Interferon plus entecavir may tame chronic HBV

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Interferon plus entecavir may tame chronic HBV

BOSTON – Adding pegylated interferon alfa-2a to entecavir increased the likelihood of long-term viral suppression of chronic hepatitis B infections in a randomized trial of 160 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infections.

Loss of the hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and hepatitis B viral (HBV) DNA levels below 200 IU/mL after 48 weeks of therapy occurred in 18% of patients who were randomized to entecavir (Baraclude) and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys), compared with 8% of patients on entecavir monotherapy, but this difference was not significant, Dr. Milan J. Sonneveld reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

However, after adjustment for baseline HBV serum antigen levels, analysis showed that pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG IFN) as an add-on was independently associated with response at 48 weeks (P = .01).

"Adding peginterferon alfa-2a to a potent nucleoside analogue appears to be a possibility to increase the probability of finite treatment in e-antigen–positive chronic hepatitis B patients," said Dr. Sonneveld of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Investigators at 15 sites in Europe and China enrolled 184 patients with HBeAg-positive infections with compensated liver disease. The patients were randomized to either entecavir alone at a dose of 0.5 mg daily for 48 weeks, or 24 weeks of entecavir monotherapy, after which 24 weeks of PEG IFN alfa-2a 180 mcg weekly were added.

All patients were assessed at weeks 12, 24, 36, and 48. Those with a response – a loss of the HBeAg with HBV DNA less than 200 IU/mL at 48 weeks – received an additional 24 weeks of consolidation therapy with entecavir and then discontinued therapy, whereas those without a response were continued on entecavir through week 72.

At week 48, there were 77 patients assigned to entecavir and PEG IFN and 83 assigned to entecavir alone.

There were no significant differences in response rates between the treatment arms, but patients who received the PEG IFN add-on had a greater decline of HBV DNA (6.33 vs. 5.91 log IU/mL; P = .05), HBeAg (1.99 vs. 1.56 log IU/mL; P = .01) and HBV serum antigen (0.84 vs. 0.32 log IU/mL; P less than .001) at week 48.

HBV serum antigen clearance was seen in only one patient at week 48; he had been assigned to the PEG IFN add-on group.

In a multivariate analysis adjusted for differences in baseline serum antigen levels, the addition of PEG IFN was independently associated with response at week 48 (adjusted odds ratio, 3.78; P = .012).

There were no differences in anemia between the two groups, but patients on the entecavir plus PEG IFN combination had significantly more leukopenia (8% vs. 0%; P = .01), neutropenia (23% vs. 0%; P = .001), and thrombocytopenia (P = .01).

The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, which manufactures entecavir, and Roche, which manufactures pegylated interferon alfa-2a. Dr. Sonneveld reported receiving speakers fees and educational support from Roche.

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BOSTON – Adding pegylated interferon alfa-2a to entecavir increased the likelihood of long-term viral suppression of chronic hepatitis B infections in a randomized trial of 160 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infections.

Loss of the hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and hepatitis B viral (HBV) DNA levels below 200 IU/mL after 48 weeks of therapy occurred in 18% of patients who were randomized to entecavir (Baraclude) and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys), compared with 8% of patients on entecavir monotherapy, but this difference was not significant, Dr. Milan J. Sonneveld reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

However, after adjustment for baseline HBV serum antigen levels, analysis showed that pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG IFN) as an add-on was independently associated with response at 48 weeks (P = .01).

"Adding peginterferon alfa-2a to a potent nucleoside analogue appears to be a possibility to increase the probability of finite treatment in e-antigen–positive chronic hepatitis B patients," said Dr. Sonneveld of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Investigators at 15 sites in Europe and China enrolled 184 patients with HBeAg-positive infections with compensated liver disease. The patients were randomized to either entecavir alone at a dose of 0.5 mg daily for 48 weeks, or 24 weeks of entecavir monotherapy, after which 24 weeks of PEG IFN alfa-2a 180 mcg weekly were added.

All patients were assessed at weeks 12, 24, 36, and 48. Those with a response – a loss of the HBeAg with HBV DNA less than 200 IU/mL at 48 weeks – received an additional 24 weeks of consolidation therapy with entecavir and then discontinued therapy, whereas those without a response were continued on entecavir through week 72.

At week 48, there were 77 patients assigned to entecavir and PEG IFN and 83 assigned to entecavir alone.

There were no significant differences in response rates between the treatment arms, but patients who received the PEG IFN add-on had a greater decline of HBV DNA (6.33 vs. 5.91 log IU/mL; P = .05), HBeAg (1.99 vs. 1.56 log IU/mL; P = .01) and HBV serum antigen (0.84 vs. 0.32 log IU/mL; P less than .001) at week 48.

HBV serum antigen clearance was seen in only one patient at week 48; he had been assigned to the PEG IFN add-on group.

In a multivariate analysis adjusted for differences in baseline serum antigen levels, the addition of PEG IFN was independently associated with response at week 48 (adjusted odds ratio, 3.78; P = .012).

There were no differences in anemia between the two groups, but patients on the entecavir plus PEG IFN combination had significantly more leukopenia (8% vs. 0%; P = .01), neutropenia (23% vs. 0%; P = .001), and thrombocytopenia (P = .01).

The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, which manufactures entecavir, and Roche, which manufactures pegylated interferon alfa-2a. Dr. Sonneveld reported receiving speakers fees and educational support from Roche.

BOSTON – Adding pegylated interferon alfa-2a to entecavir increased the likelihood of long-term viral suppression of chronic hepatitis B infections in a randomized trial of 160 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infections.

Loss of the hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and hepatitis B viral (HBV) DNA levels below 200 IU/mL after 48 weeks of therapy occurred in 18% of patients who were randomized to entecavir (Baraclude) and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys), compared with 8% of patients on entecavir monotherapy, but this difference was not significant, Dr. Milan J. Sonneveld reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

However, after adjustment for baseline HBV serum antigen levels, analysis showed that pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG IFN) as an add-on was independently associated with response at 48 weeks (P = .01).

"Adding peginterferon alfa-2a to a potent nucleoside analogue appears to be a possibility to increase the probability of finite treatment in e-antigen–positive chronic hepatitis B patients," said Dr. Sonneveld of the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Investigators at 15 sites in Europe and China enrolled 184 patients with HBeAg-positive infections with compensated liver disease. The patients were randomized to either entecavir alone at a dose of 0.5 mg daily for 48 weeks, or 24 weeks of entecavir monotherapy, after which 24 weeks of PEG IFN alfa-2a 180 mcg weekly were added.

All patients were assessed at weeks 12, 24, 36, and 48. Those with a response – a loss of the HBeAg with HBV DNA less than 200 IU/mL at 48 weeks – received an additional 24 weeks of consolidation therapy with entecavir and then discontinued therapy, whereas those without a response were continued on entecavir through week 72.

At week 48, there were 77 patients assigned to entecavir and PEG IFN and 83 assigned to entecavir alone.

There were no significant differences in response rates between the treatment arms, but patients who received the PEG IFN add-on had a greater decline of HBV DNA (6.33 vs. 5.91 log IU/mL; P = .05), HBeAg (1.99 vs. 1.56 log IU/mL; P = .01) and HBV serum antigen (0.84 vs. 0.32 log IU/mL; P less than .001) at week 48.

HBV serum antigen clearance was seen in only one patient at week 48; he had been assigned to the PEG IFN add-on group.

In a multivariate analysis adjusted for differences in baseline serum antigen levels, the addition of PEG IFN was independently associated with response at week 48 (adjusted odds ratio, 3.78; P = .012).

There were no differences in anemia between the two groups, but patients on the entecavir plus PEG IFN combination had significantly more leukopenia (8% vs. 0%; P = .01), neutropenia (23% vs. 0%; P = .001), and thrombocytopenia (P = .01).

The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, which manufactures entecavir, and Roche, which manufactures pegylated interferon alfa-2a. Dr. Sonneveld reported receiving speakers fees and educational support from Roche.

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Major Finding: Patients with chronic hepatitis B who were treated with entecavir and pegylated interferon alfa-2a had a greater decline in HBV DNA (6.33 vs. 5.91 log IU/mL; P = .05) and hepatitis B e antigen (1.99 vs. 1.56 log IU/mL; P = .01) at week 48 than patients on entecavir alone.

Data Source: A randomized clinical trial of 160 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection.

Disclosures: The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, which manufactures entecavir, and Roche, which manufactures pegylated interferon alfa-2a. Dr. Sonneveld reported receiving speakers fees and educational support from Roche.

Ribavirin dose reduction, erythropoietin combat HCV anemia

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Ribavirin dose reduction, erythropoietin combat HCV anemia

BOSTON  – Anemia developed significantly more often among patients with hepatitis C virus infection and compensated cirrhosis than among noncirrhotic patients during triple therapy in a randomized, open-label trial of treatment-naive patients, but in most instances the anemia was effectively treated.

In an anemia management subanalysis of a study comparing sustained virologic response (SVR) rates in cirrhotic and noncirrhotic patients treated with boceprevir (Victrelis), pegylated interferon alfa-2b (Peg-Intron), and ribavirin (RBV), 57% of patients with cirrhosis and anemia treated with a ribavirin dose reduction had an SVR, compared with 64% of those treated with erythropoietin. Among noncirrhotic patients with anemia, the respective SVR rates were 73% and 72%; none of the differences was significant, Dr. Eric J. Lawitz reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Eric J. Lawitz.

"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Lawitz, medical director and principal investigator at Alamo Medical Research in San Antonio, Tex., adding that ribavirin dose reductions should be the initial strategy for managing anemia, followed, if necessary, by erythropoietin.

In the trial, 687 treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections were treated for 4 weeks with pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) alfa-2b and RBV, then 24 or 44 weeks of boceprevir added in. Baseline hemoglobin levels ranged from 12 g/dL to15 g/dL for women, and from 13 g/dL to15 g/dL for men.

Patients with a hemoglobin level approaching 10 g/dL or less (tested from baseline through week 48) were randomized to either ribavirin dose reduction (249 patients) in 200-mg increments (first increment of 400 mg for initial 1,400-mg daily doses) at the investigators’ discretion, or to erythropoietin (251 patients) at 40,000 U/wk, modifiable to 20,000 U/wk or 60,000 U/wk at the investigator’s discretion. The remaining patients received anemia prophylaxis but were not randomized.

If the hemoglobin level dropped to 8.5 g/dL, patients could receive the other treatment as a secondary intervention, and patients with a hemoglobin level of 7.5 g/dL were discontinued from all study drugs.

Primary efficacy measures for all patients (cirrhotic and noncirrhotic) in each anemia strategy group were identical, with 82% having an end-of-treatment response, 71% having an SVR, and 10% experiencing relapse.

Among cirrhotic vs. noncirrhotic patients, rates were 68% vs. 76% for end-of-treatment response , 55% vs. 64% for SVR, and 18% vs. 11% for relapse.

Patients with cirrhosis were significantly more likely to require a secondary anemia intervention (44% vs. 26%, P = .009). Among noncirrhotic patients (but not cirrhotic patients), a secondary anemia intervention was associated with a greater likelihood of SVR (80% vs. 70% for only one intervention, P = .05).

Serious adverse events occurred in 20% of cirrhotic patients and 12% of noncirrhotic patients, but only one study death occurred. The noncirrhotic patient died of a cardiac arrest, which was considered to be unrelated to therapy.

Treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 3% of patients with cirrhosis and 2% of those without cirrhosis. Drug discontinuation for adverse events occurred in 17% of cirrhotic patients, and 16% of noncirrhotic patients.

Cirrhotic patients were more likely to have hemoglobin concentrations ranging from 6.5 to 8.0 g/dL than were noncirrhotic patients, but no patient in either group had a hemoglobin concentration below 6.5 g/dL.

Neutrophil counts in the range of 500-749/mm3 occurred in 24% of cirrhotic patients and 27% of noncirrhotic patients, and counts below 500/mm3 were seen in 20% and 12%.

Platelet counts from 25,000 to 49,999/mm3 occurred in 22% of cirrhotic patients and 2% of noncirrhotic patients. Counts below 25,000/mm3 were seen in 3% vs. less than 1%, respectively. Transfusion rates were similar between the groups.

The study was funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme, which manufactures boceprevir. Dr. Lawitz disclosed receiving grant and research support from the company.

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BOSTON  – Anemia developed significantly more often among patients with hepatitis C virus infection and compensated cirrhosis than among noncirrhotic patients during triple therapy in a randomized, open-label trial of treatment-naive patients, but in most instances the anemia was effectively treated.

In an anemia management subanalysis of a study comparing sustained virologic response (SVR) rates in cirrhotic and noncirrhotic patients treated with boceprevir (Victrelis), pegylated interferon alfa-2b (Peg-Intron), and ribavirin (RBV), 57% of patients with cirrhosis and anemia treated with a ribavirin dose reduction had an SVR, compared with 64% of those treated with erythropoietin. Among noncirrhotic patients with anemia, the respective SVR rates were 73% and 72%; none of the differences was significant, Dr. Eric J. Lawitz reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Eric J. Lawitz.

"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Lawitz, medical director and principal investigator at Alamo Medical Research in San Antonio, Tex., adding that ribavirin dose reductions should be the initial strategy for managing anemia, followed, if necessary, by erythropoietin.

In the trial, 687 treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections were treated for 4 weeks with pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) alfa-2b and RBV, then 24 or 44 weeks of boceprevir added in. Baseline hemoglobin levels ranged from 12 g/dL to15 g/dL for women, and from 13 g/dL to15 g/dL for men.

Patients with a hemoglobin level approaching 10 g/dL or less (tested from baseline through week 48) were randomized to either ribavirin dose reduction (249 patients) in 200-mg increments (first increment of 400 mg for initial 1,400-mg daily doses) at the investigators’ discretion, or to erythropoietin (251 patients) at 40,000 U/wk, modifiable to 20,000 U/wk or 60,000 U/wk at the investigator’s discretion. The remaining patients received anemia prophylaxis but were not randomized.

If the hemoglobin level dropped to 8.5 g/dL, patients could receive the other treatment as a secondary intervention, and patients with a hemoglobin level of 7.5 g/dL were discontinued from all study drugs.

Primary efficacy measures for all patients (cirrhotic and noncirrhotic) in each anemia strategy group were identical, with 82% having an end-of-treatment response, 71% having an SVR, and 10% experiencing relapse.

Among cirrhotic vs. noncirrhotic patients, rates were 68% vs. 76% for end-of-treatment response , 55% vs. 64% for SVR, and 18% vs. 11% for relapse.

Patients with cirrhosis were significantly more likely to require a secondary anemia intervention (44% vs. 26%, P = .009). Among noncirrhotic patients (but not cirrhotic patients), a secondary anemia intervention was associated with a greater likelihood of SVR (80% vs. 70% for only one intervention, P = .05).

Serious adverse events occurred in 20% of cirrhotic patients and 12% of noncirrhotic patients, but only one study death occurred. The noncirrhotic patient died of a cardiac arrest, which was considered to be unrelated to therapy.

Treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 3% of patients with cirrhosis and 2% of those without cirrhosis. Drug discontinuation for adverse events occurred in 17% of cirrhotic patients, and 16% of noncirrhotic patients.

Cirrhotic patients were more likely to have hemoglobin concentrations ranging from 6.5 to 8.0 g/dL than were noncirrhotic patients, but no patient in either group had a hemoglobin concentration below 6.5 g/dL.

Neutrophil counts in the range of 500-749/mm3 occurred in 24% of cirrhotic patients and 27% of noncirrhotic patients, and counts below 500/mm3 were seen in 20% and 12%.

Platelet counts from 25,000 to 49,999/mm3 occurred in 22% of cirrhotic patients and 2% of noncirrhotic patients. Counts below 25,000/mm3 were seen in 3% vs. less than 1%, respectively. Transfusion rates were similar between the groups.

The study was funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme, which manufactures boceprevir. Dr. Lawitz disclosed receiving grant and research support from the company.

BOSTON  – Anemia developed significantly more often among patients with hepatitis C virus infection and compensated cirrhosis than among noncirrhotic patients during triple therapy in a randomized, open-label trial of treatment-naive patients, but in most instances the anemia was effectively treated.

In an anemia management subanalysis of a study comparing sustained virologic response (SVR) rates in cirrhotic and noncirrhotic patients treated with boceprevir (Victrelis), pegylated interferon alfa-2b (Peg-Intron), and ribavirin (RBV), 57% of patients with cirrhosis and anemia treated with a ribavirin dose reduction had an SVR, compared with 64% of those treated with erythropoietin. Among noncirrhotic patients with anemia, the respective SVR rates were 73% and 72%; none of the differences was significant, Dr. Eric J. Lawitz reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Eric J. Lawitz.

"Sustained viral responses are comparable in cirrhotic patients when anemia is managed by ribavirin dose reduction or erythropoietin," said Dr. Lawitz, medical director and principal investigator at Alamo Medical Research in San Antonio, Tex., adding that ribavirin dose reductions should be the initial strategy for managing anemia, followed, if necessary, by erythropoietin.

In the trial, 687 treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections were treated for 4 weeks with pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) alfa-2b and RBV, then 24 or 44 weeks of boceprevir added in. Baseline hemoglobin levels ranged from 12 g/dL to15 g/dL for women, and from 13 g/dL to15 g/dL for men.

Patients with a hemoglobin level approaching 10 g/dL or less (tested from baseline through week 48) were randomized to either ribavirin dose reduction (249 patients) in 200-mg increments (first increment of 400 mg for initial 1,400-mg daily doses) at the investigators’ discretion, or to erythropoietin (251 patients) at 40,000 U/wk, modifiable to 20,000 U/wk or 60,000 U/wk at the investigator’s discretion. The remaining patients received anemia prophylaxis but were not randomized.

If the hemoglobin level dropped to 8.5 g/dL, patients could receive the other treatment as a secondary intervention, and patients with a hemoglobin level of 7.5 g/dL were discontinued from all study drugs.

Primary efficacy measures for all patients (cirrhotic and noncirrhotic) in each anemia strategy group were identical, with 82% having an end-of-treatment response, 71% having an SVR, and 10% experiencing relapse.

Among cirrhotic vs. noncirrhotic patients, rates were 68% vs. 76% for end-of-treatment response , 55% vs. 64% for SVR, and 18% vs. 11% for relapse.

Patients with cirrhosis were significantly more likely to require a secondary anemia intervention (44% vs. 26%, P = .009). Among noncirrhotic patients (but not cirrhotic patients), a secondary anemia intervention was associated with a greater likelihood of SVR (80% vs. 70% for only one intervention, P = .05).

Serious adverse events occurred in 20% of cirrhotic patients and 12% of noncirrhotic patients, but only one study death occurred. The noncirrhotic patient died of a cardiac arrest, which was considered to be unrelated to therapy.

Treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 3% of patients with cirrhosis and 2% of those without cirrhosis. Drug discontinuation for adverse events occurred in 17% of cirrhotic patients, and 16% of noncirrhotic patients.

Cirrhotic patients were more likely to have hemoglobin concentrations ranging from 6.5 to 8.0 g/dL than were noncirrhotic patients, but no patient in either group had a hemoglobin concentration below 6.5 g/dL.

Neutrophil counts in the range of 500-749/mm3 occurred in 24% of cirrhotic patients and 27% of noncirrhotic patients, and counts below 500/mm3 were seen in 20% and 12%.

Platelet counts from 25,000 to 49,999/mm3 occurred in 22% of cirrhotic patients and 2% of noncirrhotic patients. Counts below 25,000/mm3 were seen in 3% vs. less than 1%, respectively. Transfusion rates were similar between the groups.

The study was funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme, which manufactures boceprevir. Dr. Lawitz disclosed receiving grant and research support from the company.

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AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF LIVER DISEASES

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Major Finding: In cirrhotic and noncirrhotic patients treated with boceprevir, pegylated interferon alfa-2b, and ribavirin, 57% of patients with cirrhosis and anemia treated with a ribavirin dose reduction had a sustained virologic response, compared with 64% of those treated with erythropoietin.

Data Source: A randomized open-label trial of 687 treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C virus infection.

Disclosures: The study was funded by Merck Sharp & Dohme, which manufactures boceprevir. Dr. Lawitz disclosed receiving grant and research support from the company.

Avatrombopag reduces preprocedure platelet needs in chronic liver disease

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Avatrombopag reduces preprocedure platelet needs in chronic liver disease

BOSTON – Avatrombopag, an investigational thrombopoietin receptor agonist, may reduce procedure-related bleeding risk in patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia, results of a phase II trial suggest.

Patients randomized to receive avatrambopag (E5501) before invasive surgical or diagnostic procedures had significantly more platelet count responses and required significantly fewer platelet transfusions than did patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Norah Terrault said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

"It was a well-tolerated drug with no dose-limiting adverse events," Dr. Terrault said, although she noted that one patient had a nonfatal episode of portal-vein thrombosis that may have been related to the drug.

Avatrombopag has been shown to mimic the effects of thrombopoietin both in vitro and in vivo, and in a phase II study it was shown to increase platelet counts in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia.

Dr. Terrault, associate professor of medicine in the division of gastroenterology at the University of California, San Francisco, and her colleagues tested the efficacy of short-course avatrombopag in 130 patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia prior to a planned invasive procedure. The patients were all adults with cirrhosis from viral hepatitis, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or alcoholic liver disease.

The trial, labeled E5501-G000-202, enrolled patients into two cohorts. In cohort A, 67 patients were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or a loading dose of a first-generation formulation of avatrombopag 100 mg on day 1, followed by a maintenance dose on days 2-7 of either 20, 40, or 80 mg daily.

In cohort B, 63 patients were randomized either to placebo or to a second-generation formulation of avatrombopag at 80 mg on day 1, followed by either 10 mg daily for days 2-7 or 20 mg/day for days 2-4 and placebo on days 5, 6, and 7.

Patients in both cohorts were scheduled for procedures 1-4 days after the end of drug dosing.

The primary end point was a platelet count response – defined as a platelet count increase from baseline of at least 20 × 109/L and at least one count of greater than 50 × 109/L during days 4-8 from the start of treatment. In an intention-to-treat analysis, the proportion of patients achieving the primary end point was significantly higher in each cohort compared with controls.

In cohort A, the respective responses in the 20- and 80-mg groups were seen in 7 of 18 patients on the 20-mg dose (38.9%) and in 13 of 17 on the 80-mg dose (76.5%), compared with 1 of 16 (6.3%) controls (P less than .05 for both comparisons). There was no significant difference between patients given a placebo vs. a 40-mg dose, however.

In cohort B, 9 of 21 patients on the 10-mg dose (42.9%) had a platelet count response, as did 11 of 21 (52.4%) in the 20-mg group, compared with 2 of 21 on placebo (9.5%; P less than .05 for both comparisons).

The investigators also performed an exploratory analysis looking at platelet transfusion requirements for 58 of the patients in cohort B and found that 7 of 20 (35%) controls needed preprocedure platelets, compared with 1 of 19 (5.3%) each in the 10- and 20-mg avatrombopag groups (P less than .05).

In the combined cohorts, 78 of 93 (83.9%) patients assigned to the drug had treatment-emergent adverse events, compared with 28 of 37 (75.7%) assigned to placebo. There were 15 grade-3 or -4 adverse events among avatrombopag patients (16.1%), compared with 5 among controls (13.5%).

There were three severe treatment-related events, all in patients who received the active drug, and 16 serious treatment-related events among those taking avatrombopag, compared with four on placebo (17.2% vs. 10.8%).

One patient – a 55-year-old with a history of cardiovascular disease, Child-Pugh class C cirrhosis, and a MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) score of 19 – died. The death was attributed to acute respiratory failure, cardiopulmonary arrest, and metabolic acidosis.

A 61-year-old man with Child-Pugh class C disease and a MELD score of 19 but no hepatocellular carcinoma had weight gain on study day 34, which was shown on Doppler ultrasound to be portal-vein thrombus. His peak platelet count was 199 × 109/L on day 17. He was successfully treated with embolization and anticoagulation therapy.

Investigators are currently planning phase III trials with avatrombopag, Dr. Terrault said.

The study was funded by Eisai, maker of avatrombopag. Dr. Terrault receives grant and research support from the company and serves in an advisory capacity.

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BOSTON – Avatrombopag, an investigational thrombopoietin receptor agonist, may reduce procedure-related bleeding risk in patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia, results of a phase II trial suggest.

Patients randomized to receive avatrambopag (E5501) before invasive surgical or diagnostic procedures had significantly more platelet count responses and required significantly fewer platelet transfusions than did patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Norah Terrault said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

"It was a well-tolerated drug with no dose-limiting adverse events," Dr. Terrault said, although she noted that one patient had a nonfatal episode of portal-vein thrombosis that may have been related to the drug.

Avatrombopag has been shown to mimic the effects of thrombopoietin both in vitro and in vivo, and in a phase II study it was shown to increase platelet counts in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia.

Dr. Terrault, associate professor of medicine in the division of gastroenterology at the University of California, San Francisco, and her colleagues tested the efficacy of short-course avatrombopag in 130 patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia prior to a planned invasive procedure. The patients were all adults with cirrhosis from viral hepatitis, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or alcoholic liver disease.

The trial, labeled E5501-G000-202, enrolled patients into two cohorts. In cohort A, 67 patients were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or a loading dose of a first-generation formulation of avatrombopag 100 mg on day 1, followed by a maintenance dose on days 2-7 of either 20, 40, or 80 mg daily.

In cohort B, 63 patients were randomized either to placebo or to a second-generation formulation of avatrombopag at 80 mg on day 1, followed by either 10 mg daily for days 2-7 or 20 mg/day for days 2-4 and placebo on days 5, 6, and 7.

Patients in both cohorts were scheduled for procedures 1-4 days after the end of drug dosing.

The primary end point was a platelet count response – defined as a platelet count increase from baseline of at least 20 × 109/L and at least one count of greater than 50 × 109/L during days 4-8 from the start of treatment. In an intention-to-treat analysis, the proportion of patients achieving the primary end point was significantly higher in each cohort compared with controls.

In cohort A, the respective responses in the 20- and 80-mg groups were seen in 7 of 18 patients on the 20-mg dose (38.9%) and in 13 of 17 on the 80-mg dose (76.5%), compared with 1 of 16 (6.3%) controls (P less than .05 for both comparisons). There was no significant difference between patients given a placebo vs. a 40-mg dose, however.

In cohort B, 9 of 21 patients on the 10-mg dose (42.9%) had a platelet count response, as did 11 of 21 (52.4%) in the 20-mg group, compared with 2 of 21 on placebo (9.5%; P less than .05 for both comparisons).

The investigators also performed an exploratory analysis looking at platelet transfusion requirements for 58 of the patients in cohort B and found that 7 of 20 (35%) controls needed preprocedure platelets, compared with 1 of 19 (5.3%) each in the 10- and 20-mg avatrombopag groups (P less than .05).

In the combined cohorts, 78 of 93 (83.9%) patients assigned to the drug had treatment-emergent adverse events, compared with 28 of 37 (75.7%) assigned to placebo. There were 15 grade-3 or -4 adverse events among avatrombopag patients (16.1%), compared with 5 among controls (13.5%).

There were three severe treatment-related events, all in patients who received the active drug, and 16 serious treatment-related events among those taking avatrombopag, compared with four on placebo (17.2% vs. 10.8%).

One patient – a 55-year-old with a history of cardiovascular disease, Child-Pugh class C cirrhosis, and a MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) score of 19 – died. The death was attributed to acute respiratory failure, cardiopulmonary arrest, and metabolic acidosis.

A 61-year-old man with Child-Pugh class C disease and a MELD score of 19 but no hepatocellular carcinoma had weight gain on study day 34, which was shown on Doppler ultrasound to be portal-vein thrombus. His peak platelet count was 199 × 109/L on day 17. He was successfully treated with embolization and anticoagulation therapy.

Investigators are currently planning phase III trials with avatrombopag, Dr. Terrault said.

The study was funded by Eisai, maker of avatrombopag. Dr. Terrault receives grant and research support from the company and serves in an advisory capacity.

BOSTON – Avatrombopag, an investigational thrombopoietin receptor agonist, may reduce procedure-related bleeding risk in patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia, results of a phase II trial suggest.

Patients randomized to receive avatrambopag (E5501) before invasive surgical or diagnostic procedures had significantly more platelet count responses and required significantly fewer platelet transfusions than did patients randomized to placebo, Dr. Norah Terrault said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

"It was a well-tolerated drug with no dose-limiting adverse events," Dr. Terrault said, although she noted that one patient had a nonfatal episode of portal-vein thrombosis that may have been related to the drug.

Avatrombopag has been shown to mimic the effects of thrombopoietin both in vitro and in vivo, and in a phase II study it was shown to increase platelet counts in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia.

Dr. Terrault, associate professor of medicine in the division of gastroenterology at the University of California, San Francisco, and her colleagues tested the efficacy of short-course avatrombopag in 130 patients with chronic liver disease and thrombocytopenia prior to a planned invasive procedure. The patients were all adults with cirrhosis from viral hepatitis, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or alcoholic liver disease.

The trial, labeled E5501-G000-202, enrolled patients into two cohorts. In cohort A, 67 patients were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or a loading dose of a first-generation formulation of avatrombopag 100 mg on day 1, followed by a maintenance dose on days 2-7 of either 20, 40, or 80 mg daily.

In cohort B, 63 patients were randomized either to placebo or to a second-generation formulation of avatrombopag at 80 mg on day 1, followed by either 10 mg daily for days 2-7 or 20 mg/day for days 2-4 and placebo on days 5, 6, and 7.

Patients in both cohorts were scheduled for procedures 1-4 days after the end of drug dosing.

The primary end point was a platelet count response – defined as a platelet count increase from baseline of at least 20 × 109/L and at least one count of greater than 50 × 109/L during days 4-8 from the start of treatment. In an intention-to-treat analysis, the proportion of patients achieving the primary end point was significantly higher in each cohort compared with controls.

In cohort A, the respective responses in the 20- and 80-mg groups were seen in 7 of 18 patients on the 20-mg dose (38.9%) and in 13 of 17 on the 80-mg dose (76.5%), compared with 1 of 16 (6.3%) controls (P less than .05 for both comparisons). There was no significant difference between patients given a placebo vs. a 40-mg dose, however.

In cohort B, 9 of 21 patients on the 10-mg dose (42.9%) had a platelet count response, as did 11 of 21 (52.4%) in the 20-mg group, compared with 2 of 21 on placebo (9.5%; P less than .05 for both comparisons).

The investigators also performed an exploratory analysis looking at platelet transfusion requirements for 58 of the patients in cohort B and found that 7 of 20 (35%) controls needed preprocedure platelets, compared with 1 of 19 (5.3%) each in the 10- and 20-mg avatrombopag groups (P less than .05).

In the combined cohorts, 78 of 93 (83.9%) patients assigned to the drug had treatment-emergent adverse events, compared with 28 of 37 (75.7%) assigned to placebo. There were 15 grade-3 or -4 adverse events among avatrombopag patients (16.1%), compared with 5 among controls (13.5%).

There were three severe treatment-related events, all in patients who received the active drug, and 16 serious treatment-related events among those taking avatrombopag, compared with four on placebo (17.2% vs. 10.8%).

One patient – a 55-year-old with a history of cardiovascular disease, Child-Pugh class C cirrhosis, and a MELD (Model for End-Stage Liver Disease) score of 19 – died. The death was attributed to acute respiratory failure, cardiopulmonary arrest, and metabolic acidosis.

A 61-year-old man with Child-Pugh class C disease and a MELD score of 19 but no hepatocellular carcinoma had weight gain on study day 34, which was shown on Doppler ultrasound to be portal-vein thrombus. His peak platelet count was 199 × 109/L on day 17. He was successfully treated with embolization and anticoagulation therapy.

Investigators are currently planning phase III trials with avatrombopag, Dr. Terrault said.

The study was funded by Eisai, maker of avatrombopag. Dr. Terrault receives grant and research support from the company and serves in an advisory capacity.

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Major Finding: In a study cohort with a second-generation formulation of avatrombopag, 9 of 21 patients on a 10-mg daily dose (42.9%) had a platelet count response, as did 11 of 21 (52.4%) in the 20-mg group, compared with 2 of 21 on placebo (9.5%; P less than .05 for both comparisons).

Data Source: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase II trial.

Disclosures: The study was funded by Eisai, maker of avatrombopag. Dr. Terrault receives grant and research support from the company and serves in an advisory capacity.

Tenofovir alone suffices against lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B

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BOSTON  – In patients who had chronic hepatitis B infections and documented lamivudine resistance, tenofovir with or without emtricitabine produced high rates of viral suppression with no detectable resistance over 2 years.

In a phase IIIb randomized study, 89% of lamivudine-resistant patients with HBV who were randomly assigned to receive tenofovir (Viread) alone met the primary end point of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL, compared with 86% of those assigned to a tenofovir/emtricitabine (Emtriva) combination, in an intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Scott Fung, assistant professor of hepatology at the University of Toronto, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

©CDC/ Dr. Erskine Palmer
"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Scott Fung said.

"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Fung said.

In addition to the high rate of viral resistance, tenofovir was associated with normalization of ALT levels in a majority of patients, and with no emergent viral resistance, he said.

The investigators enrolled 280 patients who carried virus with lamivudine-resistant mutations, were viremic (HBV DNA greater than 103/IU per mL), and were still on lamivudine until the day of randomization. Current or prior treatment with adefovir (Hepsera) was allowed as long as the patient had received less than 48 total weeks of therapy.

A total of 133 patients who were assigned to receive tenofovir 300 mg daily completed 96 weeks of treatment and were thus available for analysis, as were 125 of those assigned to emtricitabine/tenofovir in a fixed-dose combination.

As noted before, the rates of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL were 89% for the monotherapy arm and 86% for the combination in an analysis that considered missing data as treatment failure. When missing data were excluded from an on-treatment analysis, however, the respective rates were 96% and 95%.

Using a lower cutoff point, less than 169 copies/mL, the respective rates at 96 weeks were 86% and 84%.

In all, 70% of patients in each group had normal ALT levels at 96 weeks, and among patients with abnormally high levels at baseline nearly two-thirds in each group had normalization of ALT during the study.

The HBV e-antigen loss rate was modest, at 15% of patients on tenofovir alone and 13% on the combination. HBeAg seroconversion occurred in 11% and 10%, respectively.

Among 18 patients who qualified for genotypic resistance testing at their last on-treatment visit, there were no viral isolates demonstrating tenofovir resistance, Dr. Fung said.

There were three deaths during the study: one from gastrointestinal hemorrhage in a patient in the monotherapy group and two – one from cardiac arrest and sepsis in a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma and one from bronchopneumonia – in the combination group. The deaths were judged to be unrelated to study treatment.

There was only one serious treatment-related adverse event, occurring in the combination group (the event was unspecified), and only three patients discontinued because of adverse events – one in the monotherapy arm and two in the combination group. Five patients on tenofovir alone and four on the combination had creatinine clearance less than 50 mL/min at study end; these patients all had low baseline creatinine clearance levels, ranging from 41 to 69 mL/min, Dr. Fung noted.

The authors also looked at bone mineral density levels at baseline and at study end in 239 patients for who dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry data were available. At baseline, 33% of patients were determined to have osteopenia and 7% to have osteoporosis on spine scans and 22% and 1.3%, respectively, on hip scans. Repeat scans at 96 weeks showed that the majority of patients had a reduction in bone mineral density of about 22%, a decline that was considered not clinically significant, he said.

The study was funded by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Fung disclosed receiving grant/research support and speaking/teaching fees from the company.

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BOSTON  – In patients who had chronic hepatitis B infections and documented lamivudine resistance, tenofovir with or without emtricitabine produced high rates of viral suppression with no detectable resistance over 2 years.

In a phase IIIb randomized study, 89% of lamivudine-resistant patients with HBV who were randomly assigned to receive tenofovir (Viread) alone met the primary end point of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL, compared with 86% of those assigned to a tenofovir/emtricitabine (Emtriva) combination, in an intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Scott Fung, assistant professor of hepatology at the University of Toronto, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

©CDC/ Dr. Erskine Palmer
"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Scott Fung said.

"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Fung said.

In addition to the high rate of viral resistance, tenofovir was associated with normalization of ALT levels in a majority of patients, and with no emergent viral resistance, he said.

The investigators enrolled 280 patients who carried virus with lamivudine-resistant mutations, were viremic (HBV DNA greater than 103/IU per mL), and were still on lamivudine until the day of randomization. Current or prior treatment with adefovir (Hepsera) was allowed as long as the patient had received less than 48 total weeks of therapy.

A total of 133 patients who were assigned to receive tenofovir 300 mg daily completed 96 weeks of treatment and were thus available for analysis, as were 125 of those assigned to emtricitabine/tenofovir in a fixed-dose combination.

As noted before, the rates of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL were 89% for the monotherapy arm and 86% for the combination in an analysis that considered missing data as treatment failure. When missing data were excluded from an on-treatment analysis, however, the respective rates were 96% and 95%.

Using a lower cutoff point, less than 169 copies/mL, the respective rates at 96 weeks were 86% and 84%.

In all, 70% of patients in each group had normal ALT levels at 96 weeks, and among patients with abnormally high levels at baseline nearly two-thirds in each group had normalization of ALT during the study.

The HBV e-antigen loss rate was modest, at 15% of patients on tenofovir alone and 13% on the combination. HBeAg seroconversion occurred in 11% and 10%, respectively.

Among 18 patients who qualified for genotypic resistance testing at their last on-treatment visit, there were no viral isolates demonstrating tenofovir resistance, Dr. Fung said.

There were three deaths during the study: one from gastrointestinal hemorrhage in a patient in the monotherapy group and two – one from cardiac arrest and sepsis in a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma and one from bronchopneumonia – in the combination group. The deaths were judged to be unrelated to study treatment.

There was only one serious treatment-related adverse event, occurring in the combination group (the event was unspecified), and only three patients discontinued because of adverse events – one in the monotherapy arm and two in the combination group. Five patients on tenofovir alone and four on the combination had creatinine clearance less than 50 mL/min at study end; these patients all had low baseline creatinine clearance levels, ranging from 41 to 69 mL/min, Dr. Fung noted.

The authors also looked at bone mineral density levels at baseline and at study end in 239 patients for who dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry data were available. At baseline, 33% of patients were determined to have osteopenia and 7% to have osteoporosis on spine scans and 22% and 1.3%, respectively, on hip scans. Repeat scans at 96 weeks showed that the majority of patients had a reduction in bone mineral density of about 22%, a decline that was considered not clinically significant, he said.

The study was funded by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Fung disclosed receiving grant/research support and speaking/teaching fees from the company.

BOSTON  – In patients who had chronic hepatitis B infections and documented lamivudine resistance, tenofovir with or without emtricitabine produced high rates of viral suppression with no detectable resistance over 2 years.

In a phase IIIb randomized study, 89% of lamivudine-resistant patients with HBV who were randomly assigned to receive tenofovir (Viread) alone met the primary end point of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL, compared with 86% of those assigned to a tenofovir/emtricitabine (Emtriva) combination, in an intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Scott Fung, assistant professor of hepatology at the University of Toronto, reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

©CDC/ Dr. Erskine Palmer
"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Scott Fung said.

"Tenofovir monotherapy was just as safe and effective as combination therapy, suggesting that monotherapy alone was sufficient for treatment of hepatitis B," Dr. Fung said.

In addition to the high rate of viral resistance, tenofovir was associated with normalization of ALT levels in a majority of patients, and with no emergent viral resistance, he said.

The investigators enrolled 280 patients who carried virus with lamivudine-resistant mutations, were viremic (HBV DNA greater than 103/IU per mL), and were still on lamivudine until the day of randomization. Current or prior treatment with adefovir (Hepsera) was allowed as long as the patient had received less than 48 total weeks of therapy.

A total of 133 patients who were assigned to receive tenofovir 300 mg daily completed 96 weeks of treatment and were thus available for analysis, as were 125 of those assigned to emtricitabine/tenofovir in a fixed-dose combination.

As noted before, the rates of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL were 89% for the monotherapy arm and 86% for the combination in an analysis that considered missing data as treatment failure. When missing data were excluded from an on-treatment analysis, however, the respective rates were 96% and 95%.

Using a lower cutoff point, less than 169 copies/mL, the respective rates at 96 weeks were 86% and 84%.

In all, 70% of patients in each group had normal ALT levels at 96 weeks, and among patients with abnormally high levels at baseline nearly two-thirds in each group had normalization of ALT during the study.

The HBV e-antigen loss rate was modest, at 15% of patients on tenofovir alone and 13% on the combination. HBeAg seroconversion occurred in 11% and 10%, respectively.

Among 18 patients who qualified for genotypic resistance testing at their last on-treatment visit, there were no viral isolates demonstrating tenofovir resistance, Dr. Fung said.

There were three deaths during the study: one from gastrointestinal hemorrhage in a patient in the monotherapy group and two – one from cardiac arrest and sepsis in a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma and one from bronchopneumonia – in the combination group. The deaths were judged to be unrelated to study treatment.

There was only one serious treatment-related adverse event, occurring in the combination group (the event was unspecified), and only three patients discontinued because of adverse events – one in the monotherapy arm and two in the combination group. Five patients on tenofovir alone and four on the combination had creatinine clearance less than 50 mL/min at study end; these patients all had low baseline creatinine clearance levels, ranging from 41 to 69 mL/min, Dr. Fung noted.

The authors also looked at bone mineral density levels at baseline and at study end in 239 patients for who dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry data were available. At baseline, 33% of patients were determined to have osteopenia and 7% to have osteoporosis on spine scans and 22% and 1.3%, respectively, on hip scans. Repeat scans at 96 weeks showed that the majority of patients had a reduction in bone mineral density of about 22%, a decline that was considered not clinically significant, he said.

The study was funded by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Fung disclosed receiving grant/research support and speaking/teaching fees from the company.

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Major Finding: In a phase IIIb randomized study, 89% of lamivudine-resistant patients with HBV who received tenofovir alone met the primary end point of HBV DNA below 400 copies/mL, compared with 86% of those given a tenofovir/emtricitabine combination.

Data Source: A randomized, double-blind phase IIIb study

Disclosures: The study was funded by Gilead Sciences. Dr. Fung disclosed receiving grant/research support and speaking/teaching fees from the company.

HCV coinfections can be safely treated in patients with HIV

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BOSTON – Patients with HIV and hepatitis C coinfection had high levels of sustained viral response with regimens combining select antiretroviral agents with telaprevir, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin, said investigators at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The key to avoiding adverse drug interactions between telaprevir (Incivek) and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens is careful selection of HIV therapy, said Dr. Mark Sulkowski, medical director of the viral hepatitis center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Dr. Mark Sulkowski

Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues showed in a randomized phase III study that a combination of specific antiretroviral agents with telaprevir and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) was associated with a 74% SVR24 rate, compared with HAART and PEG-IFN only.

"Overall, 74% of patients treated with telaprevir in combination with peg-interferon and ribavirin achieved SVR [sustained virological response], compared to 45% of those treated with placebo. Drug interactions with telaprevir and selected antiretroviral therapies, specifically atazanavir/ritonavir and efavirenz, were not clinically meaningful," Dr. Sulkowski said.

A separate study by European investigators showed that the likelihood that patients with HIV/HCV coinfection will clear HCV from serum may depend on the presence of ribavirin in a regimen, and on HCV genotype.

"Ribavirin is important in the management of acute hepatitis C in HIV-positive patients. Almost all patients with genotype 2 and 3 infections were able to clear virus with combination therapy [PEG-IFN and RBV]," said lead investigator Dr. Christoph Boesecke of the University of Bonn, Germany.

Safety Concerns

Some infectious disease specialists have expressed concern that the addition of a direct-acting antiviral agent in combination with PEG-IFN/RBV could compromise the efficacy and/or safety of a HAART regimen.

To test the HAART/direct-acting antiviral agent combination, Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues enrolled patients with HIV/HCV coinfection in a two-part study. In part A, patients were assigned on a 1:1 ratio to receive either telaprevir or placebo, each with PEG-IFN/RBV.

In part B, patients on a HAART regimen (either a combination of efavirenz, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or ritonavir-boosted atazanavir, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or lamivudine) were assigned on a 2:1 basis to receive telaprevir or placebo plus PEG-IFN/RBV. All patients were treated for 48 weeks, with an additional 24 weeks of follow-up.

HCV RNA levels on study were measured at various time points, and the investigators looked for drug interactions, adverse events, viral breakthrough, and other clinical measures.

At 24 weeks post treatment, the HCV sustained virologic response rate (SVR24) among patients treated with telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV but not an antiretroviral therapy was 71%, compared with 33% among those treated with placebo and PEG-IFN/RBV.

Among patients on the HAART regimen containing efavirenz plus telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV, 69% had an SVR24, compared with 38% of those who received the same HAART regimen without telaprevir. Among those on the atazanavir-containing regimen, 73% had an SVR24, compared with 50% of controls who received only PEG-IFN/RBV plus HAART.

The serum concentrations of both atazanavir and efavirenz were similar whether the patients had received telaprevir or not, and there were no cases of HIV viral breakthrough, although CD4 cell counts decreased among patients taking PEG-IFN/RBV and either telaprevir or placebo. Nonetheless, investigators did not see HIV-related adverse events, Dr. Sulkowski said.

Patients on efavirenz did require a telaprevir dose increase, but the required increase was adequate for maintaining exposure to the direct-acting antiviral agent, he added.

Genotype Matters

Dr. Boesecke and his colleagues in the European AIDS Treatment Network looked at the effect of HCV genotype and ribavirin on SVR rates in the treatment of coinfected patients. They reported on 303 HIV-infected men from the Austria, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom who had been diagnosed with acute HCV infections. Of this group, 273 were treated with PEG-IFN/RBV, and 30 were treated with PEG-IFN alone. In all, 88% of the patients who received ribavirin had weight-based doses (1,000 mg for those 75 kg and under, and 1,200 mg for those over 75 kg).

A majority of the patients (69%) were infected with genotype 1; 4% had genotype 2; 11% had genotype 3; and 16% had genotype 4 infections. About one-third of patients had 24 weeks of therapy, and the remaining third had 48 weeks. Median time from HCV diagnosis to the start of treatment was about 10 weeks.

Among all patients, 52% of those received PEG-IFN alone, and 52% of those who also received ribavirin had a rapid virologic response (RVR), defined as HCV RNA negative at 4 weeks. Respective SVR24 rates were 66.7% and 69.6%.

 

 

When the investigators broke it out by genotype, however, they found that while the addition of ribavirin did not significantly change either RVR or SVR24 rates among patients with genotype 1 or 3 infections, 60% of patients with genotype 2 or 3 infections on PEG-IFN monotherapy had a 60% SVR24,, whereas those on PEG-IFN/RBV had a 94% SVR24. indicating a significant benefit to adding RBV (P = .016). The RVR rates were not significantly different in these patients, however.

There were no significant differences in either the total number or severity of adverse events among the various genotypes. In 10% of all cases a ribavirin dose reduction was required, and interferon dose reductions were required in 6% of cases.

Toxicities required stopping HCV therapy in 17 patients (6%).

"We saw high sustained virologic response rates if you treat hepatitis C early on, when it’s still acute, compared to when the disease is left to a chronic course in HIV patients," said Dr. Boesecke

Dr. Sulkowski’s study was supported by Vertex Pharmaceuticals. He is a consultant to the company and has received grant and research support from it. Dr. Boesecke’s study was supported by the European AIDS Treatment Network. He reported no conflict of interest.

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BOSTON – Patients with HIV and hepatitis C coinfection had high levels of sustained viral response with regimens combining select antiretroviral agents with telaprevir, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin, said investigators at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The key to avoiding adverse drug interactions between telaprevir (Incivek) and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens is careful selection of HIV therapy, said Dr. Mark Sulkowski, medical director of the viral hepatitis center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Dr. Mark Sulkowski

Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues showed in a randomized phase III study that a combination of specific antiretroviral agents with telaprevir and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) was associated with a 74% SVR24 rate, compared with HAART and PEG-IFN only.

"Overall, 74% of patients treated with telaprevir in combination with peg-interferon and ribavirin achieved SVR [sustained virological response], compared to 45% of those treated with placebo. Drug interactions with telaprevir and selected antiretroviral therapies, specifically atazanavir/ritonavir and efavirenz, were not clinically meaningful," Dr. Sulkowski said.

A separate study by European investigators showed that the likelihood that patients with HIV/HCV coinfection will clear HCV from serum may depend on the presence of ribavirin in a regimen, and on HCV genotype.

"Ribavirin is important in the management of acute hepatitis C in HIV-positive patients. Almost all patients with genotype 2 and 3 infections were able to clear virus with combination therapy [PEG-IFN and RBV]," said lead investigator Dr. Christoph Boesecke of the University of Bonn, Germany.

Safety Concerns

Some infectious disease specialists have expressed concern that the addition of a direct-acting antiviral agent in combination with PEG-IFN/RBV could compromise the efficacy and/or safety of a HAART regimen.

To test the HAART/direct-acting antiviral agent combination, Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues enrolled patients with HIV/HCV coinfection in a two-part study. In part A, patients were assigned on a 1:1 ratio to receive either telaprevir or placebo, each with PEG-IFN/RBV.

In part B, patients on a HAART regimen (either a combination of efavirenz, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or ritonavir-boosted atazanavir, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or lamivudine) were assigned on a 2:1 basis to receive telaprevir or placebo plus PEG-IFN/RBV. All patients were treated for 48 weeks, with an additional 24 weeks of follow-up.

HCV RNA levels on study were measured at various time points, and the investigators looked for drug interactions, adverse events, viral breakthrough, and other clinical measures.

At 24 weeks post treatment, the HCV sustained virologic response rate (SVR24) among patients treated with telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV but not an antiretroviral therapy was 71%, compared with 33% among those treated with placebo and PEG-IFN/RBV.

Among patients on the HAART regimen containing efavirenz plus telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV, 69% had an SVR24, compared with 38% of those who received the same HAART regimen without telaprevir. Among those on the atazanavir-containing regimen, 73% had an SVR24, compared with 50% of controls who received only PEG-IFN/RBV plus HAART.

The serum concentrations of both atazanavir and efavirenz were similar whether the patients had received telaprevir or not, and there were no cases of HIV viral breakthrough, although CD4 cell counts decreased among patients taking PEG-IFN/RBV and either telaprevir or placebo. Nonetheless, investigators did not see HIV-related adverse events, Dr. Sulkowski said.

Patients on efavirenz did require a telaprevir dose increase, but the required increase was adequate for maintaining exposure to the direct-acting antiviral agent, he added.

Genotype Matters

Dr. Boesecke and his colleagues in the European AIDS Treatment Network looked at the effect of HCV genotype and ribavirin on SVR rates in the treatment of coinfected patients. They reported on 303 HIV-infected men from the Austria, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom who had been diagnosed with acute HCV infections. Of this group, 273 were treated with PEG-IFN/RBV, and 30 were treated with PEG-IFN alone. In all, 88% of the patients who received ribavirin had weight-based doses (1,000 mg for those 75 kg and under, and 1,200 mg for those over 75 kg).

A majority of the patients (69%) were infected with genotype 1; 4% had genotype 2; 11% had genotype 3; and 16% had genotype 4 infections. About one-third of patients had 24 weeks of therapy, and the remaining third had 48 weeks. Median time from HCV diagnosis to the start of treatment was about 10 weeks.

Among all patients, 52% of those received PEG-IFN alone, and 52% of those who also received ribavirin had a rapid virologic response (RVR), defined as HCV RNA negative at 4 weeks. Respective SVR24 rates were 66.7% and 69.6%.

 

 

When the investigators broke it out by genotype, however, they found that while the addition of ribavirin did not significantly change either RVR or SVR24 rates among patients with genotype 1 or 3 infections, 60% of patients with genotype 2 or 3 infections on PEG-IFN monotherapy had a 60% SVR24,, whereas those on PEG-IFN/RBV had a 94% SVR24. indicating a significant benefit to adding RBV (P = .016). The RVR rates were not significantly different in these patients, however.

There were no significant differences in either the total number or severity of adverse events among the various genotypes. In 10% of all cases a ribavirin dose reduction was required, and interferon dose reductions were required in 6% of cases.

Toxicities required stopping HCV therapy in 17 patients (6%).

"We saw high sustained virologic response rates if you treat hepatitis C early on, when it’s still acute, compared to when the disease is left to a chronic course in HIV patients," said Dr. Boesecke

Dr. Sulkowski’s study was supported by Vertex Pharmaceuticals. He is a consultant to the company and has received grant and research support from it. Dr. Boesecke’s study was supported by the European AIDS Treatment Network. He reported no conflict of interest.

BOSTON – Patients with HIV and hepatitis C coinfection had high levels of sustained viral response with regimens combining select antiretroviral agents with telaprevir, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin, said investigators at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The key to avoiding adverse drug interactions between telaprevir (Incivek) and highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens is careful selection of HIV therapy, said Dr. Mark Sulkowski, medical director of the viral hepatitis center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Dr. Mark Sulkowski

Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues showed in a randomized phase III study that a combination of specific antiretroviral agents with telaprevir and pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) was associated with a 74% SVR24 rate, compared with HAART and PEG-IFN only.

"Overall, 74% of patients treated with telaprevir in combination with peg-interferon and ribavirin achieved SVR [sustained virological response], compared to 45% of those treated with placebo. Drug interactions with telaprevir and selected antiretroviral therapies, specifically atazanavir/ritonavir and efavirenz, were not clinically meaningful," Dr. Sulkowski said.

A separate study by European investigators showed that the likelihood that patients with HIV/HCV coinfection will clear HCV from serum may depend on the presence of ribavirin in a regimen, and on HCV genotype.

"Ribavirin is important in the management of acute hepatitis C in HIV-positive patients. Almost all patients with genotype 2 and 3 infections were able to clear virus with combination therapy [PEG-IFN and RBV]," said lead investigator Dr. Christoph Boesecke of the University of Bonn, Germany.

Safety Concerns

Some infectious disease specialists have expressed concern that the addition of a direct-acting antiviral agent in combination with PEG-IFN/RBV could compromise the efficacy and/or safety of a HAART regimen.

To test the HAART/direct-acting antiviral agent combination, Dr. Sulkowski and his colleagues enrolled patients with HIV/HCV coinfection in a two-part study. In part A, patients were assigned on a 1:1 ratio to receive either telaprevir or placebo, each with PEG-IFN/RBV.

In part B, patients on a HAART regimen (either a combination of efavirenz, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or ritonavir-boosted atazanavir, tenofovir, and emtricitabine or lamivudine) were assigned on a 2:1 basis to receive telaprevir or placebo plus PEG-IFN/RBV. All patients were treated for 48 weeks, with an additional 24 weeks of follow-up.

HCV RNA levels on study were measured at various time points, and the investigators looked for drug interactions, adverse events, viral breakthrough, and other clinical measures.

At 24 weeks post treatment, the HCV sustained virologic response rate (SVR24) among patients treated with telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV but not an antiretroviral therapy was 71%, compared with 33% among those treated with placebo and PEG-IFN/RBV.

Among patients on the HAART regimen containing efavirenz plus telaprevir and PEG-IFN/RBV, 69% had an SVR24, compared with 38% of those who received the same HAART regimen without telaprevir. Among those on the atazanavir-containing regimen, 73% had an SVR24, compared with 50% of controls who received only PEG-IFN/RBV plus HAART.

The serum concentrations of both atazanavir and efavirenz were similar whether the patients had received telaprevir or not, and there were no cases of HIV viral breakthrough, although CD4 cell counts decreased among patients taking PEG-IFN/RBV and either telaprevir or placebo. Nonetheless, investigators did not see HIV-related adverse events, Dr. Sulkowski said.

Patients on efavirenz did require a telaprevir dose increase, but the required increase was adequate for maintaining exposure to the direct-acting antiviral agent, he added.

Genotype Matters

Dr. Boesecke and his colleagues in the European AIDS Treatment Network looked at the effect of HCV genotype and ribavirin on SVR rates in the treatment of coinfected patients. They reported on 303 HIV-infected men from the Austria, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom who had been diagnosed with acute HCV infections. Of this group, 273 were treated with PEG-IFN/RBV, and 30 were treated with PEG-IFN alone. In all, 88% of the patients who received ribavirin had weight-based doses (1,000 mg for those 75 kg and under, and 1,200 mg for those over 75 kg).

A majority of the patients (69%) were infected with genotype 1; 4% had genotype 2; 11% had genotype 3; and 16% had genotype 4 infections. About one-third of patients had 24 weeks of therapy, and the remaining third had 48 weeks. Median time from HCV diagnosis to the start of treatment was about 10 weeks.

Among all patients, 52% of those received PEG-IFN alone, and 52% of those who also received ribavirin had a rapid virologic response (RVR), defined as HCV RNA negative at 4 weeks. Respective SVR24 rates were 66.7% and 69.6%.

 

 

When the investigators broke it out by genotype, however, they found that while the addition of ribavirin did not significantly change either RVR or SVR24 rates among patients with genotype 1 or 3 infections, 60% of patients with genotype 2 or 3 infections on PEG-IFN monotherapy had a 60% SVR24,, whereas those on PEG-IFN/RBV had a 94% SVR24. indicating a significant benefit to adding RBV (P = .016). The RVR rates were not significantly different in these patients, however.

There were no significant differences in either the total number or severity of adverse events among the various genotypes. In 10% of all cases a ribavirin dose reduction was required, and interferon dose reductions were required in 6% of cases.

Toxicities required stopping HCV therapy in 17 patients (6%).

"We saw high sustained virologic response rates if you treat hepatitis C early on, when it’s still acute, compared to when the disease is left to a chronic course in HIV patients," said Dr. Boesecke

Dr. Sulkowski’s study was supported by Vertex Pharmaceuticals. He is a consultant to the company and has received grant and research support from it. Dr. Boesecke’s study was supported by the European AIDS Treatment Network. He reported no conflict of interest.

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Major Finding: Among patients with HIV and hepatitis C coinfection, 74% of those treated with telaprevir in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavirin achieved a sustained virologic response, compared with 45% of those treated with placebo and peg-interferon.

Data Source: Randomized placebo-controlled trial and prospective cohort study

Disclosures: Dr. Sulkowski’s study was supported by Vertex Pharmaceuticals. He is a consultant to the company and has received grant and research support from it. Dr. Boesecke’s study was supported by the European AIDS Treatment Network. He reported no conflict of interest.

Triple therapy has poor safety in cirrhotic hepatitis C

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BOSTON – In patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infections and compensated cirrhosis, a combination of a direct-acting antiviral agent, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin produced high on-treatment virologic response rates, but at the cost of significantly increased toxicities in an interim analysis of a French multicenter trial looking at the safety of the regimen.

Although the efficacy of direct-acting antiviral regimens involving the protease inhibitors telaprevir (Incivek) and boceprevir (Victrelis) combined with pegylated interferon alfa-2a or -2b in combination with ribavirin (PEG-IFN/RBV) in cirrhotic nonresponders to prior therapy was good , their safety was "poor," according to Dr. Christophe Hézode of the Hôpital Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.

Virologic response at 16 weeks in a per-protocol analysis was associated with a virologic response rate of 92% with telaprevir and 77% with boceprevir.

However, there were increased rates of serious adverse events and more difficult-to-manage anemia than in phase III trials for telaprevir and boceprevir, which included only a few patients with cirrhosis, Dr. Hézode said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

In treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients with platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or serum albumin levels below 35 g/L, clinicians should weigh the risks and benefits of such regimens, with patients treated on a case-by-case basis because of the high risk for severe complications, Dr. Hézode said.

"However, cirrhotic experienced patients without predictors of severe complications clearly should be treated, but cautiously and carefully monitored," he added.

Dr. Hézode and his coinvestigators in the French Cohort of Therapeutic Failure and Resistances in Patients Treated With a Protease Inhibitor (telaprevir or boceprevir), Pegylated Interferon, and Ribavirin (CUPIC) trial studied two cohorts of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, and compensated cirrhosis (Child Pugh class A) who had either relapsed or had only a partial response to prior therapy, with partial response defined as at least a 2 log10 decline inV RNA but failure to clear virus by week 24.

He presented data on 497 patients who had completed 16 weeks of therapy on one of two regimens. In one cohort, 292 patients received 12 weeks of telaprevir 750 mg every 8 hours, and PEG-IFN alfa-2a (Pegasys) 180 mcg/wk with ribavirin 1,000-1,200 mg/day, followed by PEG-IFN/RBV through 48 weeks. In the second cohort, patients received a 4-week initiation phase with PEG-IFN alfa-2b (PegIntron) and ribavirin, followed by 44 weeks of boceprevir 800 mg every 8 hours, PEG-IFN 1.5 mcg/kg per wk, and ribavirin 800-1,400 mg/day.

At week 16, 45% of patients on telaprevir had had at least one serious adverse event, with 14.7% terminating therapy because of a serious side effect. In all, nearly one-fourth (22.6%) discontinued therapy, and there were five deaths: from septicemia, septic shock, pneumopathy, endocarditis, and bleeding esophageal varices. Other complications in this group included grade 3 or 4 infections in 6.5%, grade 3 or 4 hepatic decompensation in 2%, grade 3/4 asthenia in 5.5%, and renal failure in 1.7%.

Hematologic adverse events included anemia of grade 2 or greater in 30.4%, erythropoietin use in 53.8%, blood transfusion in 16.1%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 13%. In addition, 2.7% of patients had grade 3 or 4 neutropenia, and 1.7% had grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia.

In the boceprevir group, 32.7% had at least one serious adverse event, 26.3% discontinued prematurely, and 7.3% discontinued because of serious events. The cause of one death was described as pneumopathy. Grade 3/4 adverse events involved infections in 2.4%, hepatic decompensation in 2.9%, and asthenia in 5.8%. There were no cases of renal failure in this group.

Hematologic events in patients on boceprevir included grade 2 or greater anemia in 27.8%, erythropoietin use in 46.3%, blood transfusion in 6.3%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 10.7%.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was seen in 4.4%, and grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia in 5.4%. Two patients (1%) in this cohort received thrombopoietin.

In a multivariate analysis, significant baseline predictors of severe complications (death, severe infection, and hepatic decompensation) included platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or lower (odds ratio, 3.11; P = .0098) and a serum albumin level below 35 g/L (OR, 6.33; P less than .0001).

Baseline predictors for severe anemia (hemoglobin less than 8 g/dL) or blood transfusion included female gender (OR, 2.19; P = .023), no lead-in phase (OR, 2.25; P = .018), age 65 years or older (OR, 3.04; P = .0014), and hemoglobin 12 g/dL or lower for women and 13 g/dL or lower for men (OR, 5.30; P less than .0001),

The study was sponsored by ANRS, the French National Agency for Research in AIDS and Viral Hepatitis, with support from INSERM, the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research. Dr. Hézode said that he has no financial conflicts of interest, but disclosed serving as a speaker and adviser for Abbott, BMS, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

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BOSTON – In patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infections and compensated cirrhosis, a combination of a direct-acting antiviral agent, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin produced high on-treatment virologic response rates, but at the cost of significantly increased toxicities in an interim analysis of a French multicenter trial looking at the safety of the regimen.

Although the efficacy of direct-acting antiviral regimens involving the protease inhibitors telaprevir (Incivek) and boceprevir (Victrelis) combined with pegylated interferon alfa-2a or -2b in combination with ribavirin (PEG-IFN/RBV) in cirrhotic nonresponders to prior therapy was good , their safety was "poor," according to Dr. Christophe Hézode of the Hôpital Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.

Virologic response at 16 weeks in a per-protocol analysis was associated with a virologic response rate of 92% with telaprevir and 77% with boceprevir.

However, there were increased rates of serious adverse events and more difficult-to-manage anemia than in phase III trials for telaprevir and boceprevir, which included only a few patients with cirrhosis, Dr. Hézode said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

In treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients with platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or serum albumin levels below 35 g/L, clinicians should weigh the risks and benefits of such regimens, with patients treated on a case-by-case basis because of the high risk for severe complications, Dr. Hézode said.

"However, cirrhotic experienced patients without predictors of severe complications clearly should be treated, but cautiously and carefully monitored," he added.

Dr. Hézode and his coinvestigators in the French Cohort of Therapeutic Failure and Resistances in Patients Treated With a Protease Inhibitor (telaprevir or boceprevir), Pegylated Interferon, and Ribavirin (CUPIC) trial studied two cohorts of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, and compensated cirrhosis (Child Pugh class A) who had either relapsed or had only a partial response to prior therapy, with partial response defined as at least a 2 log10 decline inV RNA but failure to clear virus by week 24.

He presented data on 497 patients who had completed 16 weeks of therapy on one of two regimens. In one cohort, 292 patients received 12 weeks of telaprevir 750 mg every 8 hours, and PEG-IFN alfa-2a (Pegasys) 180 mcg/wk with ribavirin 1,000-1,200 mg/day, followed by PEG-IFN/RBV through 48 weeks. In the second cohort, patients received a 4-week initiation phase with PEG-IFN alfa-2b (PegIntron) and ribavirin, followed by 44 weeks of boceprevir 800 mg every 8 hours, PEG-IFN 1.5 mcg/kg per wk, and ribavirin 800-1,400 mg/day.

At week 16, 45% of patients on telaprevir had had at least one serious adverse event, with 14.7% terminating therapy because of a serious side effect. In all, nearly one-fourth (22.6%) discontinued therapy, and there were five deaths: from septicemia, septic shock, pneumopathy, endocarditis, and bleeding esophageal varices. Other complications in this group included grade 3 or 4 infections in 6.5%, grade 3 or 4 hepatic decompensation in 2%, grade 3/4 asthenia in 5.5%, and renal failure in 1.7%.

Hematologic adverse events included anemia of grade 2 or greater in 30.4%, erythropoietin use in 53.8%, blood transfusion in 16.1%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 13%. In addition, 2.7% of patients had grade 3 or 4 neutropenia, and 1.7% had grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia.

In the boceprevir group, 32.7% had at least one serious adverse event, 26.3% discontinued prematurely, and 7.3% discontinued because of serious events. The cause of one death was described as pneumopathy. Grade 3/4 adverse events involved infections in 2.4%, hepatic decompensation in 2.9%, and asthenia in 5.8%. There were no cases of renal failure in this group.

Hematologic events in patients on boceprevir included grade 2 or greater anemia in 27.8%, erythropoietin use in 46.3%, blood transfusion in 6.3%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 10.7%.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was seen in 4.4%, and grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia in 5.4%. Two patients (1%) in this cohort received thrombopoietin.

In a multivariate analysis, significant baseline predictors of severe complications (death, severe infection, and hepatic decompensation) included platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or lower (odds ratio, 3.11; P = .0098) and a serum albumin level below 35 g/L (OR, 6.33; P less than .0001).

Baseline predictors for severe anemia (hemoglobin less than 8 g/dL) or blood transfusion included female gender (OR, 2.19; P = .023), no lead-in phase (OR, 2.25; P = .018), age 65 years or older (OR, 3.04; P = .0014), and hemoglobin 12 g/dL or lower for women and 13 g/dL or lower for men (OR, 5.30; P less than .0001),

The study was sponsored by ANRS, the French National Agency for Research in AIDS and Viral Hepatitis, with support from INSERM, the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research. Dr. Hézode said that he has no financial conflicts of interest, but disclosed serving as a speaker and adviser for Abbott, BMS, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

BOSTON – In patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infections and compensated cirrhosis, a combination of a direct-acting antiviral agent, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin produced high on-treatment virologic response rates, but at the cost of significantly increased toxicities in an interim analysis of a French multicenter trial looking at the safety of the regimen.

Although the efficacy of direct-acting antiviral regimens involving the protease inhibitors telaprevir (Incivek) and boceprevir (Victrelis) combined with pegylated interferon alfa-2a or -2b in combination with ribavirin (PEG-IFN/RBV) in cirrhotic nonresponders to prior therapy was good , their safety was "poor," according to Dr. Christophe Hézode of the Hôpital Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.

Virologic response at 16 weeks in a per-protocol analysis was associated with a virologic response rate of 92% with telaprevir and 77% with boceprevir.

However, there were increased rates of serious adverse events and more difficult-to-manage anemia than in phase III trials for telaprevir and boceprevir, which included only a few patients with cirrhosis, Dr. Hézode said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

In treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients with platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or serum albumin levels below 35 g/L, clinicians should weigh the risks and benefits of such regimens, with patients treated on a case-by-case basis because of the high risk for severe complications, Dr. Hézode said.

"However, cirrhotic experienced patients without predictors of severe complications clearly should be treated, but cautiously and carefully monitored," he added.

Dr. Hézode and his coinvestigators in the French Cohort of Therapeutic Failure and Resistances in Patients Treated With a Protease Inhibitor (telaprevir or boceprevir), Pegylated Interferon, and Ribavirin (CUPIC) trial studied two cohorts of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, and compensated cirrhosis (Child Pugh class A) who had either relapsed or had only a partial response to prior therapy, with partial response defined as at least a 2 log10 decline inV RNA but failure to clear virus by week 24.

He presented data on 497 patients who had completed 16 weeks of therapy on one of two regimens. In one cohort, 292 patients received 12 weeks of telaprevir 750 mg every 8 hours, and PEG-IFN alfa-2a (Pegasys) 180 mcg/wk with ribavirin 1,000-1,200 mg/day, followed by PEG-IFN/RBV through 48 weeks. In the second cohort, patients received a 4-week initiation phase with PEG-IFN alfa-2b (PegIntron) and ribavirin, followed by 44 weeks of boceprevir 800 mg every 8 hours, PEG-IFN 1.5 mcg/kg per wk, and ribavirin 800-1,400 mg/day.

At week 16, 45% of patients on telaprevir had had at least one serious adverse event, with 14.7% terminating therapy because of a serious side effect. In all, nearly one-fourth (22.6%) discontinued therapy, and there were five deaths: from septicemia, septic shock, pneumopathy, endocarditis, and bleeding esophageal varices. Other complications in this group included grade 3 or 4 infections in 6.5%, grade 3 or 4 hepatic decompensation in 2%, grade 3/4 asthenia in 5.5%, and renal failure in 1.7%.

Hematologic adverse events included anemia of grade 2 or greater in 30.4%, erythropoietin use in 53.8%, blood transfusion in 16.1%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 13%. In addition, 2.7% of patients had grade 3 or 4 neutropenia, and 1.7% had grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia.

In the boceprevir group, 32.7% had at least one serious adverse event, 26.3% discontinued prematurely, and 7.3% discontinued because of serious events. The cause of one death was described as pneumopathy. Grade 3/4 adverse events involved infections in 2.4%, hepatic decompensation in 2.9%, and asthenia in 5.8%. There were no cases of renal failure in this group.

Hematologic events in patients on boceprevir included grade 2 or greater anemia in 27.8%, erythropoietin use in 46.3%, blood transfusion in 6.3%, and ribavirin dose reduction in 10.7%.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was seen in 4.4%, and grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia in 5.4%. Two patients (1%) in this cohort received thrombopoietin.

In a multivariate analysis, significant baseline predictors of severe complications (death, severe infection, and hepatic decompensation) included platelet counts of 100,000/mm3 or lower (odds ratio, 3.11; P = .0098) and a serum albumin level below 35 g/L (OR, 6.33; P less than .0001).

Baseline predictors for severe anemia (hemoglobin less than 8 g/dL) or blood transfusion included female gender (OR, 2.19; P = .023), no lead-in phase (OR, 2.25; P = .018), age 65 years or older (OR, 3.04; P = .0014), and hemoglobin 12 g/dL or lower for women and 13 g/dL or lower for men (OR, 5.30; P less than .0001),

The study was sponsored by ANRS, the French National Agency for Research in AIDS and Viral Hepatitis, with support from INSERM, the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research. Dr. Hézode said that he has no financial conflicts of interest, but disclosed serving as a speaker and adviser for Abbott, BMS, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

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Major Finding: At 16 weeks of therapy, 45% of treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients on a combination of telaprevir, pegylated interferon, and ribavirin experienced a serious adverse event, as did 32.7% of patients treated with boceprevir, interferon, and ribavirin.

Data Source: Data are from an ongoing multicenter, prospective cohort study.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by ANRS, the French National Agency for Research in AIDS and Viral Hepatitis, with support from INSERM, the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research. Dr. Hézode said that he has no financial conflicts of interest, but disclosed serving as a speaker and adviser for Abbott, BMS, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

New Interferon Speeds HCV Virologic Responses

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BOSTON – Call it interferon 3.0. An investigational form of the immunomodulator, known as interferon-lambda, appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon alfa, in two separate clinical trials.

In a phase IIb study, ribavirin plus pegylated interferon-lambda-1a (IFN-L/RBV) was comparable in efficacy to ribavirin plus pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN/RBV) in treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C (HCV) genotype 1 or 4 viral infections, Dr. Andrew J. Muir reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Photo credit: Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
In two clinical trials, interferon-lambda appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon-alfa.

"The improved tolerability, together with a faster time to virologic response, supports the further assessment of lambda-based, direct-acting antiviral combination regimens in patients chronically infected with HCV genotypes 1 or 4," said Dr. Muir, clinical director of hepatology in the department of medicine at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.

In a separate small study also presented at the meeting, IFN-L/RBV, combined with a direct-acting antiviral agent, yielded high rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) in Japanese patients with HCV genotype 1b infections, said Dr. Namiki Izumi of Musashino Red Cross Hospital in Tokyo.

IFN-L is a type III interferon with strong antiviral activity but a restricted receptor distribution that is reputed to give the drug a better tolerability profile than the alfa interferons currently in widespread clinical use.

Comparing New and Old IFNs

In the EMERGE phase IIb study, Dr. Muir and his colleagues randomized 527 noncirrhotic, treatment-naive adults with HCV genotypes 1-4 on a 1:1:1:1 basis to either PEG-IFN 180 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin or IFN-L at dose levels of 120, 180, or 240 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin. Because of safety issues, patients with genotypes 1 and 4 assigned to receive the 240-mcg dose of IFN-L had their dose reduced to 180 mcg at study week 12, and this dose level was subsequently chosen for phase III trials. Dr. Muir reported results through 72 weeks of follow-up for 407 patients with genotypes 1 or 4 treated for 48 weeks. Approximately 60% of patients in each of the four treatment arms completed treatment and follow-up.

IFN-L at the 180-mcg dose was associated with significantly more rapid virologic responses at week 4 (RVR4 14.7% vs. 5.8%) and complete early virologic responses at week 12 (55.9% vs. 36.9%) than was PEG-IFN (P less than .05 for each comparison). However, there were no significant differences in response rates at either the end of treatment or in SVR24at last follow-up, and relapse rates were similar between the groups.

Adverse events of any grade were similar among the groups, except for lower percentages of myalgia (5.9% for IFN-L vs. 33.0% for PEG-IFN), pyrexia (7.8% vs. 33%, respectively), chills (3.9% vs. 21.4%), and arthralgia (5.9% vs. 20.4%).

Treatment-emergent liver abnormalities included alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 5 to 10 times the upper limit of normal in 2.9% of patients on IFN-L, compared with 4.9% for those on PEG-IFN. In contrast, total bilirubin levels 2.6 to 5 times the upper limit of normal were seen in 5% vs. 3.9%, respectively. In both the 120-mcg and 180-mcg IFN-L groups and the PEG-IFN group, 1% of patients required dose reductions due to liver-related lab abnormalities. In all, 2.9% of patients of IFN-L discontinued the drug for liver abnormalities, compared with 1.9% for PEG-IFN.

High SVR With Lambda and Direct-Acting Antivirals

In the D-LITE study, Dr. Izumi and her colleagues compared IFN-L/RBV in combination with either daclatasvir, an investigational viral NS5A replication complex inhibitor, or asunaprevir, an investigational NS3 protease inhibitor, with each group including a placebo for the alternate direct-acting antiviral agent. (For example, patients receiving IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir also received an asunaprevir placebo.) In addition, the trial contained a substudy arm with patients assigned to PEG-IFN/RBV with daclatasvir and asunaprevir placebos; Dr. Izumi reported only on the IFN-L arms.

All patients in the IFN-L groups were treated for 24 weeks, at which point those patients who did not have a protocol-defined response (PDR) were given an additional 24 weeks of treatment. A PDR was defined as an HCV RNA level at week 4 below the lower limit of quantification (less than 25 IU/mL) and undetectable HCV RNA at 12 weeks.

In the daclatasvir group, eight of eight patients had a PDR, compared with five of six in the asunaprevir arm. The single patient without a response in the latter arm discontinued therapy for an adverse event at week 3.

 

 

All eight patients in the daclatasvir arm and the five remaining patients in the asuprenavir arm had week 4 and week 12 sustained virologic responses (SVR4 and SVR12).

Grade 3 or 4 adverse events occurred in one of eight patients on daclatasvir, and in four of five on asunaprevir. There were no grade 3 or 4 lab abnormalities among patients on daclatasvir. In the asunaprevir group, there was one case of hemoglobin abnormalities, three with elevated ALT, four with elevated aspartate aminotransferase, and one with elevated total bilirubin.

The authors concluded that the combination of IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir had the best safety profile, and that the data support further investigation of the combination in patients with HCV genotype 1b.

Both the EMERGE IIb and D-LITE studies were supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Muir reported receiving grant and research support and serving on advisory committees or review panels for the company. Dr. Izumi reported receiving speaking and teaching fees from the company.

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BOSTON – Call it interferon 3.0. An investigational form of the immunomodulator, known as interferon-lambda, appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon alfa, in two separate clinical trials.

In a phase IIb study, ribavirin plus pegylated interferon-lambda-1a (IFN-L/RBV) was comparable in efficacy to ribavirin plus pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN/RBV) in treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C (HCV) genotype 1 or 4 viral infections, Dr. Andrew J. Muir reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Photo credit: Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
In two clinical trials, interferon-lambda appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon-alfa.

"The improved tolerability, together with a faster time to virologic response, supports the further assessment of lambda-based, direct-acting antiviral combination regimens in patients chronically infected with HCV genotypes 1 or 4," said Dr. Muir, clinical director of hepatology in the department of medicine at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.

In a separate small study also presented at the meeting, IFN-L/RBV, combined with a direct-acting antiviral agent, yielded high rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) in Japanese patients with HCV genotype 1b infections, said Dr. Namiki Izumi of Musashino Red Cross Hospital in Tokyo.

IFN-L is a type III interferon with strong antiviral activity but a restricted receptor distribution that is reputed to give the drug a better tolerability profile than the alfa interferons currently in widespread clinical use.

Comparing New and Old IFNs

In the EMERGE phase IIb study, Dr. Muir and his colleagues randomized 527 noncirrhotic, treatment-naive adults with HCV genotypes 1-4 on a 1:1:1:1 basis to either PEG-IFN 180 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin or IFN-L at dose levels of 120, 180, or 240 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin. Because of safety issues, patients with genotypes 1 and 4 assigned to receive the 240-mcg dose of IFN-L had their dose reduced to 180 mcg at study week 12, and this dose level was subsequently chosen for phase III trials. Dr. Muir reported results through 72 weeks of follow-up for 407 patients with genotypes 1 or 4 treated for 48 weeks. Approximately 60% of patients in each of the four treatment arms completed treatment and follow-up.

IFN-L at the 180-mcg dose was associated with significantly more rapid virologic responses at week 4 (RVR4 14.7% vs. 5.8%) and complete early virologic responses at week 12 (55.9% vs. 36.9%) than was PEG-IFN (P less than .05 for each comparison). However, there were no significant differences in response rates at either the end of treatment or in SVR24at last follow-up, and relapse rates were similar between the groups.

Adverse events of any grade were similar among the groups, except for lower percentages of myalgia (5.9% for IFN-L vs. 33.0% for PEG-IFN), pyrexia (7.8% vs. 33%, respectively), chills (3.9% vs. 21.4%), and arthralgia (5.9% vs. 20.4%).

Treatment-emergent liver abnormalities included alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 5 to 10 times the upper limit of normal in 2.9% of patients on IFN-L, compared with 4.9% for those on PEG-IFN. In contrast, total bilirubin levels 2.6 to 5 times the upper limit of normal were seen in 5% vs. 3.9%, respectively. In both the 120-mcg and 180-mcg IFN-L groups and the PEG-IFN group, 1% of patients required dose reductions due to liver-related lab abnormalities. In all, 2.9% of patients of IFN-L discontinued the drug for liver abnormalities, compared with 1.9% for PEG-IFN.

High SVR With Lambda and Direct-Acting Antivirals

In the D-LITE study, Dr. Izumi and her colleagues compared IFN-L/RBV in combination with either daclatasvir, an investigational viral NS5A replication complex inhibitor, or asunaprevir, an investigational NS3 protease inhibitor, with each group including a placebo for the alternate direct-acting antiviral agent. (For example, patients receiving IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir also received an asunaprevir placebo.) In addition, the trial contained a substudy arm with patients assigned to PEG-IFN/RBV with daclatasvir and asunaprevir placebos; Dr. Izumi reported only on the IFN-L arms.

All patients in the IFN-L groups were treated for 24 weeks, at which point those patients who did not have a protocol-defined response (PDR) were given an additional 24 weeks of treatment. A PDR was defined as an HCV RNA level at week 4 below the lower limit of quantification (less than 25 IU/mL) and undetectable HCV RNA at 12 weeks.

In the daclatasvir group, eight of eight patients had a PDR, compared with five of six in the asunaprevir arm. The single patient without a response in the latter arm discontinued therapy for an adverse event at week 3.

 

 

All eight patients in the daclatasvir arm and the five remaining patients in the asuprenavir arm had week 4 and week 12 sustained virologic responses (SVR4 and SVR12).

Grade 3 or 4 adverse events occurred in one of eight patients on daclatasvir, and in four of five on asunaprevir. There were no grade 3 or 4 lab abnormalities among patients on daclatasvir. In the asunaprevir group, there was one case of hemoglobin abnormalities, three with elevated ALT, four with elevated aspartate aminotransferase, and one with elevated total bilirubin.

The authors concluded that the combination of IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir had the best safety profile, and that the data support further investigation of the combination in patients with HCV genotype 1b.

Both the EMERGE IIb and D-LITE studies were supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Muir reported receiving grant and research support and serving on advisory committees or review panels for the company. Dr. Izumi reported receiving speaking and teaching fees from the company.

BOSTON – Call it interferon 3.0. An investigational form of the immunomodulator, known as interferon-lambda, appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon alfa, in two separate clinical trials.

In a phase IIb study, ribavirin plus pegylated interferon-lambda-1a (IFN-L/RBV) was comparable in efficacy to ribavirin plus pegylated interferon alfa-2a (PEG-IFN/RBV) in treatment-naive patients with hepatitis C (HCV) genotype 1 or 4 viral infections, Dr. Andrew J. Muir reported at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

Photo credit: Courtesy US. Dept of Veterans Affairs
In two clinical trials, interferon-lambda appeared to be effective against chronic hepatitis C virus infections, but had fewer side effects than interferon-alfa.

"The improved tolerability, together with a faster time to virologic response, supports the further assessment of lambda-based, direct-acting antiviral combination regimens in patients chronically infected with HCV genotypes 1 or 4," said Dr. Muir, clinical director of hepatology in the department of medicine at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.

In a separate small study also presented at the meeting, IFN-L/RBV, combined with a direct-acting antiviral agent, yielded high rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) in Japanese patients with HCV genotype 1b infections, said Dr. Namiki Izumi of Musashino Red Cross Hospital in Tokyo.

IFN-L is a type III interferon with strong antiviral activity but a restricted receptor distribution that is reputed to give the drug a better tolerability profile than the alfa interferons currently in widespread clinical use.

Comparing New and Old IFNs

In the EMERGE phase IIb study, Dr. Muir and his colleagues randomized 527 noncirrhotic, treatment-naive adults with HCV genotypes 1-4 on a 1:1:1:1 basis to either PEG-IFN 180 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin or IFN-L at dose levels of 120, 180, or 240 mcg weekly plus daily ribavirin. Because of safety issues, patients with genotypes 1 and 4 assigned to receive the 240-mcg dose of IFN-L had their dose reduced to 180 mcg at study week 12, and this dose level was subsequently chosen for phase III trials. Dr. Muir reported results through 72 weeks of follow-up for 407 patients with genotypes 1 or 4 treated for 48 weeks. Approximately 60% of patients in each of the four treatment arms completed treatment and follow-up.

IFN-L at the 180-mcg dose was associated with significantly more rapid virologic responses at week 4 (RVR4 14.7% vs. 5.8%) and complete early virologic responses at week 12 (55.9% vs. 36.9%) than was PEG-IFN (P less than .05 for each comparison). However, there were no significant differences in response rates at either the end of treatment or in SVR24at last follow-up, and relapse rates were similar between the groups.

Adverse events of any grade were similar among the groups, except for lower percentages of myalgia (5.9% for IFN-L vs. 33.0% for PEG-IFN), pyrexia (7.8% vs. 33%, respectively), chills (3.9% vs. 21.4%), and arthralgia (5.9% vs. 20.4%).

Treatment-emergent liver abnormalities included alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 5 to 10 times the upper limit of normal in 2.9% of patients on IFN-L, compared with 4.9% for those on PEG-IFN. In contrast, total bilirubin levels 2.6 to 5 times the upper limit of normal were seen in 5% vs. 3.9%, respectively. In both the 120-mcg and 180-mcg IFN-L groups and the PEG-IFN group, 1% of patients required dose reductions due to liver-related lab abnormalities. In all, 2.9% of patients of IFN-L discontinued the drug for liver abnormalities, compared with 1.9% for PEG-IFN.

High SVR With Lambda and Direct-Acting Antivirals

In the D-LITE study, Dr. Izumi and her colleagues compared IFN-L/RBV in combination with either daclatasvir, an investigational viral NS5A replication complex inhibitor, or asunaprevir, an investigational NS3 protease inhibitor, with each group including a placebo for the alternate direct-acting antiviral agent. (For example, patients receiving IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir also received an asunaprevir placebo.) In addition, the trial contained a substudy arm with patients assigned to PEG-IFN/RBV with daclatasvir and asunaprevir placebos; Dr. Izumi reported only on the IFN-L arms.

All patients in the IFN-L groups were treated for 24 weeks, at which point those patients who did not have a protocol-defined response (PDR) were given an additional 24 weeks of treatment. A PDR was defined as an HCV RNA level at week 4 below the lower limit of quantification (less than 25 IU/mL) and undetectable HCV RNA at 12 weeks.

In the daclatasvir group, eight of eight patients had a PDR, compared with five of six in the asunaprevir arm. The single patient without a response in the latter arm discontinued therapy for an adverse event at week 3.

 

 

All eight patients in the daclatasvir arm and the five remaining patients in the asuprenavir arm had week 4 and week 12 sustained virologic responses (SVR4 and SVR12).

Grade 3 or 4 adverse events occurred in one of eight patients on daclatasvir, and in four of five on asunaprevir. There were no grade 3 or 4 lab abnormalities among patients on daclatasvir. In the asunaprevir group, there was one case of hemoglobin abnormalities, three with elevated ALT, four with elevated aspartate aminotransferase, and one with elevated total bilirubin.

The authors concluded that the combination of IFN-L/RBV and daclatasvir had the best safety profile, and that the data support further investigation of the combination in patients with HCV genotype 1b.

Both the EMERGE IIb and D-LITE studies were supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Muir reported receiving grant and research support and serving on advisory committees or review panels for the company. Dr. Izumi reported receiving speaking and teaching fees from the company.

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Tivantinib Shows Modest Benefit in Relapsed Liver Cancer

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BOSTON – The investigational drug tivantinib was associated with a modest but statistically significant slowing of time to progression as a second-line agent against hepatocellular carcinoma, investigators reported.

Tivantinib, a c-MET inhibitor, demonstrated no overall survival advantage over placebo, but improvement was seen in a subgroup of patients with high expression of MET, the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF).

Dr. Ivan Borbath

Results of the randomized phase II trial were presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. The study enrolled patients whose hepatocellular carcinoma had advanced after first-line therapy with sorafenib (Nexavar).

Median time-to-progression, the primary end point, was 6.9 weeks for patients randomized to tivantinib, compared with 6.0 weeks for those on placebo (hazard ratio, 0.64; P = .04), reported Dr. Ivan Borbath from the Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc in Brussels.

Median overall survival was similar at 6.6 months for patients on tivantinib and. 6.2 months for controls. But in a subgroup of patients whose tumors had high levels of expression of MET, median overall survival was 7.2 months with tivantinib vs. 3.8 months with placebo (P = .01), Dr. Borbath said.

There were no significant differences in time-to-progression or overall survival among patients with low MET expression.

"We found that tivantinib can give a pronounced benefit to those poor-prognosis patients who show MET-high expression," Dr. Borbath said. "These are the first randomized data in HCC showing overall survival advantage with a MET inhibitor and identifying a biological subgroup responding to a targeted therapy."

High Cost for Modest Advantage?

A gastroenterologist who attended the session at which the data were presented questioned whether tivantinib was worth the anticipated expense.

"The increase in survival is modest, so the obvious question is, what is the additional cost going to be per additional month of survival? ... These targeted drugs for cancer treatment in general, and for hepatocellular carcinoma in particular, tend to be [priced] very high. One has to begin to ask that question because of the ever-escalating cost of health care in this and other countries," said Dr. Herbert Lloyd Bonkovsky, professor of medicine at Carolinas Medical Center and the University of North Carolina in Charlotte, in an interview.

Dr. Bonkovsky also pointed out that one of the coauthors of the study was Dr. Brian Schwartz, chief medical officer of ArQule, the maker of tivantinib, but the relationship was not disclosed during the presentation. Dr. Bonkovsky was not involved in the study. Dr. Schwartz was identified with ArQule clinical development in the abstract.

ArQule and its partner Daiichi Sankyo recently discontinued a phase III clinical trial of tivantinib, a select inhibitor of MET, for non–small cell lung cancer for lack of efficacy. ArQule is continuing to test the drug against HCC.

In the current study (ARQ 197-215), patients with advanced HCC that progressed after first therapy and who were in otherwise good clinical condition with preserved liver function were randomized 2:1 to receive either tivantinib orally twice daily (71 patients) or placebo (36).

Tivantinib was started at 360 mg twice daily, but after 57 patients were enrolled, the dose was reduced to 240 mg b.i.d. because of drug-related neutropenias of grade 3 or greater.

High MET Predicts Worse Survival

The study defined high MET expression as MET being present in 50% or more of tumor cells with moderate or strong staining intensity on immunohistochemistry assay.

The authors also found that higher MET expression was a significant predictor of poor survival. Among patients in the placebo group, those with low MET levels had a median overall survival of 9.0 months, compared with 3.8 months for those with high MET levels (HR, 2.94; P = .02).

The Food and Drug Administration has agreed to consider a phase III trial of the drug in patients with HCC and high MET expression.

ArQule sponsored the trial Dr. Borbath reported no conflict of interest. Coauthor Dr. Brian Schwartz is chief medical officer of ArQule, which makes tivantinib. Dr. Bonkovsky reported no conflict of interest.

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BOSTON – The investigational drug tivantinib was associated with a modest but statistically significant slowing of time to progression as a second-line agent against hepatocellular carcinoma, investigators reported.

Tivantinib, a c-MET inhibitor, demonstrated no overall survival advantage over placebo, but improvement was seen in a subgroup of patients with high expression of MET, the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF).

Dr. Ivan Borbath

Results of the randomized phase II trial were presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. The study enrolled patients whose hepatocellular carcinoma had advanced after first-line therapy with sorafenib (Nexavar).

Median time-to-progression, the primary end point, was 6.9 weeks for patients randomized to tivantinib, compared with 6.0 weeks for those on placebo (hazard ratio, 0.64; P = .04), reported Dr. Ivan Borbath from the Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc in Brussels.

Median overall survival was similar at 6.6 months for patients on tivantinib and. 6.2 months for controls. But in a subgroup of patients whose tumors had high levels of expression of MET, median overall survival was 7.2 months with tivantinib vs. 3.8 months with placebo (P = .01), Dr. Borbath said.

There were no significant differences in time-to-progression or overall survival among patients with low MET expression.

"We found that tivantinib can give a pronounced benefit to those poor-prognosis patients who show MET-high expression," Dr. Borbath said. "These are the first randomized data in HCC showing overall survival advantage with a MET inhibitor and identifying a biological subgroup responding to a targeted therapy."

High Cost for Modest Advantage?

A gastroenterologist who attended the session at which the data were presented questioned whether tivantinib was worth the anticipated expense.

"The increase in survival is modest, so the obvious question is, what is the additional cost going to be per additional month of survival? ... These targeted drugs for cancer treatment in general, and for hepatocellular carcinoma in particular, tend to be [priced] very high. One has to begin to ask that question because of the ever-escalating cost of health care in this and other countries," said Dr. Herbert Lloyd Bonkovsky, professor of medicine at Carolinas Medical Center and the University of North Carolina in Charlotte, in an interview.

Dr. Bonkovsky also pointed out that one of the coauthors of the study was Dr. Brian Schwartz, chief medical officer of ArQule, the maker of tivantinib, but the relationship was not disclosed during the presentation. Dr. Bonkovsky was not involved in the study. Dr. Schwartz was identified with ArQule clinical development in the abstract.

ArQule and its partner Daiichi Sankyo recently discontinued a phase III clinical trial of tivantinib, a select inhibitor of MET, for non–small cell lung cancer for lack of efficacy. ArQule is continuing to test the drug against HCC.

In the current study (ARQ 197-215), patients with advanced HCC that progressed after first therapy and who were in otherwise good clinical condition with preserved liver function were randomized 2:1 to receive either tivantinib orally twice daily (71 patients) or placebo (36).

Tivantinib was started at 360 mg twice daily, but after 57 patients were enrolled, the dose was reduced to 240 mg b.i.d. because of drug-related neutropenias of grade 3 or greater.

High MET Predicts Worse Survival

The study defined high MET expression as MET being present in 50% or more of tumor cells with moderate or strong staining intensity on immunohistochemistry assay.

The authors also found that higher MET expression was a significant predictor of poor survival. Among patients in the placebo group, those with low MET levels had a median overall survival of 9.0 months, compared with 3.8 months for those with high MET levels (HR, 2.94; P = .02).

The Food and Drug Administration has agreed to consider a phase III trial of the drug in patients with HCC and high MET expression.

ArQule sponsored the trial Dr. Borbath reported no conflict of interest. Coauthor Dr. Brian Schwartz is chief medical officer of ArQule, which makes tivantinib. Dr. Bonkovsky reported no conflict of interest.

BOSTON – The investigational drug tivantinib was associated with a modest but statistically significant slowing of time to progression as a second-line agent against hepatocellular carcinoma, investigators reported.

Tivantinib, a c-MET inhibitor, demonstrated no overall survival advantage over placebo, but improvement was seen in a subgroup of patients with high expression of MET, the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF).

Dr. Ivan Borbath

Results of the randomized phase II trial were presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. The study enrolled patients whose hepatocellular carcinoma had advanced after first-line therapy with sorafenib (Nexavar).

Median time-to-progression, the primary end point, was 6.9 weeks for patients randomized to tivantinib, compared with 6.0 weeks for those on placebo (hazard ratio, 0.64; P = .04), reported Dr. Ivan Borbath from the Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc in Brussels.

Median overall survival was similar at 6.6 months for patients on tivantinib and. 6.2 months for controls. But in a subgroup of patients whose tumors had high levels of expression of MET, median overall survival was 7.2 months with tivantinib vs. 3.8 months with placebo (P = .01), Dr. Borbath said.

There were no significant differences in time-to-progression or overall survival among patients with low MET expression.

"We found that tivantinib can give a pronounced benefit to those poor-prognosis patients who show MET-high expression," Dr. Borbath said. "These are the first randomized data in HCC showing overall survival advantage with a MET inhibitor and identifying a biological subgroup responding to a targeted therapy."

High Cost for Modest Advantage?

A gastroenterologist who attended the session at which the data were presented questioned whether tivantinib was worth the anticipated expense.

"The increase in survival is modest, so the obvious question is, what is the additional cost going to be per additional month of survival? ... These targeted drugs for cancer treatment in general, and for hepatocellular carcinoma in particular, tend to be [priced] very high. One has to begin to ask that question because of the ever-escalating cost of health care in this and other countries," said Dr. Herbert Lloyd Bonkovsky, professor of medicine at Carolinas Medical Center and the University of North Carolina in Charlotte, in an interview.

Dr. Bonkovsky also pointed out that one of the coauthors of the study was Dr. Brian Schwartz, chief medical officer of ArQule, the maker of tivantinib, but the relationship was not disclosed during the presentation. Dr. Bonkovsky was not involved in the study. Dr. Schwartz was identified with ArQule clinical development in the abstract.

ArQule and its partner Daiichi Sankyo recently discontinued a phase III clinical trial of tivantinib, a select inhibitor of MET, for non–small cell lung cancer for lack of efficacy. ArQule is continuing to test the drug against HCC.

In the current study (ARQ 197-215), patients with advanced HCC that progressed after first therapy and who were in otherwise good clinical condition with preserved liver function were randomized 2:1 to receive either tivantinib orally twice daily (71 patients) or placebo (36).

Tivantinib was started at 360 mg twice daily, but after 57 patients were enrolled, the dose was reduced to 240 mg b.i.d. because of drug-related neutropenias of grade 3 or greater.

High MET Predicts Worse Survival

The study defined high MET expression as MET being present in 50% or more of tumor cells with moderate or strong staining intensity on immunohistochemistry assay.

The authors also found that higher MET expression was a significant predictor of poor survival. Among patients in the placebo group, those with low MET levels had a median overall survival of 9.0 months, compared with 3.8 months for those with high MET levels (HR, 2.94; P = .02).

The Food and Drug Administration has agreed to consider a phase III trial of the drug in patients with HCC and high MET expression.

ArQule sponsored the trial Dr. Borbath reported no conflict of interest. Coauthor Dr. Brian Schwartz is chief medical officer of ArQule, which makes tivantinib. Dr. Bonkovsky reported no conflict of interest.

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Major Finding: Median time to progression, the primary end point, was 6.9 weeks for patients randomized to tivantinib, compared with 6.0 weeks for those on placebo (hazard ratio, 0.64; P = .04).

Data Source: This was a randomized, placebo-controlled phase II clinical trial in patients whose hepatocellular carcinoma had advanced after first-line therapy with sorafenib.

Disclosures: ArQule sponsored the trial Dr. Borbath reported no conflict of interest. Coauthor Dr. Brian Schwartz is chief medical officer of ArQule, which makes tivantinib. Dr. Bonkovsky reported no conflict of interest.

Triple Therapy Boosts HCV Response After Transplant

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BOSTON  – Liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection who underwent triple-drug therapy achieved a high extended rapid virologic response rate but often contended with treatment complications in a retrospective multicenter cohort study.

The extended rapid virologic response (eRVR) rate seen in 57% of patients was "encouraging, given a very difficult-to-cure population," Dr. James R. Burton, Jr., said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. He noted, however, that it’s not clear if the encouraging eRVR rate will predict sustained virologic response (SVR) as it does in non-liver transplant patients.

Dr. James R. Burton, Jr.

The use of peginteferon plus ribavirin in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection has an SVR of only 30%. While triple therapy with peginterferon, ribavirin, and a protease inhibitor (boceprevir or telaprevir) has significantly improved rates of SVR in patients infected with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus, its safety and efficacy in liver transplant recipients is unknown, said Dr. Burton, medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora.

With 101 patients, the five-center study is the largest involving triple therapy in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection.

Telaprevir was the protease inhibitor used most often in patients (90% vs. 10% with boceprevir). Nearly all patients (96%) had a lead-in treatment phase with peginterferon plus ribavirin. A minority of patients (14%) had an extended lead-in phase of at least 90 days (median of 189 days) and were excluded from efficacy, but not safety, analyses. The other patients had a lead-in lasting a median of 29 days. The patients with a long lead-in phase had a median of 398 total treatment days, compared with a median of 154 days for those with a shorter lead-in time.

The efficacy study population involved genotype 1–infected patients (54% genotype 1a, 39% 1b, and 7% mixed) from five medical centers. Most patients were men (76%); they had a median age of 58 years and a median duration of 54 months from their liver transplant to starting a protease inhibitor. An unfavorable IL28B genotype was found in 69% of 45 patients tested. In the 60% of patients who had undergone previous antiviral therapy, 29% had a partial response. On liver biopsy, another 47% of patients had either bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis.

The immunosuppressive agents used by the patients included cyclosporine (66%) and tacrolimus (23%). A small percentage did not receive a calcineurin inhibitor or rapamycin. Another 27% were taking corticosteroids, and 72% were taking mycophenolate mofetil or mycophenolic acid.

On treatment, the percentage of patients who had an HCV RNA level less than the limit of detection increased from 55% at 4 weeks to 63% at 8 weeks. At 12 weeks the percentage was 71%. An eRVR, defined as negative HCV RNA tests at 4 and 12 weeks, occurred in 57%. An eRVR occurred significantly more often among patients who had at least a 1 log drop in HCV RNA levels during the lead-in phase than did those with less than a 1 log drop (76% vs. 35%).

Overall, 12% of patients experienced virologic breakthrough, and treatment was stopped. This occurred more often among those with a long lead-in vs. those with a short lead-in (21% vs. 10%, respectively). Another 14% discontinued treatment early because of an adverse event; discontinuations occurred more often among patients with a long lead-in (40% vs. 11%).

Protease inhibitors are known to inhibit the metabolism of calcineurin inhibitors, which was reflected in the study by the need to reduce the median daily doses of cyclosporine (from 200 mg to 50 mg) and tacrolimus (from 1.0 mg to 0.06 mg) after protease inhibitor therapy began.

Many patients (49%) required blood transfusions during triple therapy. During the first 16 weeks of therapy, these patients used a median of 2.5 units. The majority of patients (86%) used growth factors, including granulocyte-colony stimulating factor in 44% and erythropoietin in 79%. Medication dose reductions were most frequent for ribavirin (in 78%). A total of 7% were hospitalized for anemia, Dr. Burton said.

Renal insufficiency, defined as an increase in creatinine of greater than 0.5 mg/dL from baseline, developed in 32%. Of two rejection episodes in the study, one involved a patient coming off a protease inhibitor.

Dr. Burton suggested that future studies should focus on identifying predictors for nonresponse to avoid unnecessary treatment and associated toxicities such as complications of anemia and adverse events related to significant protease inhibitor–calcineurin inhibitor interactions, such as worsening renal function and graft rejection when transitioning off a protease inhibitor.

 

 

Dr. Burton disclosed that he is an investigator in a clinical trial sponsored by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which makes telaprevir.☐

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BOSTON  – Liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection who underwent triple-drug therapy achieved a high extended rapid virologic response rate but often contended with treatment complications in a retrospective multicenter cohort study.

The extended rapid virologic response (eRVR) rate seen in 57% of patients was "encouraging, given a very difficult-to-cure population," Dr. James R. Burton, Jr., said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. He noted, however, that it’s not clear if the encouraging eRVR rate will predict sustained virologic response (SVR) as it does in non-liver transplant patients.

Dr. James R. Burton, Jr.

The use of peginteferon plus ribavirin in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection has an SVR of only 30%. While triple therapy with peginterferon, ribavirin, and a protease inhibitor (boceprevir or telaprevir) has significantly improved rates of SVR in patients infected with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus, its safety and efficacy in liver transplant recipients is unknown, said Dr. Burton, medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora.

With 101 patients, the five-center study is the largest involving triple therapy in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection.

Telaprevir was the protease inhibitor used most often in patients (90% vs. 10% with boceprevir). Nearly all patients (96%) had a lead-in treatment phase with peginterferon plus ribavirin. A minority of patients (14%) had an extended lead-in phase of at least 90 days (median of 189 days) and were excluded from efficacy, but not safety, analyses. The other patients had a lead-in lasting a median of 29 days. The patients with a long lead-in phase had a median of 398 total treatment days, compared with a median of 154 days for those with a shorter lead-in time.

The efficacy study population involved genotype 1–infected patients (54% genotype 1a, 39% 1b, and 7% mixed) from five medical centers. Most patients were men (76%); they had a median age of 58 years and a median duration of 54 months from their liver transplant to starting a protease inhibitor. An unfavorable IL28B genotype was found in 69% of 45 patients tested. In the 60% of patients who had undergone previous antiviral therapy, 29% had a partial response. On liver biopsy, another 47% of patients had either bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis.

The immunosuppressive agents used by the patients included cyclosporine (66%) and tacrolimus (23%). A small percentage did not receive a calcineurin inhibitor or rapamycin. Another 27% were taking corticosteroids, and 72% were taking mycophenolate mofetil or mycophenolic acid.

On treatment, the percentage of patients who had an HCV RNA level less than the limit of detection increased from 55% at 4 weeks to 63% at 8 weeks. At 12 weeks the percentage was 71%. An eRVR, defined as negative HCV RNA tests at 4 and 12 weeks, occurred in 57%. An eRVR occurred significantly more often among patients who had at least a 1 log drop in HCV RNA levels during the lead-in phase than did those with less than a 1 log drop (76% vs. 35%).

Overall, 12% of patients experienced virologic breakthrough, and treatment was stopped. This occurred more often among those with a long lead-in vs. those with a short lead-in (21% vs. 10%, respectively). Another 14% discontinued treatment early because of an adverse event; discontinuations occurred more often among patients with a long lead-in (40% vs. 11%).

Protease inhibitors are known to inhibit the metabolism of calcineurin inhibitors, which was reflected in the study by the need to reduce the median daily doses of cyclosporine (from 200 mg to 50 mg) and tacrolimus (from 1.0 mg to 0.06 mg) after protease inhibitor therapy began.

Many patients (49%) required blood transfusions during triple therapy. During the first 16 weeks of therapy, these patients used a median of 2.5 units. The majority of patients (86%) used growth factors, including granulocyte-colony stimulating factor in 44% and erythropoietin in 79%. Medication dose reductions were most frequent for ribavirin (in 78%). A total of 7% were hospitalized for anemia, Dr. Burton said.

Renal insufficiency, defined as an increase in creatinine of greater than 0.5 mg/dL from baseline, developed in 32%. Of two rejection episodes in the study, one involved a patient coming off a protease inhibitor.

Dr. Burton suggested that future studies should focus on identifying predictors for nonresponse to avoid unnecessary treatment and associated toxicities such as complications of anemia and adverse events related to significant protease inhibitor–calcineurin inhibitor interactions, such as worsening renal function and graft rejection when transitioning off a protease inhibitor.

 

 

Dr. Burton disclosed that he is an investigator in a clinical trial sponsored by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which makes telaprevir.☐

BOSTON  – Liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection who underwent triple-drug therapy achieved a high extended rapid virologic response rate but often contended with treatment complications in a retrospective multicenter cohort study.

The extended rapid virologic response (eRVR) rate seen in 57% of patients was "encouraging, given a very difficult-to-cure population," Dr. James R. Burton, Jr., said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. He noted, however, that it’s not clear if the encouraging eRVR rate will predict sustained virologic response (SVR) as it does in non-liver transplant patients.

Dr. James R. Burton, Jr.

The use of peginteferon plus ribavirin in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection has an SVR of only 30%. While triple therapy with peginterferon, ribavirin, and a protease inhibitor (boceprevir or telaprevir) has significantly improved rates of SVR in patients infected with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus, its safety and efficacy in liver transplant recipients is unknown, said Dr. Burton, medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora.

With 101 patients, the five-center study is the largest involving triple therapy in liver transplant recipients with hepatitis C virus infection.

Telaprevir was the protease inhibitor used most often in patients (90% vs. 10% with boceprevir). Nearly all patients (96%) had a lead-in treatment phase with peginterferon plus ribavirin. A minority of patients (14%) had an extended lead-in phase of at least 90 days (median of 189 days) and were excluded from efficacy, but not safety, analyses. The other patients had a lead-in lasting a median of 29 days. The patients with a long lead-in phase had a median of 398 total treatment days, compared with a median of 154 days for those with a shorter lead-in time.

The efficacy study population involved genotype 1–infected patients (54% genotype 1a, 39% 1b, and 7% mixed) from five medical centers. Most patients were men (76%); they had a median age of 58 years and a median duration of 54 months from their liver transplant to starting a protease inhibitor. An unfavorable IL28B genotype was found in 69% of 45 patients tested. In the 60% of patients who had undergone previous antiviral therapy, 29% had a partial response. On liver biopsy, another 47% of patients had either bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis.

The immunosuppressive agents used by the patients included cyclosporine (66%) and tacrolimus (23%). A small percentage did not receive a calcineurin inhibitor or rapamycin. Another 27% were taking corticosteroids, and 72% were taking mycophenolate mofetil or mycophenolic acid.

On treatment, the percentage of patients who had an HCV RNA level less than the limit of detection increased from 55% at 4 weeks to 63% at 8 weeks. At 12 weeks the percentage was 71%. An eRVR, defined as negative HCV RNA tests at 4 and 12 weeks, occurred in 57%. An eRVR occurred significantly more often among patients who had at least a 1 log drop in HCV RNA levels during the lead-in phase than did those with less than a 1 log drop (76% vs. 35%).

Overall, 12% of patients experienced virologic breakthrough, and treatment was stopped. This occurred more often among those with a long lead-in vs. those with a short lead-in (21% vs. 10%, respectively). Another 14% discontinued treatment early because of an adverse event; discontinuations occurred more often among patients with a long lead-in (40% vs. 11%).

Protease inhibitors are known to inhibit the metabolism of calcineurin inhibitors, which was reflected in the study by the need to reduce the median daily doses of cyclosporine (from 200 mg to 50 mg) and tacrolimus (from 1.0 mg to 0.06 mg) after protease inhibitor therapy began.

Many patients (49%) required blood transfusions during triple therapy. During the first 16 weeks of therapy, these patients used a median of 2.5 units. The majority of patients (86%) used growth factors, including granulocyte-colony stimulating factor in 44% and erythropoietin in 79%. Medication dose reductions were most frequent for ribavirin (in 78%). A total of 7% were hospitalized for anemia, Dr. Burton said.

Renal insufficiency, defined as an increase in creatinine of greater than 0.5 mg/dL from baseline, developed in 32%. Of two rejection episodes in the study, one involved a patient coming off a protease inhibitor.

Dr. Burton suggested that future studies should focus on identifying predictors for nonresponse to avoid unnecessary treatment and associated toxicities such as complications of anemia and adverse events related to significant protease inhibitor–calcineurin inhibitor interactions, such as worsening renal function and graft rejection when transitioning off a protease inhibitor.

 

 

Dr. Burton disclosed that he is an investigator in a clinical trial sponsored by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which makes telaprevir.☐

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Triple Therapy Boosts HCV Response After Transplant
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Liver transplant, hepatitis C virus, hvc, extended rapid virologic response (eRVR), Dr. James R. Burton, Jr., American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, sustained virologic response (SVR), peginteferon, ribavirin, protease inhibitor, boceprevir, telaprevir
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Liver transplant, hepatitis C virus, hvc, extended rapid virologic response (eRVR), Dr. James R. Burton, Jr., American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, sustained virologic response (SVR), peginteferon, ribavirin, protease inhibitor, boceprevir, telaprevir
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AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF LIVER DISEASES

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Major Finding: An extended rapid virologic response occurred significantly more often among patients who had at least a 1 log drop in HCV RNA levels during the lead-in phase than did those with less than a 1 log drop (76% vs. 35%)

Data Source: This was a multicenter retrospective cohort study of triple therapy for hepatitis C virus infection in 101 patients with post liver transplant.

Disclosures: Dr. Burton disclosed that he is an investigator in a clinical trial sponsored by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which makes telaprevir.

Brivanib Can't Match Sorafenib for Advanced Liver Cancer

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Brivanib Can't Match Sorafenib for Advanced Liver Cancer

BOSTON – The investigational antiangiogenic drug brivanib failed to achieve noninferiority to sorafenib in a phase III trial testing the two for first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

There is an unmet medical need for more effective and better tolerated drugs for the first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than sorafenib (Nexavar), the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the indication. In particular, in Asian-Pacific and sub-Saharan countries where HCC is most prevalent, "many patients have such advanced disease at diagnosis that potentially curative treatments are no longer available," Dr. Philip Johnson said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

He and his colleagues randomized 1,155 patients to double-blind treatment with either sorafenib, a multitargeted kinase inhibitor, or brivanib, a dual vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors inhibitor. Both receptors are known to play a role in tumor growth, survival, and metastasis through proangiogenic signaling in HCC tumor cells.

The patients in this multicenter study, who had not yet received any systemic therapy, had a mean age of about 60 years, and most were men (84%). About two-thirds of the patients were Asian, and 92% were in Child-Pugh class A. The groups had a similar prevalence of infection with hepatitis B (20%) or hepatitis C (45%) viruses and alcoholic liver disease (16%).

The trial, known as the BRISK-FL study, had a hybrid noninferiority/superiority design in which the investigators set a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08, which equates to no more than a 3-week difference in median overall survival. This ensured that the risk of dying while taking brivanib was not unacceptably higher than with sorafenib, explained Dr. Johnson, professor of oncology and translational research and director of the Cancer Research U.K. Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham in England.

Based on the sample size, a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08 meant that the estimated hazard rate had to be 0.94 at highest for brivanib to be considered noninferior to sorafenib. Comparisons of the median overall survival between the groups showed an overall hazard ratio of 1.07 for brivanib with an upper 95% confidence interval value of 1.23, which was higher than the predetermined limit for noninferiority of 1.08 or less.

Median overall survival was 9.9 months with sorafenib and 9.5 months with brivanib. No subgroup of patients had better survival with either drug. The median time-to-progression was nearly equal in patients treated with sorafenib (4.1 months) and brivanib (4.2 months). Rates of complete, partial, and overall response, as well as disease control, were all similar between the groups.

A 50% or greater reduction in the level of alpha-fetoprotein occurred in 31% of 270 patients taking sorafenib and in 58% of 250 patients taking brivanib. A decline in alpha-fetoprotein levels has been considered an indication of tumor cells killed, Dr. Johnson said.

Similar percentages of patients in each group had dose reductions or underwent poststudy treatments. Both groups had similar rates of study discontinuation; the most frequent reasons were disease progression and drug toxicity.

Both agents also had similar rates of overall adverse events, but brivanib-treated patients experienced significantly higher rates of decreased appetite, fatigue, hypertension, nausea, vomiting, and hyponatremia. The adverse events that occurred more often among sorafenib-treated patients included hand-foot skin reaction, alopecia, and rash.

Both groups showed declines in quality of life at 12 weeks on the physical and role functions measured by the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer’s Quality of Life Questionnaire–Core 36). Small, but statistically significantly greater declines in these functions in the brivanib arm have unknown clinical significance, Dr. Johnson said.

The developer of brivanib, Bristol-Myers Squibb, funded the trial. No disclosures were available for Dr. Johnson.

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BOSTON – The investigational antiangiogenic drug brivanib failed to achieve noninferiority to sorafenib in a phase III trial testing the two for first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

There is an unmet medical need for more effective and better tolerated drugs for the first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than sorafenib (Nexavar), the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the indication. In particular, in Asian-Pacific and sub-Saharan countries where HCC is most prevalent, "many patients have such advanced disease at diagnosis that potentially curative treatments are no longer available," Dr. Philip Johnson said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

He and his colleagues randomized 1,155 patients to double-blind treatment with either sorafenib, a multitargeted kinase inhibitor, or brivanib, a dual vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors inhibitor. Both receptors are known to play a role in tumor growth, survival, and metastasis through proangiogenic signaling in HCC tumor cells.

The patients in this multicenter study, who had not yet received any systemic therapy, had a mean age of about 60 years, and most were men (84%). About two-thirds of the patients were Asian, and 92% were in Child-Pugh class A. The groups had a similar prevalence of infection with hepatitis B (20%) or hepatitis C (45%) viruses and alcoholic liver disease (16%).

The trial, known as the BRISK-FL study, had a hybrid noninferiority/superiority design in which the investigators set a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08, which equates to no more than a 3-week difference in median overall survival. This ensured that the risk of dying while taking brivanib was not unacceptably higher than with sorafenib, explained Dr. Johnson, professor of oncology and translational research and director of the Cancer Research U.K. Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham in England.

Based on the sample size, a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08 meant that the estimated hazard rate had to be 0.94 at highest for brivanib to be considered noninferior to sorafenib. Comparisons of the median overall survival between the groups showed an overall hazard ratio of 1.07 for brivanib with an upper 95% confidence interval value of 1.23, which was higher than the predetermined limit for noninferiority of 1.08 or less.

Median overall survival was 9.9 months with sorafenib and 9.5 months with brivanib. No subgroup of patients had better survival with either drug. The median time-to-progression was nearly equal in patients treated with sorafenib (4.1 months) and brivanib (4.2 months). Rates of complete, partial, and overall response, as well as disease control, were all similar between the groups.

A 50% or greater reduction in the level of alpha-fetoprotein occurred in 31% of 270 patients taking sorafenib and in 58% of 250 patients taking brivanib. A decline in alpha-fetoprotein levels has been considered an indication of tumor cells killed, Dr. Johnson said.

Similar percentages of patients in each group had dose reductions or underwent poststudy treatments. Both groups had similar rates of study discontinuation; the most frequent reasons were disease progression and drug toxicity.

Both agents also had similar rates of overall adverse events, but brivanib-treated patients experienced significantly higher rates of decreased appetite, fatigue, hypertension, nausea, vomiting, and hyponatremia. The adverse events that occurred more often among sorafenib-treated patients included hand-foot skin reaction, alopecia, and rash.

Both groups showed declines in quality of life at 12 weeks on the physical and role functions measured by the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer’s Quality of Life Questionnaire–Core 36). Small, but statistically significantly greater declines in these functions in the brivanib arm have unknown clinical significance, Dr. Johnson said.

The developer of brivanib, Bristol-Myers Squibb, funded the trial. No disclosures were available for Dr. Johnson.

BOSTON – The investigational antiangiogenic drug brivanib failed to achieve noninferiority to sorafenib in a phase III trial testing the two for first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

There is an unmet medical need for more effective and better tolerated drugs for the first-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than sorafenib (Nexavar), the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the indication. In particular, in Asian-Pacific and sub-Saharan countries where HCC is most prevalent, "many patients have such advanced disease at diagnosis that potentially curative treatments are no longer available," Dr. Philip Johnson said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

He and his colleagues randomized 1,155 patients to double-blind treatment with either sorafenib, a multitargeted kinase inhibitor, or brivanib, a dual vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors inhibitor. Both receptors are known to play a role in tumor growth, survival, and metastasis through proangiogenic signaling in HCC tumor cells.

The patients in this multicenter study, who had not yet received any systemic therapy, had a mean age of about 60 years, and most were men (84%). About two-thirds of the patients were Asian, and 92% were in Child-Pugh class A. The groups had a similar prevalence of infection with hepatitis B (20%) or hepatitis C (45%) viruses and alcoholic liver disease (16%).

The trial, known as the BRISK-FL study, had a hybrid noninferiority/superiority design in which the investigators set a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08, which equates to no more than a 3-week difference in median overall survival. This ensured that the risk of dying while taking brivanib was not unacceptably higher than with sorafenib, explained Dr. Johnson, professor of oncology and translational research and director of the Cancer Research U.K. Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham in England.

Based on the sample size, a noninferiority upper margin of 1.08 meant that the estimated hazard rate had to be 0.94 at highest for brivanib to be considered noninferior to sorafenib. Comparisons of the median overall survival between the groups showed an overall hazard ratio of 1.07 for brivanib with an upper 95% confidence interval value of 1.23, which was higher than the predetermined limit for noninferiority of 1.08 or less.

Median overall survival was 9.9 months with sorafenib and 9.5 months with brivanib. No subgroup of patients had better survival with either drug. The median time-to-progression was nearly equal in patients treated with sorafenib (4.1 months) and brivanib (4.2 months). Rates of complete, partial, and overall response, as well as disease control, were all similar between the groups.

A 50% or greater reduction in the level of alpha-fetoprotein occurred in 31% of 270 patients taking sorafenib and in 58% of 250 patients taking brivanib. A decline in alpha-fetoprotein levels has been considered an indication of tumor cells killed, Dr. Johnson said.

Similar percentages of patients in each group had dose reductions or underwent poststudy treatments. Both groups had similar rates of study discontinuation; the most frequent reasons were disease progression and drug toxicity.

Both agents also had similar rates of overall adverse events, but brivanib-treated patients experienced significantly higher rates of decreased appetite, fatigue, hypertension, nausea, vomiting, and hyponatremia. The adverse events that occurred more often among sorafenib-treated patients included hand-foot skin reaction, alopecia, and rash.

Both groups showed declines in quality of life at 12 weeks on the physical and role functions measured by the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer’s Quality of Life Questionnaire–Core 36). Small, but statistically significantly greater declines in these functions in the brivanib arm have unknown clinical significance, Dr. Johnson said.

The developer of brivanib, Bristol-Myers Squibb, funded the trial. No disclosures were available for Dr. Johnson.

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Brivanib Can't Match Sorafenib for Advanced Liver Cancer
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investigational antiangiogenic drug brivanib, sorafenib, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, first-line treatment, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, HCC, sorafenib, Nexavar, Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Philip Johnson, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, kinase inhibitor, brivanib, dual vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF, fibroblast growth factor, FGF, BRISK-FL study, Cancer Research U.K. Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham in England,
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investigational antiangiogenic drug brivanib, sorafenib, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, first-line treatment, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma, HCC, sorafenib, Nexavar, Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Philip Johnson, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, kinase inhibitor, brivanib, dual vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF, fibroblast growth factor, FGF, BRISK-FL study, Cancer Research U.K. Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham in England,
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AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF LIVER DISEASES

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article

Vitals

Major Finding: Comparisons of the median overall survival between brivanib- and sorafenib-treated patients showed an overall hazard ratio of 1.07 for brivanib with an upper 95% confidence interval value of 1.23, which was higher than the predetermined limit for noninferiority of 1.08 or less.

Data Source: The BRISK-FL study was a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, phase III trial of brivanib vs. sorafenib in 1,155 patients with unresectable, advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

Disclosures: The developer of brivanib, Bristol-Myers Squibb, funded the trial. No disclosures were available for Dr. Johnson.