Sunday, January 26, 2014

Watch - Dr. Gregory T. Everson discuss Interferon-and Ribavirin-Free HCV Regimen of Daclatasvir, Asunaprevir, and BMS-791325

Weekend Reading

Hello everyone, welcome to Weekend Reading, a chance for you to catch up, or review those HCV research articles, videos, or learning activities you might have missed over the last few weeks.

Today you're in for treat, sit back and listen to Dr. Gregory T. Everson, one of the country's leading hepatologist discuss his manuscript; "Efficacy of an Interferon- and Ribavirin-Free Regimen of Daclatasvir, Asunaprevir, and BMS-791325 in Treatment-Naive Patients With HCV Genotype 1 Infection."

The Phase II study is exciting folks, up to 94% treatment-naive genotype 1 participants achieved SVR12 using the triple-antiviral combination without interferon or ribavirin, currently Phase III clinical trials are underway which included treatment-experienced, naive and patients with cirrhosis.

In Case You Missed It - Published on Jan 15, 2014
 
Dr. Gregory T. Everson discusses his manuscript "Efficacy of an Interferon- and Ribavirin-Free Regimen of Daclatasvir, Asunaprevir, and BMS-791325 in Treatment-Naive Patients With HCV Genotype 1 Infection." 

To view abstract http://bit.ly/1astcIL.

 


Related: January 9 2014

Triple-antiviral therapy achieves 94% response without interferon, ribavirin

By: MICHELE G. SULLIVAN

Both a 12-week and a 24-week regimen of three oral antiviral drugs achieved sustained viral remissions at 12 weeks in up to 94% of treatment-naive patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus infections.

The three oral antivirals included daclatasvir, an NS5A replication complex inhibitor; asunaprevir, an NS3 protease inhibitor; and BMS-791325, an investigational selective non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor. A key point of the study is its proof that short-duration treatment – even without interferon or ribavirin – can result in sustained remission, Dr. Gregory T. Everson and his colleagues wrote in the February issue of Gastroenterology (doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2013.10.057).

"Shorter treatment durations are preferable because they may improve patient compliance. In this study, treatment periods of both 12 and 24 weeks yielded high SVR (sustained viral remission) rates, suggesting no advantage for extending treatment duration to 24 weeks."

Further, the triple-antiviral combination apparently controlled viral replication without using interferon or ribavirin, thus avoiding their side effects. The current regimen for treatment-naive patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus infections calls for a 48-week treatment with peginterferon and ribavirin with telaprevir or boceprevir.

"Ribavirin contributes to anemia and it is teratogenic; thus, effective treatments without ribavirin are desirable," wrote Dr. Everson of the University of Colorado, Denver, and his coauthors. "This interferon- and ribavirin-free regimen did not alter hemoglobin levels in a clinically meaningfully manner, as evidenced by no grade 1 or higher hemoglobin reductions and no adverse events of anemia."

Dr. Everson and his colleagues gave the regimen for periods of 12 and 24 weeks and with two different doses of BMS-791325, resulting in a four-way randomized study. Groups 1 and 2 were treated for 12 weeks with the combination of daclatasvir 60 mg once daily, asunaprevir 200 mg twice daily, and BMS-791325 (twice daily 75 mg or 150 mg). Groups 3 and 4 had exactly the same two-treatment regimen, but took the drugs for 24 weeks. After treatment, there was a 48-week follow-up period.

Among the 66 patients in the study, the average age was about 50 years old, and the mean HCV-RNA level was 6 log10 IU/mL. Most (75%) had HCV genotype 1a; the rest had 1b. All were treatment naive. Four patients withdrew before the study’s end; none of the withdrawals were for adverse events.

In groups 1 and 2 (75 mg BMS-791325, twice daily for 12 and 24 weeks), the viral load decreased rapidly. By week 4, all of these patients achieved a HCV-RNA level of less than 25 IU/mL; 97% maintained that level through the end of treatment. In a modified intent-to-treat analysis, 94% achieved a sustained viral response by week 12.

In groups 3 and 4 (150 mg BMS-791325, twice daily for 12 or 24 weeks), HCV-RNA levels also fell rapidly in the first month, By week 4, all of those in the 12-week group and all but one in the 24-week group had levels of less than 25 IU/mL, which were sustained through the end of treatment. In the intent-to-treat analysis, 91% overall had an HCV-RNA load of less than 25 IU/mL by the end of treatment.

Overall, there were three treatment failures: one each in groups 3 and 4 had viral breakthrough, and one in group 4 experienced a relapse at week 4.

Both breakthrough patients were given peginterferon-alfa/ribavirin in addition to the direct-acting antivirals. After 16 weeks, one discontinued treatment because of interferon-related cerebral vasoconstriction. That patient had an undetectable HCV-RNA level at the end of treatment, but relapsed by post treatment week 4. The other patient had a sustained viral response.

The study was sponsored by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Everson listed financial and research relationships with numerous pharmaceutical companies, including Bristol-Myers. His coauthors also declared relationships with numerous drug manufacturers, including Bristol-Myers.

Related:
HCV Genotypes and Treatment
News and research is offered on this page with a focus on treatment options for HCV genotypes 1-6, including FDA approved drugs, and investigational agents currently in clinical trials. Information is extracted from news articles, peer-reviewed journals, as well as liver meetings/conferences, research manuscripts and interactive learning activities.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Emricasan Development - A potential treatment for fibrotic liver disease



Why Conatus Pharmaceuticals May Have the Answer to Liver Disease

Steven Mento, PhD on Advanced Therapy for Liver Disease

Video Source - The Doctor's Channel 

Emricasan Development
  • We have designed a comprehensive clinical program to demonstrate the therapeutic benefit of emricasan across the spectrum of fibrotic liver disease. We plan to study emricasan in patients with rapidly progressing fibrosis (HCV-POLT) as well as in patients with established liver cirrhosis and decompensated disease (ACLF and CLF). 
  • Current clinical focus is on patients with chronic liver disease to:
    • Improve and/or stabilize liver function during acute and chronic liver failure
    • Delay progression of fibrosis to cirrhosis due to Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) recurrence
HCV-POLT - post-orthotopic liver transplant due to Hepatitis C virus infection
ACLF- acute-on-chronic liver failure
CLF - chronic liver failure
Emricasan, also known as IDN 6556 and  PF 03491390

Overview
Conatus Pharmaceuticals is a biotechnology company focused on the development and commercialization of novel medicines to treat liver disease. We are developing our lead compound, emricasan, for the treatment of patients in orphan populations with chronic liver disease and acute exacerbations of chronic liver disease. Emricasan is a first-in-class, orally active caspase protease inhibitor designed to reduce the activity of enzymes that mediate inflammation and cell death, or apoptosis. We believe that by reducing the activity of these enzymes, emricasan has the potential to interrupt the progression of liver disease. We have observed compelling preclinical and clinical trial results that suggest emricasan may have clinical utility in slowing progression of liver diseases regardless of the original cause of the disease

To date, emricasan has been studied in over 500 subjects in ten clinical trials. In a randomized Phase 2b clinical trial in patients with liver disease, emricasan demonstrated a statistically significant, consistent, rapid and sustained reduction in elevated levels of two key biomarkers of inflammation and cell death, alanine aminotransferase, or ALT, and cleaved Cytokeratin 18, or cCK18, respectively, both of which are implicated in the severity and progression of liver disease. Emricasan has been generally well-tolerated in all of the clinical studies. Our initial development strategy targets indications for emricasan with high unmet clinical need in orphan patient populations, such as patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure, or ACLF, chronic liver failure, or CLF, and patients who have developed liver fibrosis post-orthotopic liver transplant due to Hepatitis C virus infection, or HCV-POLT.

We expect to initiate a Phase 2b ACLF trial and a Phase 3 HCV-POLT trial (currently designated a Phase 3 registration study in the European Union and a Phase 2b study in the United States) in the second half of 2013 and a Phase 2b CLF trial in the second half of 2014.

Overview of Liver Disease
Liver disease can result from injury to the liver caused by a variety of insults, including Hepatitis C virus, or HCV, Hepatitis B virus, obesity, chronic excessive alcohol use or autoimmune diseases.

Regardless of the underlying cause of the disease, there are important similarities in the disease progression including increased inflammatory activity and excessive liver cell apoptosis, which if unresolved leads to fibrosis. Fibrosis, if allowed to progress, will lead to cirrhosis, or excessive scarring of the liver, which may result in reduced liver function. Some patients with liver cirrhosis have a partially functioning liver and may appear asymptomatic for long periods of time, which is referred to as compensated liver disease. When the liver is unable to perform its normal functions this is referred to as decompensated liver disease. ACLF occurs in patients who have compensated or decompensated cirrhosis but are in relatively stable condition until an acute event sets off a rapid worsening of liver function. Patients with CLF suffer from continual disease progression which may eventually lead them to require orthotopic liver transplantation. Patients with HCV who receive orthotopic liver transplants, in which the diseased liver is replaced by a donor liver, will have their HCV infections recur. Many of these HCV-POLT patients will experience accelerated development of fibrosis and progression to cirrhosis of the transplanted liver due to the recurrence of HCV.

The National Institutes of Health estimates that 5.5 million Americans have chronic liver disease or cirrhosis, and liver disease is the twelfth leading cause of death in the United States. According to the European Association for the Study of the Liver, 29 million Europeans have chronic liver disease and liver disease represents approximately two percent of deaths annually. In the United States, more than 5,000 liver transplants are performed in adults and more than 500 in children annually, with approximately 17,000 subjects still awaiting transplant. We are planning to study the effectiveness of emricasan in defined subsets of patients with liver disease. ACLF, CLF and HCV-POLT are potential orphan indications in both the United States and European Union, or EU. We estimate that the target populations for emricasan in these indications in the United States and the EU are approximately 150,000 ACLF patients, 10,000 CLF patients and 50,000 HCV-POLT patients.

Conatus Pharmaceuticals 

Related - Jan 13 2104
Fatty Liver Disease W-Advanced Fibrosis: Galectins Completes Enrollment For First Cohort Phase 1 Trial of GR-MD-02 

December 2013
Liver transplant therapy given orphan drug status
The FDA has granted orphan drug status to Conatus Pharmaceuticals for emricasan, a potential treatment for patients with chronic liver disease and acute exacerbations of chronic liver disease, according to a company news release.

The orally active caspase protease inhibitor is intended for liver transplant recipients with re-established fibrosis to delay the progression to cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease, the release said. It is designed to reduce activity of enzymes that mediate inflammation and apoptosis.
“The FDA’s orphan drug designation of emricasan … reinforces the critical need for alternatives to the only currently available treatment, which is a second transplant,” Conatus Co-Founder, President and CEO Stephen J. Mento, PhD, said in the release. “This designation is a significant step forward for Conatus' clinical development program for emricasan.”

The treatment has been studied in 10 clinical trials involving more than 500 patients, the release said, including a randomized phase 2b clinical trial in which it resulted in statistically significant, consistent, rapid and sustained reductions in key biomarkers related to the progression and severity of liver disease.

Another phase 2b trial involving emricasan and patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure is under way, as is a phase 2 trial involving patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis, the release said.
The FDA’s orphan drug program offers incentives to drug makers working on therapies for conditions affecting fewer than 200,000 people in the United States and for those affecting more than 200,000 people but not expected to allow for recovery of the costs of developing and marketing the treatment.

Source Healio



Friday, January 24, 2014

Hepatitis C-New Concepts of Sofosbuvir-Based Treatment Regimens

Gut. 2014;63(2):207-215. 

Introduction
Since the discovery of HCV in 1989, interferon α (IFNα)-based therapy has been the only treatment approach leading to HCV genotype-dependent sustained virological response (SVR) rates in a significant number of patients. However, the treatment uptake has been generally low due to numerous side effects and contraindications to IFNα-based regimens. Because of these limitations, the overall HCV-related health burden could only gradually be decreased, even though treatment efficacy was increased over recent years.[1,2]

The lack of cell culture systems to grow HCV had been a key limitation for the development of direct acting antivirals (DAAs). Nevertheless, in 1997, only a few years after the discovery of HCV, the first subgenomic HCV replicons were obtained allowing researchers to develop and assay DAAs with a robust methodology.[3–5] In 2004, the safety and efficacy of the first DAA, the protease inhibitor BILN2061, were assessed in a proof-of-concept clinical trial.[6] Now, a few years later, IFNα-containing or IFNα-free regimens based on DAAs showed the potential to cure HCV infection in very high percentages with overall good tolerability.[7]

DAAs targeting two major steps of the HCV life cycle have reached clinical development: (1) inhibitors of the NS3-4A protease, which block HCV polyprotein processing and (2) inhibitors of viral replication, including several drug families, such as nucleoside/nucleotide and non-nucleoside inhibitors of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), and inhibitors of the NS5A viral protein which have a regulatory role in HCV replication.[8–12]

A perspective of the future treatment landscape for chronic HCV infection is depicted in figure 1. Peg-IFNα-containing regimens with second generation protease inhibitors like simeprevir and faldaprvir or the polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir will become the first to be licensed for HCV type 1 infection. A significant number of different all oral IFNα-free regimens with pan-genotypic activity by combining different classes of DAAs have entered phase II and III and may become available in the near future (see figure 1).


Figure 1.
Selected treatment regimens for chronic hepatitis C infections which are expected to become available in the near future. Future treatments focus on interferon (IFN)α-free, direct acting antiviral-based combination regimens which have shown sustained virological response rates of around 90%. The displayed studies include predominantly patients without liver cirrhosis. (1) Submitted for approval in Japan in 2013; (2) approval expected in Japan and in the USA at the end of 2013; and (3) submission for approval expected in November 2013. NS3/4A PI=second generation protease inhibitor; NUC=nucleosidic polymerase (NS5B) inhibitor; NS5A=NS5A inhibitor; PI/r=ritonavir boosted PI; PR=pegylated-IFNα plus RBV; RBV=ribavirin.

Sofosbuvir is the first nucleotide polymerase inhibitor that will become licensed for the treatment of HCV infection as part of IFNα-containing and IFNα-free regimens. As other nucleoside/nucleotide inhibitors of the RdRp, it shows high antiviral activity against all HCV genotypes and a high barrier to resistance.[12] Sofosbuvir was shown to be safe and overall well tolerated, and no relevant drug–drug interactions (DDI) have to be expected. Due to this favourable pharmacological profile, sofosbuvir has a great potential to become a cornerstone in the management of HCV infection. Especially, the performance of sofosbuvir in IFNα-free treatment approaches may open a new and promising area in the treatment of hepatitis C.

The present article reviews the clinical current knowledge of sofosbuvir as part of IFNα-containing as well as IFNα-free treatment regimes, which have been published in phase II and III studies. We have further tried to estimate its possible use in patients who show difficult-to-treat characteristics. Finally, we were trying to give an outlook on the future role of sofosbuvir in the treatment of chronic HCV infection

Current Standard of Care
The current standard of care for the treatment of chronic HCV infection is still based on a combination of pegylated (Peg)-IFNα and ribavirin (RBV) but includes a protease inhibitor (either telaprevir or boceprevir) for HCV type 1-infected patients. This triple regimen has increased SVR rates up to approximately 70% and also allows reducing treatment duration in approximately 50% of patients to 24 weeks.[12] However, the antiviral efficiency of triple regimens is low in previous null responders, especially in those with advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis and the addition of a protease inhibitor to the regimen led to a significant increase in the number of side effects.[8–11]

Contraindications or status intolerance to IFNα or RBV further limits the number of patients who may benefit from this first generation protease inhibitor-based triple therapy.

Protease inhibitors are not licensed for the use in non-type-1-infected patients for whom the combination of Peg-IFNα and RBV remains the standard of care. After 48 weeks of treatment duration, SVR rates of around 60% can be achieved in HCV genotypes 4, 5 and 6 infection whereas up to 60%–80% of type 2 and 3-infected patients may be cured by a 24-week dual regimen.[13,14] 

Pharmacology of Sofosbuvir
Sofosbuvir, a prodrug of 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-2'-C-methyluridine monophosphate, is a specific nucleotide analogue inhibitor of the HCV NS5B polymerase that acts as a false substrate for the RdRp, leading to chain termination after incorporation into the newly synthesised RNA chain.[15] The drug needs two additional phosphorylations to be activated. Sofosbuvir has a potent antiviral activity covering all HCV genotypes.[16] Dose findings studies showed optimal inhibition of HCV replication by a once daily dose of 400 mg.[17]
 
Sofosbuvir is a once-daily drug which can be taken with or without food. The drug traverses the GI tract and remains intact during absorption, resulting in high exposure in the liver.[15] It is absorbed rapidly with a median tmax of 1 h (range 0.5–3.0 h). The elimination is rapid with median t½ in the range of 0.48–0.75 h. The active metabolite of sofosbuvir, GS-331007, exhibits a longer median tmax of 4 h (range 1.5–8) and a half life ranging from 7.27 to 11.80 h.[17]
 
Sofosbuvir is mainly eliminated by the kidneys at a rate of 76%. Clearance of the drug is rapid, with median half life in the range of 0.48–0.75 h.[17] No dose adjustment seems necessary in patients with renal clearance >30 mL/min, whereas modification of doses or dosing intervals may be required in patients with moderate to severe renal impairment or haemodialysis.[18]
 
One of the additional advantages of sofosbuvir and other drugs of the same family is their low potential for DDI, because their metabolism is not linked to the CYP3A4 pathway. A recent study conducted in healthy volunteers assessed the potential for pharmacokinetic interactions between sofosbuvir and the immunosuppressants cyclosporine and tacrolimus and revealed that sofosbuvir did not affect the exposure to calcineurin inhibitors and only a slight increase in the concentration of sofosbuvir was observed in individuals who received cyclosporine.[19] In addition, no clinically significant interactions have been observed with methadone or with antiretroviral therapies in HCV/HIV co-infected patients such as the nucleosidic reverse transcriptase inhibitors tenofovir and emtricitabine, the non-nucleosidic reverse transcriptase inhibitors efavirenz and rilpivirine or the protease inhibitors darunavir or ritonavir.[20]

Sofosbuvir Development Programme
IFN-free Sofosbuvir Regimens in HCV type 1-infected Patients: Results From Phase II Trials
IFNα-free strategies have been evaluated in phase II studies in HCV type 1-infected patients which tried to define the efficacy of different treatment combinations for different treatment durations ranging from 8 to 24 weeks.[21–26] These regimens typically consist of combinations based on (1) sofosbuvir plus RBV, (2) sofosbuvir plus a second DAA or (3) sofosbuvir plus a second DAA in combination with RBV, summarised in figure 2A and B. Even though the numbers of type 1-infected patients included in the numerous different arms of the studies were quite often limited and to date not all patients have completed the observation period yet, interesting preliminary conclusions can already be extracted from the presented results.


Figure 2.
Phase II trials on sofosbuvir-containing interferon α-free treatments in (A) treatment-naive and (B) treatment-experienced patients with HCV type 1 according to present publication of sustained virological response (SVR) rates.21–26 The study arms were designed to examine the efficacy of sofosbuvir in combination with ribavirin (RBV) (highlighted in blue), in combination with a second direct acting antiviral (DAA) (highlighted in pink) or with both a second DAA and RBV (highlighted in purple) to examine the optimal treatment length, which could be between 8 and 24 weeks. Of note, only few patients in these trials had liver cirrhosis. *One patient was missing in the evaluation 12 weeks after the end of treatment. All patients remaining in the study showed SVR.

Sofosbuvir in Treatment-naive HCV Type 1-infected Patients
In the QUANTUM and ELECTRON studies, sofosbuvir was given for 12 weeks in combination with RBV to overall 50 treatment-naive patients with HCV type 1 infection.[23,27] SVR12 was observed in 56% and 88% of patients, respectively (mean of 70%). Prolongation of this dual combination treatment to 24 weeks seemed not implicitly to increase in SVR rates, as the overall SVR12 rate was 52% and 90%, respectively (mean 67%) in 35 patients of the QUANTUM and NIH SPARE studies.[23,25] These findings were surprising in view of the results from the phase III FUSION trial in HCV type 2 and 3 infection, where treatment extension from 12 to 16 weeks tended to improve SVR rates significantly from 56% to 73%.[28]
 
Combining sofosbuvir with a second DAA generally led to a much more robust treatment response with higher SVR rates as compared with the sofosbuvir plus RBV regimen, irrespective of whether RBV was added or not (figure 2A and B).[21–25]
 
The choice of the second DAA—either a non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor or NS5A inhibitor—did not seem to impact the strength of the response, as far as it can be judged by the present results. A combination of sofosbuvir with another distinct nucleotide analogue (GS-0938) for 12 weeks resulted in SVR12 in 88% out of 25 patients. The SVR4 rates after 12 weeks of combination treatment with sofosbuvir and the NS5A inhibitors daclatasvir or ledipasvir (GS-5885) were as high as 98% and 100% in the 41 and 19 patients which were studied, respectively.[22,24] Whether a prolongation of this combination treatment beyond 12 weeks will be required to further increase the response rates is questionable, as treatment extension to 24 weeks with GS-0938 plus sofosbuvir showed an equally high SVR12 rate of 88%.[23] Even shorter treatment duration seems to be a realistic option, as sofosbuvir and ledipasvir given for 8 weeks already led to SVR8 in 95% of 20 patients in the LONESTAR trial.[22]

Sofosbuvir in Treatment-experienced Type 1-infected Patients
A 12-week sofosbuvir plus RBV regimen was evaluated in the multipart ELECTRON study in 10 HCV type 1-infected patients who previously showed null response to Peg-IFNα and RBV (figure 2B).[21] On treatment, complete suppression of hepatitis C viremia was achieved in all patients, but surprisingly all but one of these patients relapsed after treatment was stopped.
The limitations which sofosbuvir obviously had in these patients when combined with RBV were overruled when sofosbuvir was given with a second DAA for only 12 weeks in patients, which resulted in SVR rates between 90% and 100%. Regardless of the mode of action of the second DAA, being either the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir or daclatasvir, the protease inhibitor simeprevir or the non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor GS-9669 this regimen showed equally high SVR rates as in treatment-naive patients (figure 2B).[22,24,26]
 
Treatment extension to 24 weeks using a combination of sofosbuvir and the NS5A inhibitor daclatasvir was evaluated in the AI444-404 study in 41 patients who failed a previous protease inhibitor-based triple therapy.[24] This study was controlled for the effect of RBV by randomising patients to receive 1000–1200 mg RBV per day or placebo for 24 weeks. Irrespective of the addition of RBV, all patients who were followed for 12 weeks after stopping therapy achieved an SVR.

IFN-free Sofosbuvir Regimens in HCV Non-type 1-infected Patients: Results From Phase II Trials
To evaluate a possible benefit of adding Peg-IFNα to a 12-week combination treatment of sofosbuvir plus RBV in patients with HCV type 2 or type 3, four treatment arms including 12, 8, 4 weeks or no Peg-IFNα and sofosbuvir plus RBV were included in the phase IIa ELECTRON trial.[21] All patients who were treated for 12 weeks with sofosbuvir and RBV, with or without Peg-IFNα, showed SVR12 giving conclusive evidence that adding Peg-IFNα was not needed for these patients. Also patients who were treated with sofosbuvir as monotherapy for 12 weeks showed undetectable HCV RNA at the end of treatment; however, at week 4 post-treatment, four of the 10 patients had a virological relapse. As a result, in the following phase III studies, monotherapy with sofosbuvir was no longer considered.

Sofosbuvir as Part of Peg-IFNα-containing Regimens in HCV Type 1 and Type 4–6-infected Patients: Results From Phase II Trials
A strong efficacy of the combination treatment of sofosbuvir plus RBV and Peg-IFNα in patients with HCV type 1 was demonstrated in the PROTON and in the ATOMIC phase II studies.[29,30] The PROTON study, in which 400 mg sofosbuvir per day or placebo were given in combination with Peg-IFNα plus RBV for 12 weeks followed by an additional 12 or 36 weeks of Peg-IFNα and RBV, showed 91% SVR12 rates for the sofosbuvir group versus 40% for the placebo group.[29] In the ATOMIC trial, it was investigated whether maintenance treatment is necessary once a response was introduced by a 12-week sofosbuvir-containing triple regimen. Overall, 332 treatment-naive patients with HCV types 1, 4 and 6 without cirrhosis were treated with sofosbuvir 400 mg per day plus Peg-IFNα and RBV given for either 12 or 24 weeks.[30] In the 12-week arms, patients were randomised to either stop treatment or enter a maintenance phase with either sofosbuvir alone or in combination with RBV for additional 12 weeks. Regardless of the treatment arms, SVR rates between 90% and 94% were observed. Therefore, a 12-week combination treatment of sofosbuvir plus RBV and Peg-IFNα was chosen for the phase III NEUTRINO study.[31]

Sofosbuvir as Part of Peg-IFNα-containing Regimens in HCV Type 1 and Type 4–6-infected Patients: Results From the NEUTRINO Phase III Trial
In the NEUTRINO trial, 327 naive HCV type 1, 4, 5 and 6 patients were treated for 12 weeks in an open-label single-arm design with sofosbuvir 400 mg and RBV 1000–1200 mg per day as well as with Peg-IFNα 180 μg per week.[31] The result were compared with the historic SVR12 rates of treated cohorts with Peg-IFNα and RBV over 48 weeks which had a global SVR12 rate settled on 60%. The study included 291 patients with HCV type 1 (89%), and 35 with types 4, 5 and 6 (11%). The overall SVR12 rate was 90% (figure 3), 89% in HCV type 1, 96% in HCV type 4 and 100% in the seven patients with HCV types 5 and 6. Out of the 55 patients with cirrhosis, 80% achieved SVR12. No significant differences in SVR rates were found with respect to other baseline parameters, but slightly higher SVR rates were observed in patients with low viral load, favourable IL28B CC genotype and those being infected with HCV subtype 1a versus1b.



Figure 3.
Phase III trials on sofosbuvir-containing treatments in treatment-naive, treatment-experienced patients with contraindications to IFNα. The study arms were designed to examine the efficacy of sofosbuvir in combination with Peg-IFNα and ribavirin (RBV) given for 12 weeks (highlighted in blue) or for 24 weeks (highlighted in orange) in HCV types 1, 4, 5 and 6, and to examine the efficacy of sofosbuvir in combination with RBV (highlighted in light blue) in patients with types 2 and 3.28,31
Sofosbuvir was well tolerated and did not add side effects to the expected safety profile of Peg-IFNα plus RBV. The rate of discontinuation related to adverse events was 2% which was significantly lower as in the historical controls. Even among patients with cirrhosis, serious adverse events were rare and only one patient had to discontinue treatment.[31]

Sofosbuvir as Part of Peg-IFNα-free Regimens in HCV Type 2 and 3-infected Patients: Results From the Phase III Trials FISSION, FUSION and POSITRON
Combination of sofosbuvir plus RBV given for 12 weeks in phase II trials had led to such convincing SVR rates in HCV type 2 and 3-infected patients that this regimen was further evaluated in phase III. According to prior treatment experience different treatment scenarios were explored in three different phase III trials—the FISSION, FUSION and POSITRON studies.[28,31]
The FISSION trial was designed to assess the efficacy of the combination of an IFNα-free regimen based on sofosbuvir plus RBV given for 12 weeks in 256 treatment-naive type 2 or 3-infected patients in comparison with combination of Peg-IFNα plus RBV given to 243 patients with types 2 or 3 for 24 weeks.[31] About 176 (72%) of the patients had HCV type 3, and 50 patients (21%) had cirrhosis. The rates of SVR were 67% in both arms, confirming the non-inferiority main endpoint of the oral regimen (figure 3). The response rates to the IFNα-free sofosbuvir plus RBV regimen were however significantly lower among patients with HCV type 3 than among those with type 2 (56% vs 97%, respectively; figure 4).


Figure 4.
Influence of liver cirrhosis on response to treatment with sofosbuvir plus ribavirin (RBV), and the effect of treatment prolongation from 12 to 16 weeks in treatment-experienced patients with HCV types 2 or 3, as observed in the phase III FUSION trial.28 Extending the treatment duration by 4 weeks increased sustained virological response (SVR) rates especially in patients with type 3 infection, but also in patients with type 2 infection and cirrhosis.
Presence of cirrhosis was another strong negative predictor of response. SVR rates were only 47% in patients with cirrhosis, which was similar to the 38% SVR in the control arm with standard treatment of Peg-IFNα plus RBV (figure 4). In terms of safety, the sofosbuvir plus RBV arm was associated with significantly fewer adverse events than the arm with Peg-IFNα plus RBV.

The FUSION trial aimed at investigating whether the combination treatment of sofosbuvir and RBV was more effective when given for 16 instead of 12 weeks.[28] The studied cohort was conducted in HCV type 2 and 3 patients who had failed previous Peg-IFNα-based therapies. Among these patients, 75% had suffered virological breakthrough or relapse, and 25% were defined as non-responders.[28] Patients were randomised 1:1 to receive either 12 weeks (n=103) or 16 weeks (n=98) treatment with sofosbuvir 400 mg plus RBV 1000–1200 mg per day. The overall SVR rates were 50% in the 12-week and 73% in the 16-week arms (p<0.001), both results comparing favourably with a 25% cure rate which has been estimated for a virtual control group expressing identical characteristics but being treated with Peg-IFNα plus RBV (figure 3).[28]
 
Again, HCV type 3 and presence of cirrhosis were the main predictors of poor outcome. However, in such cases, the extension of treatment duration from 12 to 16 weeks could improve the results considerably (see figure 4). No increase in adverse events was observed when treatment was extended to 16 weeks.[28]
 
In the POSITRON trial, the effectiveness of 12 weeks of combination of sofosbuvir and RBV was investigated in 278 patients with HCV type 2 or 3 being ineligible for Peg-IFNα-based therapies due to contraindications and/or unacceptable previous adverse events or unwillingness to receive Peg-IFNα therapy.[28] Patients were randomised 3:1 to receive either sofosbuvir 400 mg plus RBV 1000–1200 mg per day or placebo. Overall, 78% of patients in the treatment-arm and no patient in the placebo group achieved an SVR (figure 3). For HCV type 2 and 3-infected patients, SVR rates were 93% and 61%, respectively. Among the 44 patients with compensated cirrhosis, SVR rates were 94% in HCV type 2 but only 21% in HCV type 3 infections.

Sofosbuvir Resistance
HCV variants which cause resistance against sofosbuvir have been identified in vitro using the HCV replicon system.[32] In these assays, sofosbuvir showed a 9.5-fold increase in EC50 if the S282T mutation was present. Infection models using HCV types 1a, 1b and 2 could also demonstrate a selection of this mutation in presence of sofosbuvir. In type 1a patients, additional variants as the mutation I434M were shown to be selected by sofosbuvir, although these variants only lead to a small loss of susceptibility.

Indeed, in the ELECTRON trial, in one of the four patients who suffered a relapse after 12 weeks of sofosbuvir monotherapy, the S282T mutation could be detected after the relapse. Before treatment this variant had not been present in this patient. No mutations associated with resistance to sofosbuvir have been detected in patients who showed a relapse after sofosbuvir combination therapy with either RBV or a second DAA.[33] Moreover, no on-treatment resistance associated viral breakthrough has been observed in any of the patients treated with any sofosbuvir regimens and virtually all patients showed a robust and quite rapid response to the drug. Interestingly, in two patients who experienced a relapse in HCV replication after 12 weeks combination treatment with sofosbuvir and the protease inhibitor simeprevir, the mutation Q80K that is associated with simeprevir resistance was detectable at baseline. One of these patients gained the D168E and I170T simeprevir resistance mutations during combination treatment, but there were no emergent sofosbuvir resistance mutations detectable during the relapse.[34]
 
The high genetic barrier against resistance created by sofosbuvir may have different reasons. First, replication fitness of the sofosbuvir resistance associated variant S282T is significantly impaired as this mutation within the active site of the RdRp impairs polymerase activity decreasing the replication capacity by approximately 90% in HCV types 1a and 1b as compared with the wild type replicon. Second, the drug was able to suppress hepatitis C viremia to undetectable levels in virtually all patients within 4 weeks of treatment as has been demonstrated in all clinical trials so far. The shutdown of viral replication at these early stages on treatment limits the time for the selection of resistant variants which is in line with the concept: 'no replication=no resistance'.

Predictors of Response and the Problem of Relapse
A rebound of viral replication (a relapse) after stopping sofosbuvir-based therapy accounts for practically all failures to this treatment. The phenomenon that, in spite of fast suppression to undetectable HCV RNA levels in virtually all patients within the first 2–4 weeks of sofosbuvir treatment, HCV replication may relapse in some patients after stopping treatment is poorly understood.

Significant relapse rates (ie, greater than 10%) were however only seen in patients treated with either sofosbuvir alone or in combination with RBV, but not in those treated in combination with a second DAA or Peg-IFNα, and relapse rates were especially high in HCV type 1 and 3-infected patients with previous null response to Peg-IFNα and RBV therapy and those with cirrhosis (figure 4).

There are subtle hints that very early viral kinetics within the first days of treatment may differ between patients who are going to relapse and those achieving a sustained response (figure 5).[20]

There remains, however, the intriguing question: why does prior response to a Peg-IFNα-based treatment influence the responsiveness to a IFNα-free regimen like sofosbuvir plus RBV? One might speculate that prior null response to Peg-IFNα and RBV might not only be driven by low IFNα susceptibility but also by non-responsiveness to RBV. According to this concept, re-treatment of these patients with sofosbuvir plus RBV may be basically equivalent to a functional sofosbuvir monotherapy which is not effective enough to eradicate the infection during a short treatment period. A genetic profile associated with an altered innate immune function (ie, IL28B non-CC genotype) predominates in patients showing non-responsiveness to Peg-IFNα and RBV, which also may contribute to the lower likelihood of viral eradication that can be induced during short-term blocking of viral replication by polymerase inhibitors.[35]


RBV reduces in vivo the mRNA levels of a large number of Peg-IFNα-stimulated genes, particularly those which were found to be upregulated in non-responders to Peg-IFNα plus RBV.[36] These epigenetic re-programming properties of RBV could synergise with the potent antiviral activity of sofosbuvir to restore the host innate immunity responses.[37] Furthermore, HCV-specific immune modulation with IFNα-free DAA therapy may occur via inhibition of HCV replication that may be key in order to prevent relapses and induce an SVR.[38]
 
HCV RNA testing 4 weeks after stopping treatment already allows a high positive prediction of sustained response as it has been shown in both the QUANTUM and the ELECTRON studies.[23,21] SVR24 rates were 99% and 97.1%, respectively, in patients who showed undetectable HCV RNA levels at week 4 of the post-treatment follow-up.[39]

Safety Profile of Treatments Containing Sofosbuvir
Sofosbuvir was generally well tolerated when given alone, in combination with RBV or in combination with Peg-IFNα and RBV.

Sofosbuvir given in Peg-IFNα-free regimens has clearly improved tolerability over Peg-IFNα-based treatments.[40] In a meta-analysis of different studies comprising Peg-IFNα-free arms, the rate of severe adverse events (SAE) was between 4% and 6%, and none of these SAEs was related to sofosbuvir.[40] Only four of 331 patients (1.2%) who received sofosbuvir as monotherapy, in combination with RBV or in combination with the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir and RBV, discontinued treatment due to adverse events. Also few laboratory abnormalities were found in these patients. In the phase II COSMOS trial, grade 3–4 pancreatic amylase or lipase elevations were observed in five out 52 patients (10%) who had been treated with sofosbuvir in combination with simprevir plus RBV, and in one out of 29 patients (3%) who received sofosbuvir plus simeprevir. However, these laboratory findings were transient and not associated with clinical symptoms.[37]
 
Safety profile did not differ in patients with well compensated liver cirrhosis who were included in the phase III sofosbuvir trials and no hepatic decompensation was observed while on any of the IFNα-free treatment arms.[27,31]

Sofosbuvir for Difficult-to-Treat Patients
Due to its high antiviral potency, even when given as monotherapy, the favourable safety profile and obvious lack of cumbersome DDIs, sofosbuvir represents a nearly ideal backbone for the treatment of patients who were up to now considered as difficult-to-treat, that is, patients with prior treatment failures to Peg-IFNα-based treatments (including those who failed triple therapy), patients being intolerant or ineligible to Peg-IFNα, patients with extra hepatic HCV manifestations or HCV/HIV co-infection, as well as those with decompensated cirrhosis or liver transplant recipients.[41]
 
Pilot studies in patients awaiting LT and in liver transplant recipients with aggressive HCV recurrence are currently ongoing to assess efficacy of sofosbuvir in this population (studies NCT01687270 and NCT01779518; for more information see: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov). Sofosbuvir plus daclatasvir combination proof-of-concept therapy was effective to cure a liver transplant recipient with severe recurrent cholestatic hepatitis C.[42] Preventing the infection of the graft by application of sofosbuvir either alone or in combination with a second DAA also appears to become a realistic scenario in the near future.

Treatment efficacy of IFNα-free sofosbuvir regimens in HCV type 1-infected patients with compensated cirrhosis has not been evaluated in a significant number of patients. However, a lower cure rate might be expected given the fact that in HCV type 2 and especially in type 3-infected patients cirrhosis was one of the main risk factors for reduced SVR rates (figure 4). The expected low SVR in these patients has influenced the design of the NCT01687257 in which patients infected with different HCV types who have compensated or decompensated liver cirrhosis receive an extended 48-week combined treatment of sofosbuvir plus RBV. One is inclined to argue that patients with decompensated HCV-induced cirrhosis may profit most from IFNα-free combinations with different DAAs. In some ongoing trials evaluating these treatments, patients with liver cirrhosis may be included; however, data on safety and efficacy are awaited.

Sofosbuvir is currently being investigated in patients with HCV/HIV co-infection in the PHOTON trial (NCT01783678). In this trial, the efficacy of the combination of sofosbuvir plus RBV is investigated over 12 weeks in HCV type 2-infected patients and for 24 weeks in HCV type 1, 2, 3 and 4-infected patients. 

Summary and Future Directions
The approval of sofosbuvir can be regarded as a first step towards a radical change in the antiviral management of chronic HCV infection. For the first time, we are about to hold a DAA in our hands that covers all genotypes and shows robust antiviral response in virtually all patients due to high intrahepatocellular concentrations. No viral breakthrough as a consequence of drug resistance has been observed, even when sofosbuvir was given as monotherapy. The excellent safety profile and the lack of significant DDIs will allow the broad use of the drug also in more difficult-to treat situations like co-infections, cirrhosis and the liver transplant setting.

For HCV type 1, 4, 5 and 6 infection, a triple combination containing sofosbuvir plus Peg-IFNα and RBV given for a fixed duration of only 12 weeks will be licensed in the close future that obviously is able to cure 90% of the patients without any response guided modifications. However, Peg-IFNα-containing regimens can be regarded only as a brief 'footnote' in the history of the sofosbuvir development programme, as IFNα-free regimens are close to becoming the standard in HCV type 1 infection.

For HCV type 2 and 3-infected patients, an IFNα-free regimen containing sofosbuvir plus RBV has been established by three different phase III trials showing cure rates that were at least comparable with those observed in dual therapy with Peg-IFNα plus RBV.

As virological relapses account for practically all sofosbuvir treatment failures, the main unresolved issues are now (1) how long the duration of treatment has to be and (2) how many DAAs have to be combined in order to prevent a virological relapse. Also, the role of RBV in the setting of multiple DDA regimens remains uncertain.

For HCV type 2-infected patients, a 12-week sofosbuvir plus RBV regimen may soon become the standard of care, whereas in HCV type 3 as well as in type 1-infected patients and in patients with cirrhosis, the high relapse rates that have been seen after this regimen certainly claim for individualised treatment adaptations. Prolonging treatment duration to 16 weeks helped to reduce the relapse rates in HCV type 3. Whether prolongation of sofosbuvir and RBV to 24 weeks may further increase cure rates is currently being evaluated in the ongoing European Valence Study (GS-US-34–0133) in HCV type 3 infection. An alternative approach which is now studied in phase II trials aims to shorten treatment to 12 or even 8 weeks by applying different regimens including either Peg-IFNα and RBV or a second DAA—the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir or the non-nucleoside inhibitor GS-9669 in combination with sofosbuvir (NCT01260350).

For HCV type 1-infected patients, the combination of sofosbuvir plus a second DAA will probably represent the most promising approach. Gilead Sciences is currently evaluating the combination treatment with its own NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir (formerly GS-5885) in three different phase III trials (ION studies).[43] The ION-1 trial is designed to evaluating a once-daily fixed-dose combination of sofosbuvir plus ledipasvir with or without RBV for 12 or 24 weeks among 800 treatment-naive HCV type 1 patients. The ION-2 is evaluating sofosbuvir with ledipasvir and RBV for 12 weeks or sofosbuvir plus ledipasvir with or without RBV for 24 weeks among 400 treatment-experienced type 1 HCV patients who previously failed to respond to a triple therapy with Peg-IFNα, RBV and either boceprevir or telaprevir. The ION-3 trial is designed to evaluate 8- and 12-week courses of therapy with the combination of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir with or without RBV in 60 treatment-naive non-cirrhotic patients (NCT01851330).

In summary, a 12-week IFNα-free regimen may become the skeletal structure of the future sofosbuvir-based treatment algorithms. Depending on certain host and viral factors, like HCV type, prior treatment experience or presence of cirrhosis, a second DAA, RBV or both will need to be added. Also, shortening or extending treatment duration may become part of the new individualised treatment approach. It is likely that the availability of these Peg-IFNα-free antiviral regimens will lead to a similar shift in the treatment paradigms and outcomes as has been observed when the first polymerase inhibitors became available for patients with chronic HBV infection. However, we have to be aware that the number of treated patients with more 'difficult-to-treat' characteristics is limited, especially of those with cirrhosis who have been successfully cured with the new treatment regimens. Therefore, that a broader use of these new DAAs in the 'real-world' will probably face unprecedented safety and resistance issues cannot be ruled out.

 http://gut.bmj.com/

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Only just the beginning of the end of hepatitis C


The Lancet, Volume 383, Issue 9914, Page 281, 25 January 2014

doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60087-8 Cite or Link Using DOI
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.

Editorial - PDF Download 

Only just the beginning of the end of hepatitis C
 
2014 marks the 25th anniversary of the identification of the hepatitis C virus (HCV). HCV infection continues to be a major global health problem. Unlike many chronic diseases, hepatitis C can be cured, but it is difficult to treat, not all patients are responsive, side-effects can be severe, and progression to end-stage liver disease and liver cancer is common. Over the past few years, new medicines for HCV infection have begun to transform the treatment landscape, and, just in the past few months alone, the development of new regimens has been so successful that disease experts are heralding an era where all patients can be cured, even debating whether eradication is possible.

HCV has six major genotypes and the infecting genotype determines the treatment response and duration. Genotypes 1—3 have a worldwide distribution, but genotype 1 predominates in North America, Europe, and Japan, hence pharmaceutical research to treat this genotype has been preferred to others.

The new treatment modalities are once-daily oral combination regimens with optional inclusion of ribavirin and are pegylated interferon (peginterferon) free, so multiple tablets and injections are no longer needed. The novel agents are known as direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). In two phase 2 clinical trials published last week, the DAAs, sofosbuvir and daclatasvir, and the investigational DAAs, ABT-450, ABT-267, and ABT-333 in combination with known protease inhibitors, were shown to achieve high viral clearance response rates (83—100%) in previously treated and previously untreated patients with HCV genotype 1 with a short duration of therapy (12 weeks vs 48 weeks), together with a favourable safety profile compared with the current standard peginterferon based treatments.

Patients with HCV genotypes 2 and 3 also responded well to treatment and there was minimal need for clinical and laboratory monitoring. Testing of other promising DAAs is underway. Results are expected within the next 2 years. Rapid regulatory approval of sofosbuvir in the USA and Europe (and an expedited review of daclatasvir) have been accompanied by reports of promises from companies to ensure that access is achieved as quickly as possible. But given 90% of the estimated 184 million people with hepatitis C live in low-income and middle-income countries, how available and accessible will these new medicines be globally?

The main drawback of these new agents is the huge price tag, which will make treatment out of reach for people in the developed and developing world. Indeed, current treatment uptake is also impeded by cost. One 12 week course of sofosbuvir will cost US$84 000, even though the scientist involved in formulating sofosbuvir, Raymond Schinazi, estimates costs at just $1400. An even lower price was shown by Andrew Hill and colleagues in a recent study. Based on the fact that the new hepatitis C treatments are comparable in molecular structure and chemistry to HIV antiretrovirals, the authors used the same market dynamics to determine the minimum cost to manufacture them, which was $100—250 per 12 week treatment course; they concluded that at these low prices, widespread access to these new medicines is feasible within 15 years. Although manufacturers are likely to offer low-income countries steep discounts, around 75% of people with hepatitis C live in middle-income countries regarded as emerging markets by companies, and so are unlikely to benefit from the kind of discounts needed to make treatment available. Interestingly, the sofosbuvir patent application is currently under challenge in India, and if upheld will allow Indian generic drug companies to enter the market and drive major price reductions as seen with HIV/AIDS medicines.

The other concern is the limited testing of these new treatments on less common genotypes and marginalised populations disproportionately affected by HCV infection. For example, there has been minimal testing among those co-infected with HIV. Although the field is likely to see pan-genotypic treatments that clear all genotypes, and will also remove the need for a complex diagnostic, many countries are still years away from these scenarios.

The need for a global plan for hepatitis C is imperative. It should include research and operational priorities, and establish global funding mechanisms. Countries are only likely to develop national plans for hepatitis C when treatments become more affordable. Last year, Tido von Schoen-Angerer and colleagues in a Lancet letter rightly argued that UNITAID—which has successfully lowered prices of HIV treatments—should do the same for hepatitis C medicines. Lessons from HIV/AIDS will be instructive for the hepatitis C field, as will political and community mobilisation to ensure these treatments reach those in most need.

The Lancet
Photo Credit - Ramon Andrade 3DCiencia/Science Photo Library

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

High Stakes Intrigue In Hep C: Bristol-Myers Vs. Gilead

Related:
Daclatasvir Plus Sofosbuvir-Three New Clinical Trials Sponsored By Bristol-Myers Squibb 

Daclatasvir and Sofosbuvir: Drug combo cures toughest cases of hepatitis C, hints to future injection-free therapies 

Bristol-Myers Squibb Hepatitis C Therapy Opens Up Combination Options

Investment Commentary 

High Stakes Intrigue In Hep C: Bristol-Myers Vs. Gilead
Jan. 22, 2014 3:47 PM ET 

Gilead's (GILD) reluctance to marry its Hep C drug Sovaldi with Bristol-Myers Squibb's (BMY) daclatasvir forced Bristol to take evasive action.
Bristol applied to the European Union for approval of daclatasvir, an investigational NS5A complex inhibitor, for the treatment of adults with chronic hepatitis C with compensated liver disease, including genotypes 1, 2, 3, and 4. The application seeks the approval of daclatasvir for use in combination with other agents, including Sovaldi.
The EU accepted the application for an accelerated regulatory review. Hepatitis C represents a high unmet need in Europe where an estimated 9 million people are living with hepatitis C.
The EU submission follows a filing in Japan seeking approval for the treatment of patients infected with HCV genotype 1b.
Divorce before marriage
An article in the January New England Journal of Medicine presents great results from the combination trial of Sovaldi and daclatasvir.
Initially 44 previously untreated patients with genotype 1, 2 and 3 were tested with daclatasvir at a dose of 60 mg once daily tablet plus Sovaldi at a dose of 400 mg once daily tablet, with or without ribavirin, for 24 weeks.
Later on the study was expanded to include 123 additional patients with Genotype 1 infection. 82 patients were previously untreated and 41 patients had been previously treated with Incivek (made by Vertex (VRTX)) or Victrelis (made by Merck (MRK)) plus peginterferon alfa and ribavirin. The primary end point was a sustained virologic response (an HCV RNA level of lower than 25 IU per milliliter) at week 12 after the end of therapy.

Continue on to page 2 @ Seeking Alpha 

Just For Fun - What Does the Spleen Do?






By Alvin Powell, Harvard Staff Writer

Who knew the spleen was so funny? And popular?
A parody video by a group of Harvard Medical School students went viral in December, garnering a million YouTube hits in just five days and surpassing 1.7 million since.
The video’s creators were astounded at its popularity, according to Ben Rome, a second-year student who filmed and edited the video. Rather than just basking in their 15 minutes of fame, however, the students are trying leverage the video’s popularity for a good cause: science education. They launched the HMS/HSDM Organ Challenge, a contest for primary and secondary school students to create a music video highlighting one of the body’s organs.

Read more here............

Neutropenia-Lymphocyte count associated with infection risk during HCV interferon treatment

Lymphocyte count associated with infection risk during interferon treatment
Melia M. Clin Infect Dis. 2014;doi:10.1093/cid/ciu009.

Adults with hepatitis C who were treated with pegylated interferon and ribavirin for up to 48 weeks commonly experienced moderate, severe or life-threatening infections, according to a report in Clinical Infectious Diseases.

The nadir lymphocyte count, but not the nadir neutrophil count, was associated with the increased risk for infections in the Individualized Dosing Efficacy vs. Flat Dosing to Assess Optimal Pegylated Interferon Therapy (IDEAL) study.

“While the risk of infection associated with severe neutropenia due to chemotherapy among cancer patients and recipients of hematopoietic cell transplants is well-established, most studies have not demonstrated any increased risk among patients who develop neutropenia while receiving [pegylated interferon],” the researchers wrote. “Nevertheless, up to 23% of patients develop acute infections during HCV treatment.”

Patients in the IDEAL study were randomly assigned to varying doses of pegylated interferon with ribavirin for chronic HCV treatment. In this study, the investigators from evaluated the risk for infection among patients with myelosuppression, a common adverse effect of pegylated interferon treatment.

The IDEAL study included 3,070 treatment-naïve patients. Among those, 581 (19%) patients experienced moderate, severe or life-threatening infections, determined by the investigator. In a logistic regression model, female gender, history of depression and nadir on-treatment absolute lymphocyte count were associated with moderate, severe or life-threatening infections. After adjustment, pegylated interferon type (alfa-2a vs. alfa-2b) and nadir absolute neutrophil count were not associated with moderate, severe or life-threatening infections.

“This observation has important implications for the management of patients treated with [pegylated interferon/ribavirin] alone or in combination with other agents,” the researchers wrote. “While further research is needed to confirm this observation, clinicians should carefully monitor the [absolute lymphocyte count] in addition to the [absolute neutrophil count] for patients receiving HCV therapy with [pegylated interferon and/or ribavirin].”

Disclosure: See study manuscript for disclosure information.

New @ Healio

HCV testing rates low among IDUs in Thailand
January 22, 2014
Only one-third of Thai injection drug users reported getting tested for hepatitis C, according to study results published in the Journal of Public Health.
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Scoring system accurately predicted mortality among cirrhosis patients
January 21, 2014
Researchers focusing on nine specific comorbidities have developed a scoring system that can predict death or survival of cirrhosis patients with strong...
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HCV testing rates low among IDUs in Thailand
January 22, 2014
“Clinicians should be aware that although access to HIV testing has increased in most settings recently, rates of HCV testing among injection drug users (IDUs) remains low in some countries,” study researcher Thomas Kerr, PhD, co-director of the Urban Health Research Initiative at the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, told Infectious Disease News. “It is important to ensure appropriate follow-up after testing for HCV is provided, including access to viral load testing and specialist care.”
Full Story »

Synthetic Marijuana 'Spice' Linked to Stroke

Medscape Medical News > Psychiatry

Synthetic Marijuana 'Spice' Linked to Stroke
Dan Rankin
January 21, 2014

Ischemic stroke may be added to the list of health risks already associated with the recreational street drug spice, a team of neurologists from the University of South Florida (USF), in Tampa, suggests.

In a new report, the authors discuss the cases of 2 young and previously healthy siblings aged 26 and 19 years who experienced acute ischemic stroke shortly after smoking the Schedule I synthetic marijuana known as spice. Imaging results suggested the strokes may have been embolic.

The lead author of the article, Melissa J. Freeman, MD, said that all the tests they ran on the siblings to determine whether they were genetically predisposed to developing blood clots came back negative.

"We're proposing that perhaps it's a cardioembolic etiology, because smoking the synthetic marijuana spice has been associated in the medical literature with myocardial infarction and seizures," Dr. Freeman, a USF vascular neurology fellow, told Medscape Medical News. "If people are having heart attacks from it, perhaps there is a cardiac reason for the strokes."

The study was published in the December 10 issue of Neurology.

Spice-Associated Effects

The authors cite tachycardia, vomiting, agitation, confusion, and hallucinations as common side effects of smoking spice, adding that national news media outlets have also reported on spice-associated deaths within the past several months.

Patient A, a 26-year-old man, was brought to the emergency department with sudden-onset dysarthria, expressive aphasia, and weakness in his right face and arm.

He was found to have a clot in the left middle cerebral artery (MCA), which was confirmed by computed tomographic angiography, and was treated with tissue plasminogen–activator (tPA). He improved clinically and did not return for his follow-up visit, they write.

Patient B, a 19-year-old woman, was recognized by staff members as the sibling who had visited her brother on his previous admission. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a large MCA distribution infarction, with punctate infarcts in the right cerebral hemisphere, "suggestive of a proximal embolic event," the authors note. "She did not arrive within the window for tPA."

She stabilized neurologically, but at the last office visit, she still had right hemiparesis and expressive aphasia, they note.

Although both patients tested positive for regular cannabis and had in the past smoked conventional marijuana, each reported that they had smoked spice shortly prior to onset of the stroke and that they had obtained the drug from the same supplier.

The active ingredient in the spice smoked by the siblings in this report was JWH-018, a chemical compound first developed in the mid-1990s. But different compounds are constantly being developed by spice manufacturers, Dr. Freeman said. That makes them harder to regulate and more dangerous for users, she said.

"The chemicals might be slightly different on a molecular level and therefore wouldn't be part of the group that is considered illegal," said Dr. Freeman. "There is so much that is unknown, which is part of the problem. If it were one specific compound, it would be a lot easier to research."

Limitations to the findings listed by the authors in the article include possible unidentified contaminants in the product the siblings consumed and the fact that an unknown genetic mechanism could have caused the stroke, given the relationship of the patients.

Anything Pot Can Do…

In an editorial accompanying the publication, John C. M. Brust, MD, from the New York Neurological Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeon, New York City, points out that many synthetic cannabinoids have several times the potency or efficacy of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in natural marijuana.

Citing 59 reported cases of marijuana-related strokes in the medical literature, Dr. Brust concluded by saying, "If marijuana can cause ischemic stroke, and if anything pot can do spice can do better, neurologists will likely encounter increasing numbers of spice-associated strokes in the years ahead."

In the meantime, Dr. Freeman encouraged doctors who see stroke patients who are not within the age range of people normally considered at risk for stroke to ask whether they have smoked spice recently.

"I think it should be reported, because we won't be able to figure anything more out unless we have more information," she said. "I think it's very important that they screen high school– and college-aged students. The prevalence of younger people smoking the substance is so much higher than I thought it would be."

Neurology. Published online November 8, 2013. Abstract, Editorial