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– Evidence is mounting for several adjuvant treatments that may be appropriate for patients with primary biliary cholangitis who are not responding to first-line ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), according to Cynthia Levy, MD.

Given these new potential treatment options, it’s important for clinicians to assess biochemical response to first-line UDCA, said Dr. Levy, assistant director for the Schiff Center for Liver Diseases at the University of Miami.

“Up until recently, we didn’t have anything to offer to nonresponders,” Dr. Levy said at the inaugural Perspectives in Digestive Diseases meeting held by Global Academy for Medical Education. “Now we know at 1 year, we need to restratify to evaluate the need for adjuvant therapy.”

Many UDCA-treated patients will not respond to that first-line treatment, putting them at risk for progression to hepatocellular carcinoma and end-stage liver disease, according to Dr. Levy.

Obeticholic acid, a farnesoid X receptor agonist, is now a Food and Drug Administration–approved option for these patients, while fibrates and budesonide have recent data supporting their use and are available off-label, she added.

The conditional FDA approval for obeticholic acid, granted in May 2016, is for treatment as monotherapy in patients who do not tolerate UDCA or in combination with UDCA for patients who had had incomplete responses to that treatment for at least a year. Improvement in survival without liver transplantation has not yet been demonstrated for this agent, though studies are ongoing, Dr. Levy noted.

In the meantime, research is progressing with the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-alpha) agonists fenofibrate and bezafibrate.

 

 


In the BEZURSO study, presented at the 2017 EASL Congress, 100 patients with incomplete response to UDCA were randomized to bezafibrate plus UDCA or placebo plus UDCA for 2 years. The primary endpoint, normalization of liver function tests at 2 years, was achieved in 30% of the bezafibrate group and 0% of the placebo group. In addition, 67% of the bezafibrate-treated patients had alkaline phosphatase normalization, compared with 0% in the placebo group.

Bezafibrate was also associated with significant reductions in fatigue and itching, as well as surrogate liver fibrosis markers, according to investigators. The serious adverse event rate was similar between groups, as was the rate of end-stage liver complications, which was 4% for each arm.

Fenofibrate was studied in a small 20-patient, open-label, phase 2 study by Dr. Levy and her colleagues. “Alkaline phosphatase significantly improved fairly early when the drug was started,” she said. Treatment was for 48 weeks, and once the drug was discontinued, there was a rebound in alkaline phosphatase levels.

Seladelpar is another PPAR agonist far along in the pipeline, according to Dr. Levy. This selective PPAR-delta agonist demonstrated significant improvements in alkaline phosphatase and other measures in a 12-week trial that included 75 patients with primary biliary cholangitis and incomplete response to UDCA.

 

 


While fenofibrate and bezafibrate can be used off-label for primary biliary cholangitis, Dr. Levy said, fenofibrate labeling indicates that it is contraindicated in patients with hepatic or severe renal dysfunction, including primary biliary cholangitis.

According to Dr. Levy, that contraindication is based on experience with clofibrate, a first-generation fibrate that was associated with increased risk of gallstone formation. “If you choose to use fenofibrate, this is off-label use, and you need to warn your patients,” she told attendees at the meeting.

Two other agents under investigation in primary biliary cholangitis that have shown some promising results recently, according to Dr. Levy, include budesonide and an engineered variant of the human hormone FGF19 known as NGM282.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Levy reported disclosures related to CymaBay Therapeutics, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Genfit, GenKyoTex, Gilead Sciences, GlaxoSmithKline, Intercept Pharmaceuticals, NGM Biopharmaceuticals, and Novartis.

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– Evidence is mounting for several adjuvant treatments that may be appropriate for patients with primary biliary cholangitis who are not responding to first-line ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), according to Cynthia Levy, MD.

Given these new potential treatment options, it’s important for clinicians to assess biochemical response to first-line UDCA, said Dr. Levy, assistant director for the Schiff Center for Liver Diseases at the University of Miami.

“Up until recently, we didn’t have anything to offer to nonresponders,” Dr. Levy said at the inaugural Perspectives in Digestive Diseases meeting held by Global Academy for Medical Education. “Now we know at 1 year, we need to restratify to evaluate the need for adjuvant therapy.”

Many UDCA-treated patients will not respond to that first-line treatment, putting them at risk for progression to hepatocellular carcinoma and end-stage liver disease, according to Dr. Levy.

Obeticholic acid, a farnesoid X receptor agonist, is now a Food and Drug Administration–approved option for these patients, while fibrates and budesonide have recent data supporting their use and are available off-label, she added.

The conditional FDA approval for obeticholic acid, granted in May 2016, is for treatment as monotherapy in patients who do not tolerate UDCA or in combination with UDCA for patients who had had incomplete responses to that treatment for at least a year. Improvement in survival without liver transplantation has not yet been demonstrated for this agent, though studies are ongoing, Dr. Levy noted.

In the meantime, research is progressing with the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-alpha) agonists fenofibrate and bezafibrate.

 

 


In the BEZURSO study, presented at the 2017 EASL Congress, 100 patients with incomplete response to UDCA were randomized to bezafibrate plus UDCA or placebo plus UDCA for 2 years. The primary endpoint, normalization of liver function tests at 2 years, was achieved in 30% of the bezafibrate group and 0% of the placebo group. In addition, 67% of the bezafibrate-treated patients had alkaline phosphatase normalization, compared with 0% in the placebo group.

Bezafibrate was also associated with significant reductions in fatigue and itching, as well as surrogate liver fibrosis markers, according to investigators. The serious adverse event rate was similar between groups, as was the rate of end-stage liver complications, which was 4% for each arm.

Fenofibrate was studied in a small 20-patient, open-label, phase 2 study by Dr. Levy and her colleagues. “Alkaline phosphatase significantly improved fairly early when the drug was started,” she said. Treatment was for 48 weeks, and once the drug was discontinued, there was a rebound in alkaline phosphatase levels.

Seladelpar is another PPAR agonist far along in the pipeline, according to Dr. Levy. This selective PPAR-delta agonist demonstrated significant improvements in alkaline phosphatase and other measures in a 12-week trial that included 75 patients with primary biliary cholangitis and incomplete response to UDCA.

 

 


While fenofibrate and bezafibrate can be used off-label for primary biliary cholangitis, Dr. Levy said, fenofibrate labeling indicates that it is contraindicated in patients with hepatic or severe renal dysfunction, including primary biliary cholangitis.

According to Dr. Levy, that contraindication is based on experience with clofibrate, a first-generation fibrate that was associated with increased risk of gallstone formation. “If you choose to use fenofibrate, this is off-label use, and you need to warn your patients,” she told attendees at the meeting.

Two other agents under investigation in primary biliary cholangitis that have shown some promising results recently, according to Dr. Levy, include budesonide and an engineered variant of the human hormone FGF19 known as NGM282.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Levy reported disclosures related to CymaBay Therapeutics, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Genfit, GenKyoTex, Gilead Sciences, GlaxoSmithKline, Intercept Pharmaceuticals, NGM Biopharmaceuticals, and Novartis.

 

– Evidence is mounting for several adjuvant treatments that may be appropriate for patients with primary biliary cholangitis who are not responding to first-line ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), according to Cynthia Levy, MD.

Given these new potential treatment options, it’s important for clinicians to assess biochemical response to first-line UDCA, said Dr. Levy, assistant director for the Schiff Center for Liver Diseases at the University of Miami.

“Up until recently, we didn’t have anything to offer to nonresponders,” Dr. Levy said at the inaugural Perspectives in Digestive Diseases meeting held by Global Academy for Medical Education. “Now we know at 1 year, we need to restratify to evaluate the need for adjuvant therapy.”

Many UDCA-treated patients will not respond to that first-line treatment, putting them at risk for progression to hepatocellular carcinoma and end-stage liver disease, according to Dr. Levy.

Obeticholic acid, a farnesoid X receptor agonist, is now a Food and Drug Administration–approved option for these patients, while fibrates and budesonide have recent data supporting their use and are available off-label, she added.

The conditional FDA approval for obeticholic acid, granted in May 2016, is for treatment as monotherapy in patients who do not tolerate UDCA or in combination with UDCA for patients who had had incomplete responses to that treatment for at least a year. Improvement in survival without liver transplantation has not yet been demonstrated for this agent, though studies are ongoing, Dr. Levy noted.

In the meantime, research is progressing with the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-alpha) agonists fenofibrate and bezafibrate.

 

 


In the BEZURSO study, presented at the 2017 EASL Congress, 100 patients with incomplete response to UDCA were randomized to bezafibrate plus UDCA or placebo plus UDCA for 2 years. The primary endpoint, normalization of liver function tests at 2 years, was achieved in 30% of the bezafibrate group and 0% of the placebo group. In addition, 67% of the bezafibrate-treated patients had alkaline phosphatase normalization, compared with 0% in the placebo group.

Bezafibrate was also associated with significant reductions in fatigue and itching, as well as surrogate liver fibrosis markers, according to investigators. The serious adverse event rate was similar between groups, as was the rate of end-stage liver complications, which was 4% for each arm.

Fenofibrate was studied in a small 20-patient, open-label, phase 2 study by Dr. Levy and her colleagues. “Alkaline phosphatase significantly improved fairly early when the drug was started,” she said. Treatment was for 48 weeks, and once the drug was discontinued, there was a rebound in alkaline phosphatase levels.

Seladelpar is another PPAR agonist far along in the pipeline, according to Dr. Levy. This selective PPAR-delta agonist demonstrated significant improvements in alkaline phosphatase and other measures in a 12-week trial that included 75 patients with primary biliary cholangitis and incomplete response to UDCA.

 

 


While fenofibrate and bezafibrate can be used off-label for primary biliary cholangitis, Dr. Levy said, fenofibrate labeling indicates that it is contraindicated in patients with hepatic or severe renal dysfunction, including primary biliary cholangitis.

According to Dr. Levy, that contraindication is based on experience with clofibrate, a first-generation fibrate that was associated with increased risk of gallstone formation. “If you choose to use fenofibrate, this is off-label use, and you need to warn your patients,” she told attendees at the meeting.

Two other agents under investigation in primary biliary cholangitis that have shown some promising results recently, according to Dr. Levy, include budesonide and an engineered variant of the human hormone FGF19 known as NGM282.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Levy reported disclosures related to CymaBay Therapeutics, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Genfit, GenKyoTex, Gilead Sciences, GlaxoSmithKline, Intercept Pharmaceuticals, NGM Biopharmaceuticals, and Novartis.

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