An interferon-free regimen of daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir, with or without ribavirin, cured all previously treated hepatitis C patients who did not respond to interferon-based triple therapy using the approved HCV protease inhibitors boceprevir (Victrelis) or telaprevir (Incivek), according to a report presented at the EASL International Liver Congress (EASL 2013) this week in Amsterdam.
The advent of direct-acting antivirals has changed the treatment paradigm for chronic hepatitis C. Yet many people with progressive liver disease are not in a position to wait for all-oral regimens, and no options have been proven effective for patients who fail on the latest standard of care consisting of pegylated interferon, ribavirin, and one of the approved HCV NS3 protease inhibitors, boceprevir or telaprevir.
Mark Sulkowski from Johns Hopkins University and colleagues conducted a proof-of-concept study to evaluate an all-oral regimen containing Bristol-Myers Squibb's NS5A replication complex inhibitor daclatasvir (formerly BMS-790052) plus Gilead Sciences' nucleotide analog HCV polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir (formerly GS-7977), with or without ribavirin, for patients who failed triple therapy with boceprevir or telaprevir.
As Sulkowski reported at the AASLD Liver Meeting this past November, the daclatasvir/sofosbuvir combination was previously shown to be highly effective, demonstrating near complete sustained virological response for previously untreated patients.
The current study enrolled 41 genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C patients, more than 80% with harder-to-treat subtype 1a. Nearly two-thirds were men, 90% were white, and the median age was 58 years (older than the population in most hepatitis C trials). People with known liver cirrhosis were excluded, but more than 80% had estimated Metavir scores of F2 (moderate fibrosis) or higher according to non-invasive tests. Almost all had unfavourable (CT or TT) IL28B gene patterns.
Most (about 80%) had previously used telaprevir, while about 20% had used boceprevir. Participants were roughly evenly divided between prior non-responders (continued detectable HCV RNA at the end of treatment), prior viral breakthroughs on treatment, and prior relapsers. Those who had stopped boceprevir or telaprevir due to adverse events were excluded. Nearly half still had boceprevir or telaprevir resistance mutations, even though the median time since last treatment was more than four years.
Study participants were randomly assigned to receive 60 mg once-daily daclatasvir plus 400 mg once-daily sofosbuvir, either as a dual regimen or with 1000-1200 mg/day weight-based ribavirin, for 24 weeks.
Results
The researchers concluded that the all-oral, once-daily combination of daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir with or without ribavirin achieved SVR in all HCV genotype 1 patients" who failed prior treatment with boceprevir or telaprevir and pegylated interferon/ribavirin.
"Neither baseline NS3 protease inhibitor resistance variants nor use of ribavirin influenced response," they continued. "These data provide proof-of-concept that the combination of two potent direct-acting antivirals with different viral targets is effective in patients who failed [pegylated interferon/ribavirin] plus a protease inhibitor."
"We can tell our patients who failed triple therapy they now appear to have a path forward toward a cure," Sulkowski said.
4/28/13
Reference
MS Sulkowski, DF Gardiner, M Rodriguez-Torres, et al. Sustained virologic response with daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir +/-± ribavirin (RBV) in chronic HCV genotype (GT) 1-infected patients who previously failed telaprevir (TVR) or boceprevir (BOC). 48th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL 2013). Amsterdam, April 24-28, 2013. Abstract 1417.