A 12-week oral regimen of daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir, with or without ribavirin, cured 86% to 90% of genotype 1 hepatitis C patients with cirrhosis in the Phase 3 UNITY-2 trial, while the TRIO regimen without ribavirin demonstrated similar sustained response rates for non-cirrhotics in UNITY-1, according to 2 late-breaking reports presented at the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) Liver Meeting this week in Boston. Findings suggest that ribavirin is still useful for some harder-to-treat patients.
With the recent U.S. approval of Harvoni (Gilead Sciences' sofosbuvir/ledipasvir) and the pending approval of AbbVie's 3D regimen (paritaprevir/ombitasvir/ritonavir + dasabuvir) -- both of which are well-tolerated and cure well over 90% of genotype 1 patients -- the bar has been raised for agents further back in the development pipeline. Although there is room for competition on price, any new regimen will have to be highly effective and easy to take with minimal side effects.
Bristol-Myers Squibb's pan-genotypic (effective against multiple viral genotypes) NS5A inhibitor daclatasvir (Daklinza) was recently approved in the European Union. An oral regimen of daclatasvir and the company's HCV NS3/4A protease inhibitor asunaprevir (Sunvepra) is approved in Japan, where most hepatitis C patients have easier-to-treat HCV genotype 1b.
Studies showed that this dual regimen did not work as well against harder-to-treat genotype 1a, but adding a third direct-acting antiviral improved response rates. BMS is now evaluating a twice-daily coformulation containing daclatasvir (30 mg), asunaprevir (200 mg), and its non-nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor BMS-791325, newly dubbed beclabuvir (75 mg).
As part of its Phase 3 development program, the multinational UNITY-2 trial tested the TRIO regimen in more than 200 chronic hepatitis C patients with liver cirrhosis -- a group that is more difficult to treat and often requires longer or more intensive therapy. Andrew Muir from Duke University School of Medicine presented late-breaking results on Monday.
A total of 112 previously untreated participants and 90 treatment-experienced patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to take the TRIO regimen twice-daily either with placebo or with weight-based ribavirin for 12 weeks. Participants were followed through week 24 to determine sustained virological response, or continued undetectable HCV viral load, at 12 weeks after completing treatment (SVR12), which is considered a cure.
About two-thirds of study participants were men, most were white, and the median age was 59 years. About 70% of treatment-naive and 78% of previously treated patients had genotype 1a and most had high baseline viral load. Three-quarters had unfavorable IL28B gene variants associated with poor response to interferon. All had cirrhosis confirmed by liver biopsies or non-invasive methods, and one-quarter had a platelet count <100,000/mm3, indicating advanced disease. In the treatment-experienced cohort more than one-third were prior null responders -- the hardest group to treat.
Results
The multinational UNITY-1 trial (AI443-102) tested the 12-week TRIO regimen without ribavirin, again using the twice-daily fixed-dose coformulation; all participants received the same treatment. Results were presented in a late-breaking poster.
This study included 312 previously untreated and 103 treatment-experienced HCV genotype 1 patients without liver cirrhosis. About 60% were men, most were white, and the median age was 55 years. 73% had genotype 1a, about 80% had high baseline viral load, and three-quarters had unfavorable IL28B variants. In the treatment-experienced group, 38% were prior relapsers, 24% were null responders, 12% were partial responders, and 10% were interferon-intolerant.
Results
In agreement with several other studies presented at the Liver Meeting, the UNITY findings suggest that there is still a role for ribavirin in hard-to-treat patients, including those with genotype 1a and cirrhosis. In particular, even when using potent direct-acting antivirals, ribavirin appears to help prevent relapse, as it does with interferon-based therapy.
"Even with the most recent HCV treatment advances, genotype 1 patients with cirrhosis remain difficult to treat," Andrew Muir stated in a BMS press release. "Currently, treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients still require a 24-week regimen to achieve high SVR rates. The data from this clinical trial [UNITY-2] using the daclatasvir TRIO regimen showed high cure rates for this population in a 12-week regimen, and has the potential to aid treatment adherence and provide a shorter treatment duration to achieve cure."
It remains to be seen in clinical practice whether hard-to-treat individuals will respond better to -- or prefer -- the addition of ribavirin, with its potential for added side effects, versus extending the duration of treatment.
11/11/14
References
A Muir, F Poordad, JP Lalezari, et al. Oral fixed dose daclatasvir/asunaprevir/ BMS791325 for genotype 1 compensated cirrhosis: UNITY-2 Phase 3 SVR12. American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) Liver Meeting. Boston, November 7-12, 2014. AbstractLB-2.
F Poordad, W Sievert, L Mollison, et al. Daclatasvir/asunaprevir/BMS791325 for non-cirrhotics: UNITY-1 Phase 3 SVR12. American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) Liver Meeting. Boston, November 7-12, 2014. AbstractLB-7.
Other Source
Bristol-Myers Sqibb. Phase 3 UNITY Trials Demonstrate High Cure Rates for Investigational, All-Oral Daclatasvir TRIO Fixed-Dose Combination in Genotype 1 Hepatitis C Patients, Including Those with Cirrhosis. Press release. November 8, 2014.