6 percent, were currently on anti-viral therapy.
    • Of the remaining 3,618 patients, 12 percent had never been followed up within the health care system, despite clinical confirmation that they had chronic hepatitis C.
    • The majority, 55 percent, were not being treated, either because of “absolute contraindications” to current therapy – meaning the risk of available treatment is too high – or because either the patient or physician were waiting for newer therapies.
    • Another 12 percent of patients had chosen not to start treatment, despite a doctor’s recommendation to do so.

    “These results confirm that only a small proportion of chronic hepatitis C patients in American health care systems who were still being followed at the end of 2011 had achieved an SVR with available antiviral regimens,” Dr. Gordon said.

    The second study sought to identify “lost opportunities” to treat hepatitis C patients and achieve SVR, now the closest thing to a “cure” for the disease.

    “We looked at data regarding testing for chronic Hep C, patient referral, patient visits and the start of treatment,” explains Kimberly Ann Brown, M.D., division head of Gastroenterology at Henry Ford Hospital and lead author of the study’s findings.

    “In addition,” Dr. Brown says, “we considered patient age, race, gender, income, marital status, psychiatric diagnoses and the number of comorbidities, or co-existing diseases.”

    The findings showed that of the 458 patients identified with a positive hepatitis C antibody, only 117 received confirmatory testing, were referred to a specialist and presented to the office for a visit. Of the 117 patients who came for the specialty visit, only 21, or 17.9 percent, were felt to be appropriate treatment candidates.

    “This data speaks to the significant "lost opportunity" we have, not only in identifying patients with hepatitis C in our community, but also in providing them with appropriate treatment options,” says Dr. Brown.