Boceprevir
Improves Response to Interferon-based Therapy and Allows Many Patients
to Reduce Duration of Treatment
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SUMMARY:
Final results from 2 pivotal Phase 3 clinical trials presented
at the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
"Liver Meeting" (AASLD 2010)
this week in Boston showed that adding Merck's experimental
hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 protease inhibitor boceprevir
to standard therapy increased the likelihood of sustained
virological response for both previously untreated and treatment-experienced
genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C patients. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
Current
standard therapy for chronic hepatitis C consists of pegylated
interferon plus ribavirin for 24 weeks (HCV
genotypes 2 and 3) or 48 weeks (genotypes
1 or 4). Interferon-based therapy can cause difficult side effects,
however, and only about half of people with hard-to-treat HCV genotype
1 achieve a cure.
The first novel oral drugs that directly target steps of the viral lifecycle
-- such as HCV protease and polymerase inhibitors -- are in the final
stages of development. Most studies to date have looked at these agents
in combination with pegylated interferon plus ribavirin. These direct-acting
agents are often tested in genotype 1 prior non-responders who did not
achieved a cure with previous interferon-based therapy, since they are
most difficult to treat and stand to benefit most from new treatment
options.
A pair of HCV protease inhibitors -- Merck's boceprevir
and Vertex's telaprevir -- are furthest along
in the development pipeline, and many experts expect that they will
be approved next year.
RESPOND-2
The Phase 3 RESPOND-2 study included 403 treatment-experienced genotype
1 patients in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. Participants included prior
null responders (no notable decrease in HCV viral load), non-responders
(some decrease, but not undetectable), and relapsers (undetectable at
the end of treatment followed by viral rebound). About two-thirds were
men, 12% were black -- a group that responds more poorly to interferon
-- and 12% had liver cirrhosis (another predictor of poor response).
All participants initially took a standard therapy regimen of 1.5 mcg/kg/week
pegylated interferon alfa-2b
(PegIntron) plus 600-1400 mg/day weight-adjusted ribavirin for a
4-week lead-in period. After this, they were randomly assigned to continue
on pegylated interferon/ribavirin, either alone or in combination with
800 mg 3-times-daily boceprevir.
Boceprevir recipients were assigned to either receive triple combination
therapy for a fixed duration of 44 more weeks of (total 48 weeks), or
to use a response-guided therapy strategy in which the total duration
was determined based on early response. Patients with undetectable HCV
RNA viral load at weeks 8 and thereafter were eligible to stop all treatment
at week 36. Those with detectable viral load at week 8 but not at week
12 also stopped boceprevir at week 36, but continued on pegylated interferon/ribavirin
through week 48. Anyone who still had detectable HCV RNA at week 12
discontinued all therapy due to the likely futility of further treatment.
Results
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In
an intent-to-treat analysis, patients using boceprevir had a significantly
higher rate of sustained virological response (SVR), or continued
undetectable HCV RNA at 24 weeks after completion of treatment: |
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Standard
therapy without boceprevir: SVR 21%; |
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Response-guided
therapy with boceprevir: 59% (37% improvement); |
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Fixed-duration
therapy with boceprevir: 67% (45% improvement). |
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In
all arms, previous relapsers and non-responders had higher SVR rates
than prior null responders: |
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Standard
therapy without boceprevir: 29%, 7%, and 0%, respectively; |
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Response-guided
therapy with boceprevir: 69%, 40%, and 33%, respectively; |
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Fixed-duration
therapy with boceprevir: 75%, 52%, and 34%, respectively. |
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Prior null responders in both response-guided and fixed-duration
boceprevir arms had significantly higher SVR rates than those receiving
standard therapy. |
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46%
of patients in the response-guided therapy arm met the early response
criteria and were eligible to stop all treatment at 36 weeks; the
SVR rate for this subgroup was 86% (versus 88% with fixed-duration
boceprevir). |
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The
highest SVR rate -- 80% -- was seen among patients who had at least
a 1 log drop in HCV RNA at week 4 following the lead-in and received
boceprevir for 44 weeks. |
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Relapse
rates were 32% in the standard therapy arm, 15% in the boceprevir
response-guided therapy arm, and 12% in the boceprevir fixed-duration
arm. |
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Rates
of discontinuation due to adverse events were 3% in the standard
therapy arm, 8% in the boceprevir response-guided arm, and 12% in
the boceprevir fixed-duration arm. |
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The
most common treatment-related adverse events were fatigue, headache,
nausea, chills, and flu-like illness -- all symptoms of interferon
-- occurring at similar rates in all arms. |
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Anemia,
however, was more common in the response-guided and fixed-duration
boceprevir arms (43% and 46%) than in the standard therapy arm (20%);
41%, 46%, and 21%, respectively, used erythropoietin to manage anemia. |
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There
were no discontinuations due to skin rash, a potential boceprevir
side effect. |
"Boceprevir
added to [pegylated interferon/ribavirin] leads to high SVR rates in
genotype 1 previous non-responders and relapsers to [pegylated interferon/ribavirin]
therapy, with significant but lower response rates in 'null' responders,"
the RESPOND-2 investigators concluded. "This therapy was generally
well tolerated, and offers substantial benefit to patients who failed
prior [pegylated interferon/ribavirin] therapy."
"In
the study of patients who failed prior treatment, boceprevir combination
therapy helped the majority of patients achieve sustained virologic
response, the goal of treatment," co-principal investigator Bruce
Bacon from Saint Louis University School of Medicine said in a press
release issued by Merck. "We observed that many patients in the
boceprevir response-guided therapy arm were able to have their treatment
duration reduced by 3 months compared to current standard duration of
treatment."
SPRINT-2
The Phase 3 SPRINT-2 study included 1097 treatment-naive genotype 1
patients. Participants were divided into cohorts according to race,
since people of African descent do not respond as well to interferon.
One cohort included 159 African-American/black patients (about 15%),
while the other included 938 people of other racial/ethnic groups ("non-black").
More than 90% had high HCV viral load (> 400,000 IU/mL) and 9% had
advanced (stage F3-F4) liver fibrosis.
As with RESPOND-2, participants in SPRINT-2 were randomly assigned to
receive the same doses of pegylated interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin
either alone or with boceprevir. This study also assigned some patients
to a fixed-duration 48-week course of treatment and others to response-guided
therapy; in this study, however, people with undetectable HCV viral
load at week 8 were eligible to stop all treatment at 28 weeks. Patients
with detectable HCV RNA at week 24 discontinued due to likely futility.
Results
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In
an intent-to-treat analysis, SVR rates were again significantly
higher in the boceprevir arms: |
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Standard
therapy without boceprevir: 38% (40% for non-blacks and 23%
for blacks); |
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Response-guided
therapy with boceprevir: 63% (67% and 42%, respectively); |
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Fixed
duration therapy with boceprevir: 66% (69% and 53%, respectively). |
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44%
of patients in the response-guided therapy arm met the early response
criteria and were eligible to stop all treatment at 28 weeks; SVR
rates in this subgroup were 97% for non-blacks and 87% for blacks
(versus 96% and 95%, respectively, with fixed-dose boceprevir). |
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Relapse
rates were as follows: |
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Standard
therapy without boceprevir: 23% for non-blacks and 14% for
blacks; |
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Response-guided
therapy with boceprevir: 9% and 12%, respectively; |
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Fixed
duration therapy with boceprevir: 8% and 17%, respectively. |
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Rates
of discontinuation due to adverse events were 16% in the standard
therapy arm, 12% in the boceprevir response-guided arm, and 16%
in the boceprevir fixed-duration arm. |
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The
most common side effects were similar to those reported by treatment-experienced
patients, again affecting similar proportions of participants in
all arms. |
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Again,
anemia was more common in the boceprevir arms (49% for both) than
in the standard therapy arm (29%); 13% and 21%, respectively, reduced
drug doses, and 1% and 2%, respectively, discontinued therapy early
for this reason. |
"[Boceprevir/pegylated
interferon/ribavirin] significantly increased SVR in both the [response-guided
therapy] and 48-week treatment arms over standard of care by ~70%,"
the SPRINT-2 team concluded. "Compared to 44 weeks of triple therapy
after the lead-in period, [response-guided therapy] produced comparable
SVR [rates]."
"Boceprevir was well tolerated," they added. "[A]lthough
reported more often in boceprevir recipients, anemia rarely led to treatment
discontinuation."
"In these studies, boceprevir response-guided therapy provided
physicians flexibility in the management of their patients' HCV therapy,
which enabled them to adapt treatment duration based on individual patient
response," said co-principal investigator Fred Poordad from Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in a Merck press release. "These studies were designed
with a 4-week lead-in strategy that was intended to help physicians
identify their patients' responsiveness to interferon prior to the addition
of a protease inhibitor, which provided an early indication of the likelihood
of treatment success."
"We are excited by the results of these pivotal studies,"
Peter Kim, President of Merck Research Laboratories, said in the company
press release. "In these studies, boceprevir substantially increased
success rates compared to standard therapy, both for patients who received
48 weeks of treatment and for patients treated with the response-guided
therapy approach, many of whom were able to be treated for 28 to 36
weeks."
Based on these data, he added, Merck has initiated a rolling submission
of a New Drug Application (NDA) for boceprevir to the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA), with completion expected by the end of 2010.
Investigator affiliations:
Bacon study (RESPOND-2): Saint Louis University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO; Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI; Alamo Medical Research,
San Antonio, TX; University Paris 7-Hôpital Beaujon, Clichy, France;
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX; Universitätsklinikum des
Saarlandes, Homburg/Saar, Germany; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los
Angeles, CA; Merck, Whitehouse Station, NJ; Hospital General Universitario
Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain. Poordad and Bronowicki studies (SPRINT-2):
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA; Gastroenterology/Hepatology
Certified Endoscopy Centers, Alexandria, VA; St. Louis University School
of Medicine, St. Louis, MO; University of Milan, Milan, Italy; Medical
School of Hannover, Hannover, Germany; Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD; Joan Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University,
New York, NY; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; Merck, North
Wales, PA; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nancy-Brabois, Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy,
France.
11/2/10
References
BR Bacon,
SC Gordon, E Lawitz, and others. HCV RESPOND-2 Final Results: High Sustained
Virologic Response Among Genotype 1 Previous Non-Responders and Relapsers
to Peginterferon/Ribavirin when Re-Treated with Boceprevir Plus PegIntron
(Peginterferon alfa-2b)/Ribavirin. 61st Annual Meeting of the American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD 2010). Boston, October
29-November 2, 2010. Abstract
216.
F Poordad, J McCone, BR Bacon, and others. Boceprevir (BOC) Combined
with Peginterferon alfa-2b/Ribavirin (P/R) for Treatment-Naive Patients
with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Genotype (G) 1: SPRINT-2 Final Results.
61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver
Diseases (AASLD 2010). Boston, October 29-November 2, 2010. Abstract
LB-4.
J Bronowicki, J McCone, BR Bacon, and others. Response-Guided Therapy
(RGT) with Boceprevir (BOC) + Peginterferon alfa-2b/Ribavirin (P/R)
for Treatment-Naïve Patients with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Genotype
(G) 1 Was Similar to a 48-Wk Fixed-Duration Regimen with BOC + P/R in
SPRINT-2. 61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study
of Liver Diseases (AASLD 2010). Boston, October 29-November 2, 2010.
Abstract
LB-15.
Other Source
Merck. Merck's Investigational Medicine Boceprevir Achieved Significantly
Higher SVR Rates In Treatment-Failure and Treatment-Naive Adult Patients
with Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 1 Compared to Control. Press
release. October 30, 2010.
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