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Fibrosis Progression in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection [Meeting Abstract]
Zeremski, Marija; Dimova, Rositsa B; Pillardy, Jaroslaw; De Jong, Ype P; Jacobson, Ira M; Talal, Andrew H
ISI:000368375404087
ISSN: 1527-3350
CID: 2571182
Impact of common risk factors of fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C
Rueger, S; Bochud, P-Y; Dufour, J-F; Mullhaupt, B; Semela, D; Heim, M H; Moradpour, D; Cerny, A; Malinverni, R; Booth, D R; Suppiah, V; George, J; Argiro, L; Halfon, P; Bourliere, M; Talal, A H; Jacobson, I M; Patin, E; Nalpas, B; Poynard, T; Pol, S; Abel, L; Kutalik, Z; Negro, F
OBJECTIVE: The natural course of chronic hepatitis C varies widely. To improve the profiling of patients at risk of developing advanced liver disease, we assessed the relative contribution of factors for liver fibrosis progression in hepatitis C. DESIGN: We analysed 1461 patients with chronic hepatitis C with an estimated date of infection and at least one liver biopsy. Risk factors for accelerated fibrosis progression rate (FPR), defined as >/= 0.13 Metavir fibrosis units per year, were identified by logistic regression. Examined factors included age at infection, sex, route of infection, HCV genotype, body mass index (BMI), significant alcohol drinking (>/= 20 g/day for >/= 5 years), HIV coinfection and diabetes. In a subgroup of 575 patients, we assessed the impact of single nucleotide polymorphisms previously associated with fibrosis progression in genome-wide association studies. Results were expressed as attributable fraction (AF) of risk for accelerated FPR. RESULTS: Age at infection (AF 28.7%), sex (AF 8.2%), route of infection (AF 16.5%) and HCV genotype (AF 7.9%) contributed to accelerated FPR in the Swiss Hepatitis C Cohort Study, whereas significant alcohol drinking, anti-HIV, diabetes and BMI did not. In genotyped patients, variants at rs9380516 (TULP1), rs738409 (PNPLA3), rs4374383 (MERTK) (AF 19.2%) and rs910049 (major histocompatibility complex region) significantly added to the risk of accelerated FPR. Results were replicated in three additional independent cohorts, and a meta-analysis confirmed the role of age at infection, sex, route of infection, HCV genotype, rs738409, rs4374383 and rs910049 in accelerating FPR. CONCLUSIONS: Most factors accelerating liver fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C are unmodifiable.
PMID: 25214320
ISSN: 1468-3288
CID: 2569332
Sofosbuvir plus pegylated interferon and ribavirin in patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus in whom previous therapy with direct-acting antivirals has failed
Pol, Stanislas; Sulkowski, Mark S; Hassanein, Tarek; Gane, Edward J; Liu, Lin; Mo, Hongmei; Doehle, Brian; Kanwar, Bittoo; Brainard, Diana; Subramanian, G Mani; Symonds, William T; McHutchison, John G; Nahass, Ronald G; Bennett, Michael; Jacobson, Ira M
UNLABELLED: Retreatment of patients who have not achieved sustained virological response (SVR) after treatment with investigational direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) has not been extensively studied. We conducted an open-label trial to assess the efficacy and safety of sofosbuvir (SOF) plus pegylated interferon (Peg-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) in patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus (HCV) who participated in previous studies of one or more Gilead investigational DAAs in combination with RBV with or without Peg-IFN. We enrolled 80 patients at 40 sites. All patients received SOF 400 mg once daily plus Peg-IFN-alpha 180 mug/week and weight-based ribavirin (1,000 or 1,200 mg/day) for 12 weeks. The efficacy endpoint was the proportion of patients with SVR 12 weeks after discontinuation of therapy (SVR12). Of the 80 patients enrolled, 36 (45%) had received two or more courses of earlier treatment for HCV and 74 (93%) had at least one resistance-associated variant (RAV) at baseline. SVR12 was achieved by 63 of the 80 patients (79%) treated. Rates of SVR12 were similar across patient subgroups. Presence of RAVs at baseline did not appear to be associated with treatment failure. Seventy-one of eighty patients (89%) experienced at least one adverse event (AE), but most events were mild to moderate in severity. The most common AEs were fatigue, headache, and nausea. No patients discontinued all treatment because of AEs. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that SOF plus Peg-IFN and RBV for 12 weeks is effective and safe in patients who have not achieved SVR with earlier regimens of one or more DAAs plus Peg-IFN and RBV.
PMID: 25847509
ISSN: 1527-3350
CID: 2568202
Fixed-dose combination therapy with daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir for noncirrhotic patients with HCV genotype 1 infection
Poordad, Fred; Sievert, William; Mollison, Lindsay; Bennett, Michael; Tse, Edmund; Brau, Norbert; Levin, James; Sepe, Thomas; Lee, Samuel S; Angus, Peter; Conway, Brian; Pol, Stanislas; Boyer, Nathalie; Bronowicki, Jean-Pierre; Jacobson, Ira; Muir, Andrew J; Reddy, K Rajender; Tam, Edward; Ortiz-Lasanta, Grisell; de Ledinghen, Victor; Sulkowski, Mark; Boparai, Navdeep; McPhee, Fiona; Hughes, Eric; Swenson, E Scott; Yin, Philip D
IMPORTANCE: The antiviral activity of all-oral, ribavirin-free, direct-acting antiviral regimens requires evaluation in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. OBJECTIVE: To determine the rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) in patients receiving the 3-drug combination of daclatasvir (a pan-genotypic NS5A inhibitor), asunaprevir (an NS3 protease inhibitor), and beclabuvir (a nonnucleoside NS5B inhibitor). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was an open-label, single-group, uncontrolled international study (UNITY-1) conducted at 66 sites in the United States, Canada, France, and Australia between December 2013 and August 2014. Patients without cirrhosis who were either treatment-naive (n = 312) or treatment-experienced (n = 103) and had chronic HCV genotype 1 infection were included. INTERVENTIONS: Patients received a twice-daily fixed-dose combination of daclatasvir, 30 mg; asunaprevir, 200 mg; and beclabuvir, 75 mg. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary study outcome was SVR12 (HCV-RNA <25 IU/mL at posttreatment week 12) in patients naive to treatment. A key secondary outcome was SVR12 in the treatment-experienced cohort. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics were comparable between the treatment-naive and treatment-experienced cohorts. Patients were 58% male, 26% had IL28B (rs12979860) CC genotype, 73% were infected with genotype 1a, and 27% were infected with genotype 1b. Overall, SVR12 was observed in 379 of 415 patients (91.3%; 95% CI, 88.6%-94.0%): 287 of 312 treatment-naive patients (92.0%; 95% CI, 89.0%-95.0%) and 92 of 103 treatment-experienced patients (89.3%; 95% CI, 83.4%-95.3%). Virologic failure occurred in 34 patients (8%) overall. One patient died at posttreatment week 3; this was not considered related to study medication. There were 7 serious adverse events, all considered unrelated to study treatment, and 3 adverse events (<1%) leading to treatment discontinuation, including 2 grade 4 alanine aminotransferase elevations. The most common adverse events (in >/=10% of patients) were headache, fatigue, diarrhea, and nausea. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this open-label, nonrandomized, uncontrolled study, a high rate of SVR12 was achieved in treatment-naive and treatment-experienced noncirrhotic patients with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection who received 12 weeks of treatment with the oral fixed-dose regimen of daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01979939.
PMID: 25942723
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 1569352
Plasma Interferon-gamma-Inducible Protein 10 (Ip-10) and Response to Interferon-Free Direct-Acting Antiviral Therapy in HCV Genotype 1-Infected Patients With and Without Cirrhosis [Meeting Abstract]
Jacobson, Ira M; Dore, Gregory J; Wyles, David; Lawitz, Eric; Talal, Andrew; Ball, Greg; Dumas, Emily O; Feld, Jordan J
ISI:000360120800131
ISSN: 1528-0012
CID: 2571082
Improvement in Liver Function and Non-Invasive Estimates of Liver Fibrosis 48 Weeks After Treatment With Ombitasvir/Paritaprevir/R, Dasabuvir and Ribavirin in HCV Genotype 1 Patients With Cirrhosis [Meeting Abstract]
Flamm, Steven L; Morgan, Timothy R; Fried, Michael W; Poordad, Fred; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Berg, Thomas; Foster, Graham; Craxi, Antonio; Larrey, Dominique; Trinh, Roger; Lovell, Sandra S; Tang, Yuanyuan; Pedrosa, Marcos; Lopez-Talavera, Juan Carlos; Jacobson, Ira M
ISI:000360120300556
ISSN: 1528-0012
CID: 2571072
Simeprevir with peginterferon/ribavirin for treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus genotype 1 infection: pooled safety analysis from Phase IIb and III studies
Manns, M P; Fried, M W; Zeuzem, S; Jacobson, I M; Forns, X; Poordad, F; Peeters, M; Fu, M; Lenz, O; Ouwerkerk-Mahadevan, S; Jessner, W; Scott, J A; Kalmeijer, R; De La Rosa, G; Sinha, R; Beumont-Mauviel, M
This pooled analysis of five Phase IIb and III studies evaluated the safety and tolerability of simeprevir, a once daily, oral hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4A protease inhibitor. Data were summarised for patients who received simeprevir 150 mg once daily (n = 924) or placebo (n = 540) plus pegylated interferon-alpha/ribavirin for 12 weeks. During the first 12 weeks of treatment, few patients discontinued simeprevir or placebo due to adverse events (AEs) (both 2.2%). Pruritus (23.8% vs 17.4%), rash (any; 22.9% vs 16.7%) and photosensitivity (3.2% vs 0.6%) [Correction added on 16 January 2015, after first online publication: In the above sentence, the values in 'Photosensitivity' were previously incorrect and have now been changed to 3.2% vs 0.6%.] were more prevalent in the simeprevir vs the placebo groups. Most AEs were grade 1/2 (72.4% for simeprevir vs 71.3% for placebo). All grade 3/4 AEs occurred in <5.0% of patients, except neutropenia (9.8% vs 7.6%). Overall incidence of neutropenia was similar (17.3% vs 15.7%). Incidence of anaemia was 13.2% for simeprevir vs 10.9% for placebo, and incidence of increased bilirubin was 8.4% vs 2.8%. Bilirubin increases were mild-to-moderate and transient without concurrent transaminase increases or association with hepatic injury. Safety and tolerability did not vary with METAVIR score, although increased bilirubin and anaemia were more frequent in simeprevir-treated patients with METAVIR F4 (increased bilirubin, 13.0% vs 3.3%; anaemia, 19.0% vs 14.8%). Serious AEs were infrequent (2.1% for simeprevir vs 3.0% for placebo). No deaths were reported during the first 12 weeks of treatment. Patient-reported fatigue and other outcomes were comparable for both groups, but were of shorter duration for simeprevir due to the use of response-guided therapy. Simeprevir is well tolerated in HCV genotype 1-infected patients.
PMID: 25363449
ISSN: 1365-2893
CID: 2569322
Hepatitis C virus RNA functionally sequesters miR-122
Luna, Joseph M; Scheel, Troels K H; Danino, Tal; Shaw, Katharina S; Mele, Aldo; Fak, John J; Nishiuchi, Eiko; Takacs, Constantin N; Catanese, Maria Teresa; de Jong, Ype P; Jacobson, Ira M; Rice, Charles M; Darnell, Robert B
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) uniquely requires the liver-specific microRNA-122 for replication, yet global effects on endogenous miRNA targets during infection are unexplored. Here, high-throughput sequencing and crosslinking immunoprecipitation (HITS-CLIP) experiments of human Argonaute (AGO) during HCV infection showed robust AGO binding on the HCV 5'UTR at known and predicted miR-122 sites. On the human transcriptome, we observed reduced AGO binding and functional mRNA de-repression of miR-122 targets during virus infection. This miR-122 "sponge" effect was relieved and redirected to miR-15 targets by swapping the miRNA tropism of the virus. Single-cell expression data from reporters containing miR-122 sites showed significant de-repression during HCV infection depending on expression level and site number. We describe a quantitative mathematical model of HCV-induced miR-122 sequestration and propose that such miR-122 inhibition by HCV RNA may result in global de-repression of host miR-122 targets, providing an environment fertile for the long-term oncogenic potential of HCV.
PMCID:4386883
PMID: 25768906
ISSN: 1097-4172
CID: 2568212
All oral fixed dose combination therapy with daclatasvir asunaprevir beclabuvir for patients with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection without cirrhosis unity 1 phase 3 results [Meeting Abstract]
Poordad, F; Sievert, W; Mollison, L; Brau, N; Levin, J; Sepe, T; Lee, S; Boyer, N; Bronowicki, J -P; Jacobson, I; Boparai, N; Hughes, E; Swenson, S; Yin, P
Introduction: The all-oral combination of daclatasvir (DCV; pangenotypic NS5A inhibitor), asunaprevir (ASV; NS3 protease inhibitor), and beclabuvir (BCV; BMS-791325; non-nucleoside NS5B inhibitor)- DCV-TRIO regimen-was evaluated without ribavirin in HCV genotype (GT) 1-infected treatment-naive and -experienced patients without cirrhosis in a Phase 3, open-label, international clinical trial. Methods: Patients received a fixed-dose combination (FDC) of DCV 30 mg, ASV 200 mg, and BCV 75 mg twice daily for 12 weeks. SVR12 rates in the treatment-naive and -experienced cohorts were evaluated separately as key efficacy outcomes. Results: SVR12 was achieved by 92 % of treatment-naive patients (Table). Among treatment-experienced patients, 89 % achieved SVR12. Virologic failure occurred in 34 (8 %) patients overall. Baseline characteristics were comparable between the treatment-naive (N = 312) and treatment-experienced (N = 103) cohorts. Overall, patients were 58 %male and 26 %IL28B (rs1297860) CC genotype; 73 % were infected with GT 1a and 27 % with GT 1b. One death reported posttreatment was considered not related to study treatment. There were 7 serious adverse events, all considered unrelated to study treatment, and 3 (<1 %) adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation. The most common adverse events (in>10 % of patients) were headache, fatigue, diarrhea, and nausea. Conclusions: In this Phase 3 study of 415 patients, 12 weeks of alloral treatment with DCV/ASV/BCV FDC achieved high SVR12 rates in patients with chronic HCV GT 1 infection and was well tolerated. These findings demonstrate the potent antiviral activity, safety, and tolerability of the DCV-TRIO regimen in treatment-naive and treatment- experienced patients without cirrhosis
EMBASE:71806253
ISSN: 1936-0533
CID: 1514732
Randomized study of danoprevir/ritonavir-based therapy for HCV genotype 1 patients with prior partial or null responses to peginterferon/ribavirin
Feld, Jordan J; Jacobson, Ira M; Jensen, Donald M; Foster, Graham R; Pol, Stanislas; Tam, Edward; Jablkowski, Maciej; Berak, Hanna; Vierling, John M; Yoshida, Eric M; Perez-Gomez, Hector R; Scalori, Astrid; Hooper, Gregory J; Tavel, Jorge A; Navarro, Mercidita T; Shahdad, Saba; Kulkarni, Rohit; Le Pogam, Sophie; Najera, Isabel; Eng, Simon; Lim, Chin Yin; Shulman, Nancy S; Yetzer, Ellen S
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Chronic hepatitis C treatment for prior non-responders to peginterferon (PegIFN)/ribavirin remains suboptimal. The MATTERHORN study evaluated regimens containing ritonavir-boosted danoprevir (danoprevir/r) in prior PegIFN alfa/ribavirin non-responders. METHODS: Prior partial responders (N=152) were randomized to 24 weeks of twice-daily danoprevir/r 100/100mg, mericitabine 1000 mg and ribavirin 1000/1200 mg (IFN-free); danoprevir/r plus PegIFN alfa-2a/ribavirin (triple); or danoprevir/r, mericitabine and PegIFN alfa-2a/ribavirin (Quad). Prior null responders (N=229) were randomized to 24 weeks of IFN-free therapy, or quad alone (Quad 24) or quad plus 24-weeks of PegIFN alfa-2a/ribavirin (Quad 48). The primary endpoint was sustained virological response (HCV RNA <25 IU/ml) 24 weeks after end-of-treatment (SVR24). Due to high relapse rates, genotype (G) 1a patients in IFN-free arms were offered additional PegIFN alfa-2a/ribavirin. RESULTS: Among prior partial responders, SVR24 rates were 46.2%, 51.0%, and 86.0%, in the IFN-free, Triple and Quad arms, respectively; among prior null responders, SVR24 rates were 45.5%, 80.5%, and 83.8% respectively. Relapse rates were lower and SVR24 rates higher in G1b-infected than G1a-infected patients. SVR24 rates in G1a and G1b patients randomized to Quad were 75.0% and 96.2%, respectively, in the partial Quad arm, and 68.1% and 100%, respectively, in the null Quad 24 arm. Treatment failure was associated with resistance to danoprevir, but not to mericitabine, and was more common in G1a infected patients. Treatment was well-tolerated. CONCLUSIONS: Danoprevir/r, mericitabine plus PegIFN alfa-2a/ribavirin was well-tolerated and produced high overall SVR24 rates in prior partial and null responders to PegIFN alfa/ribavirin. In contrast, IFN-free regimens were associated with unacceptably high relapse rates.
PMID: 25239078
ISSN: 1600-0641
CID: 2568262