More than 70% of people with chronic genotype 1 hepatitis C who did not
achieve a sustained virological response when treated with
sofosbuvir/ledipasvir (Harvoni) for 8
or 12 weeks were cured with a subsequent 24-week course of the same two drugs,
according to a study presented at the European Association for the Study of the
Liver (EASL) International Liver Congress last week in Vienna, Austria.
Direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) used in interferon-free regimens
cure a large proportion of people with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus (HCV)
infection, but the approach for the small percentage of people who are not
cured is not yet established.
Gilead Sciences’ nucleotide HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir plus
NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir – the components of the Harvoni coformulation – was the first approved interferon- and
ribavirin-free combination DAA regimen. In phase 3 trials, this regimen taken
for 8 or 12 weeks cured more than 95% of nearly 2000 people, but a small
percentage still had detectable HCV viral load at 12 weeks after the end of
treatment.
Glossary
- IL28B
An inherited gene which all individuals have. There are three genotypes of IL28B; these influence response to hepatitis C and its treatment. People with CC genotype are more likely to spontaneously clear acute infection or (during chronic infection) respond well to interferon-based treatment. The other two genotypes are known as CT and TT.
Eric Lawitz from the University of Texas
Health Science Center evaluated the efficacy of sofosbuvir/ledipasvir without
ribavirin taken for 24 weeks as re-treatment for these patients, along with
others who experienced treatment failure on similar regimens in phase 2 trials.
(Related re-treatment protocols, not reported here, are looking at people with
treatment failure after using only sofosbuvir/ribavirin.)
This study included a total of 41 participants from the ION, LONESTAR and TRIOLOGY 1
trials. Most had previously used sofosbuvir/ledipasvir with or without
ribavirin, while eight had used sofosbuvir/ledipasvir plus the experimental non-nucleoside HCV
polymerase inhibitor GS-9669.
All participants in this open-label study were re-treated with 440mg
sofosbuvir and 90mg ledipasvir in a once-daily coformulation, without
ribavirin, for 24 weeks. The researchers evaluated sustained virological
response, or continued undetectable HCV RNA at 12 week post-treatment (SVR12),
and performed deep sequencing to look for virus with NS5A or NS5B
resistance-associated variants (RAVs).
More than 80% of participants were men, a quarter were African-American
and the mean age was 58 years. Not surprisingly, given their prior treatment
failure, they were a challenging population: more than 90% had unfavourable
IL28B gene variants, 46% had liver cirrhosis (rising to 79% among those with
NS5A resistance) and the mean baseline HCV RNA level was 6.2 log10 IU/ml.
About three-quarters had been previously treated for 8 weeks and the
rest for 12 weeks. Nearly two-thirds of those previously treated for 8 weeks
and everyone treated for 12 weeks had baseline NS5A RAVs that potentially
confer resistance to ledipasvir; the 11 people without these RAVs had all been
treated for the shorter duration.
HCV viral load declined rapidly after starting treatment and almost all
participants had viral load <15 IU/ml by the end of treatment. One person
experienced viral rebound while on treatment at week 16 and 11 people relapsed,
usually between the end of therapy and 4 weeks post-treatment. This resulted in
an overall SVR12 rate of 71%.
There was not
much difference in response between people with and without cirrhosis (68% vs
74% respectively). However, prior treatment duration and presence of baseline NS5A
resistance
mutations were associated with greater likelihood of re-treatment failure.
People initially
treated for 8 rather than 12 weeks had a substantially higher SVR12 rate: 80%
vs 46%, respectively. Baseline NS5A RAVs produced an even larger difference:
100% of those with and 60% of those without these RAVs achieved sustained
response. People with a single RAV had a cure rate of 69%, falling to just 50%
for those with two or more RAVs. Looking at specific NS5A RAVs, all participants
with Q30R or M28T still achieved SVR12, but the cure rate fell to 80% for those
with L31M and to only 33% for those with Y93H/N.
With regard to NS5B RAVs that potentially confer resistance to
sofosbuvir, no participants had these variants at baseline, but a third did
when tested after virological failure: two with S282T, one with L159F and one
with both mutations.
As seen in prior studies of this regimen, treatment was generally safe
and well-tolerated, with most adverse events being mild to moderate. Two
participants had serious adverse events, neither of which were deemed related
to the study drugs, and no one stopped treatment for this reason. The most
common adverse events were headache (15%) and fatigue (10%).
Retreatment with sofosbuvir/ledipasvir for 24 weeks "is feasible in
patients who have failed prior [sofosbuvir/ledipasvir]-based regimens,"
the researchers concluded. "The presence of baseline NS5A RAV(s), which
was more likely to develop with longer prior [sofosbuvir/ledipasvir] treatment,
was associated with virologic failure."
The key factors
that minimise relapse are the depth of viral suppression and a patient's
individual immune response, Lawitz explained. Since we can't change the latter,
anything that improves the former should help achieve a cure, and we can
improve viral suppression by either longer treatment or adding ribavirin.