Below is an excerpt from a Merck press release describing
the latest study findings.
In
Pivotal Phase III Studies, Merck's Investigational Medicine
Boceprevir Helped Majority of Patients with Chronic Hepatitis
C Genotype 1 Infection Achieve Sustained Virologic Response,
the Primary Endpoint of the Studies
Merck Expects to Submit NDA by Year-End
Whitehouse
Station, N.J. -- August 4, 2010 -- Merck today reported that
two pivotal Phase III registration studies for boceprevir, its
investigational oral hepatitis C protease inhibitor, have been
completed and met the primary endpoints: in both studies in
patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 infection,
the addition of boceprevir
to treatment with PegIntron
(peginterferon alfa-2b) and Rebetol (ribavirin, USP) (Peg/riba)
significantly increased the number of patients who achieved
sustained virologic response (SVR; defined as undetectable virus
levels 24 weeks after the end of treatment), compared to control
groups that received Peg/riba plus placebo.
Boceprevir,
in combination with Peg/riba, is being studied for the treatment
of patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype I who have previously
been treated (treatment-failure; HCV RESPOND-2) and in patients
who are new to treatment (treatment-naive; HCV SPRINT-2). Abstracts
for boceprevir studies have already been submitted for presentation
at a medical meeting later this year, and additional abstracts
are being submitted this week. Merck plans to submit a New Drug
Application (NDA) for boceprevir to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
on a rolling basis, and expects to complete regulatory submissions
in the U. S. and E.U. in 2010.
"There is a clear need for new treatment strategies for
chronic hepatitis C," said Dr. Peter S. Kim, PhD, president,
Merck Research Laboratories. "We look forward to seeking
regulatory approvals to bring boceprevir forward to help treat
people living with chronic hepatitis C."
The HCV RESPOND-2 and HCV SPRINT-2 studies each evaluated two
treatment strategies with boceprevir: 48 weeks of treatment
for all patients (4-week lead-in with 1.5 mcg/kg/week of PegIntron
and an investigational dose of 600-1,400 mg/day of Rebetol,
followed by the addition of boceprevir 800 mg three times a
day for 44 weeks), and response-guided therapy, in which patients
with undetectable virus at week 8 and again at certain points
later in the studies were able to stop all treatment at 36 weeks
in HCV RESPOND-2 and at 28 weeks in HCV SPRINT-2. Patients who
did not meet these criteria continued treatment with Peg/riba
alone for a total treatment duration of 48 weeks. Control groups
in the studies received Peg/riba at the doses described above
plus placebo for 48 weeks.
The HCV RESPOND-2 study was conducted in 403 patients who failed
prior therapy at U.S. and international sites, and patients
were randomized into the three groups (48 weeks control; 48
weeks control plus boceprevir; control plus boceprevir using
response-guided therapy) at a 1:1:1 ratio. In the boceprevir
48-week treatment group, 66 percent of patients achieved SVR,
and in the boceprevir response-guided therapy group, 59 percent
of patients achieved SVR, compared to 21 percent of patients
in the control group (p < 0.0001 for both, intent-to-treat
analysis).
"These
results are very exciting," said Bruce R. Bacon, MD, professor
of internal medicine, Saint Louis University School of Medicine,
and co-principal investigator of the HCV RESPOND-2 study. "Patients
who failed prior hepatitis C therapy are among the hardest to
treat, and the use of boceprevir in this study helped significantly
more of these patients achieve undetectable levels of the virus
at 24 weeks after the end of therapy than treatment with Peg/riba
alone."
In the HCV SPRINT-2 study, 1,097 treatment-naive patients at
U.S. and international sites were enrolled in two separate cohorts,
one with 938 non-African-American/Black patients and the other
with 159 African-American/Black patients. Patients were randomized
into the three treatment groups (48 weeks control; 48 weeks
control plus boceprevir; control plus boceprevir using response-guided
therapy) at a ratio of 1:2:2. In the study overall, 66 percent
of patients in the boceprevir 48-week treatment group achieved
SVR, and 63 percent of patients in the response-guided therapy
group achieved SVR, compared to 38 percent of patients in the
control group (p < 0.0001 for both, intent-to-treat analysis).
As specified by the HCV SPRINT-2 study protocol, results for
the non-African-American/Black and African-American/Black patient
cohorts were analyzed separately. Several previous studies have
shown that African-American/Black patients have a lower response
to HCV treatment than non-African-American/Black patients.[1-3]
Among the non-African-American/Black patients in the boceprevir
48-week treatment group, 69 percent achieved SVR, and in the
response-guided therapy group, 67 percent of patients achieved
SVR, compared to 40 percent in the control group (p < 0.0001
for both, intent-to-treat analysis). Among the African-American/Black
patients, 53 percent of patients in the 48-week treatment group
and 42 percent of patients in the response-guided therapy group
achieved SVR, compared to 23 percent in the control group (p
= 0.004 and p = 0.044, respectively, intent-to-treat analysis).
"The
response-guided therapy approach used in these studies enabled
those patients - both treatment-failure patients and treatment-naive
patients - who had undetectable virus at certain points of the
study to achieve SVR with a shorter total treatment duration
than current standard therapy," said Fred Poordad, MD,
chief of hepatology in the division of gastroenterology at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, associate professor of medicine at the David
Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
(UCLA), and co-principal investigator of the HCV SPRINT-2 study.
In the HCV RESPOND-2 study, the five most common treatment-emergent
adverse events reported for the boceprevir 48-week treatment
group, boceprevir response-guided therapy group and control
group, respectively, were: fatigue (57, 54, and 50 percent),
headache (40, 43 and 49 percent), nausea (42, 44 and 38 percent),
anemia (47, 43 and 20 percent) and dysgeusia (bad taste) (45,
43 and 11 percent). Treatment discontinuations due to anemia
were 3 percent and 0 percent for the boceprevir groups, respectively,
compared to 0 percent for the control group. Treatment discontinuations
due to adverse events overall were 12 percent and 8 percent
for the boceprevir groups, respectively, compared to 3 percent
for the control group.
In
the HCV SPRINT-2 study, the five most common treatment-emergent
adverse events reported for the boceprevir 48-week treatment
group, boceprevir response-guided therapy group and control
group, respectively, were: fatigue (57, 53 and 60 percent),
headache (46, 46 and 42 percent), nausea (43, 48 and 42 percent),
anemia (49, 49 and 29 percent) and pyrexia (fever) (32, 33 and
33 percent). Treatment discontinuations due to anemia were 2
percent for each of the boceprevir groups compared to 1 percent
for the control group. Treatment discontinuations due to adverse
events overall were 16 percent and 12 percent for the boceprevir
groups, respectively, compared to 16 percent for the control
group.
About the studies
The HCV RESPOND-2 study was conducted in patients chronically
infected with hepatitis C genotype 1 who failed prior therapy
with peginterferon and ribavirin, including those who had experienced
prior relapse or who were prior non-responders, and the HCV
SPRINT-2 study was conducted in previously untreated (treatment-naive)
patients chronically infected with hepatitis C genotype 1. Approximately
25 percent of patients in each of the studies had less than
a 1 log decrease in viral load after the 4-week Peg/riba lead-in
period.
Sustained virologic response (SVR), the protocol-specified primary
efficacy endpoint, is defined as achievement of undetectable
HCV-RNA at 24 weeks after the end of treatment in all randomized
patients treated with any study medication (Roche TaqMan LLD
= 9.3 IU/mL). Per protocol, if a patient did not have a 24-week
post-treatment assessment, the patient's 12-week post-treatment
assessment was utilized.
In
the HCV RESPOND-2 study, patients in the response-guided therapy
arm who had undetectable virus at treatment week 8 and week
12 received a total of 36 weeks of therapy (lead-in with Peg/riba
followed by the addition of boceprevir for 32 weeks); patients
with detectable virus at week 8, but undetectable virus at week
12, stopped boceprevir treatment at week 36 and continued on
Peg/riba alone for an additional 12 weeks, for a total treatment
duration of 48 weeks. Patients in any arm of the study who had
detectable virus at week 12 were considered treatment failures
and discontinued treatment.
In
the HCV SPRINT-2 study, patients in the response-guided therapy
group of the study who had undetectable virus at treatment week
8 through week 24 received a total of 28 weeks of therapy (lead-in
with Peg/riba followed by the addition of boceprevir for 24
weeks); patients with detectable virus at week 8, but undetectable
virus at week 24, stopped boceprevir treatment at week 28 and
continued on Peg/riba alone for a total treatment duration of
48 weeks. Patients in any arm of the study who had detectable
virus at week 24 were considered treatment failures and discontinued
treatment.
Merck's commitment to advancing hepatitis
therapy
Merck is committed to building on its strong legacy in the hepatitis
field by continuing to discover, develop and deliver vaccines
and medicines to help prevent and treat viral hepatitis. Extensive
research efforts are underway to develop differentiated oral
therapies that bring innovation to hepatitis care.
The complete press release, including safety information on
PegIntron, is available online at www.merck.com/newsroom/news-release-archive/research-and-development/2010_0804.html.
Full prescribing information for PegIntron is available at www.spfiles.com/pipeg-intron.pdf.
Endnotes
1. McHutchison JG, Lawitz
EJ, Shiffman ML, et al. Peginterferon alfa-2b or alfa-2a with
ribavirin for treatment of hepatitis C infection. N Engl J Med
2009;361:580-93.
2. Jeffers LJ, Cassidy W,
Howell CD, et al. Peginterferon Alfa-2a (40 kd) and Ribavirin
for Black American Patients With Chronic HCV Genotype 1. Hepatology
2004;39:1702-1708.
3. Muir AJ, Bornstein JD,
Killenberg, PG. Peginterferon Alfa-2b and Ribavirin for the
Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C in Blacks and Non-Hispanic
Whites. N Engl J Med 2004;350:2265-71.
8/6/10
Source
Merck. In Pivotal Phase III Studies, Merck's Investigational
Medicine Boceprevir Helped Majority of Patients with Chronic
Hepatitis C Genotype 1 Infection Achieve Sustained Virologic
Response, the Primary Endpoint of the Studies. Press release.
August 4, 2010.