Saturday, 17 September 2016

HCV Guidelines Update: People with HCV Should Be Tested for HBV Before Starting Antiviral Therapies

September 16, 2016

People with HCV Should Be Tested for HBV Before Starting Antiviral Therapies

All patients beginning hepatitis C (HCV) treatment using direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapies should be assessed for hepatitis B (HBV), according the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases/Infectious Diseases Society of America Guidance Panel, which provides up-to-date guidance on the treatment of hepatitis C on its website, HCVguidelines.org.

The updated information can be found in the Monitoring Patients Who Are Starting Hepatitis C Treatment, Are On Treatment, or Have Completed Therapy section of the Guidance.

“Cases of HBV reactivation (an increase of the HBV virus) during or after DAA therapy for HCV have been reported in HBV/HCV co-infected patients who were not already on HBV suppressive therapy,” explains Raymond Chung, MD, co-chair of the HCV Guidance Panel. “The severity of these cases have ranged from mild to severe fulminant liver injury that can be life threatening. While we do not know how frequently this occurs, the Guidance Panel recommends HBV testing for all patients beginning DAA treatment for HCV.”

Additionally, the Guidance Panel recommends:
  • HBV vaccination for all susceptible individuals (i.e., those not immunized or without evidence of response to immunization)
  • Obtaining a test for HBV DNA prior to DAA therapy in patients who could be actively replicating (i.e., those who are HBsAg positive)
  • Starting patients who meet criteria for treatment of active HBV infection on therapy at the same time — or before — HCV DAA therapy is started
  • Monitoring patients with low or undetectable HBV DNA levels at regular intervals (usually not more frequently than every four weeks) for HBV reactivation during treatments and placing those whose HBV DNA levels meet treatment criteria on HBV therapy as recommended by the AASLD’s HBV treatment guidelines
”While there currently isn’t enough data to make clear recommendations for patients who have been exposed to HBV and resolved the virus, whether spontaneous or after antiviral therapy, we recommend these patients be monitored for HBV reactivation,” says Susanna Naggie, MD, MHS, co-chair of the HCV Guidance Panel. “This is particularly important in the event of unexplained increases in liver enzymes and during and/or after completion of DAA therapy.”

Visit HCVguidelines.org for more information about these newest recommendations and to view other sections of the HCV Guidance.

- See more at: http://www.aasld.org/about-aasld/pressroom/people-hepatitis-c-should-be-tested-hepatitis-b-starting-antiviral-therapies#sthash.M0eeQx1D.dpuf

Comparing clinical presentations, treatments and outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma due to Hepatitis C and Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Comparing clinical presentations, treatments and outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma due to Hepatitis C and Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

, , , , , , , , , ,  

First published online: 10 September 2016


Abstract
Introduction: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is increasing in incidence in the UK and globally. Liver cirrhosis is the common cause for developing HCC. The common reasons for liver cirrhosis are viral hepatitis C (HCV), viral hepatitis B and alcohol. However, HCC caused by non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)-cirrhosis is now increasingly as a result of rising worldwide obesity.

Aim: To compare the clinical presentation, treatment options and outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma due to HCV and NAFLD patients.

Methods: Data were collected from two liver transplant centres in the United Kingdom (Birmingham and Newcastle upon Tyne) between 2000 and 2014. We compared 275 patients with HCV-related HCC against 212 patients with NAFLD- related HCC.

Results: Patients in the NAFLD group were found to be significantly older (p<0.001) and more likely to be Caucasian (p<0.001). They had lower rates of cirrhosis (p<0.001) than those in HCV-HCC group. The NAFLD group presented with significantly larger tumours (p=0.009), whilst HCV patients had a higher alpha fetoprotein (AFP) (p=0.018). NAFLD patients were more commonly treated with TACE (p=0.005) than the HCV patients, whilst the HCV group were significantly more likely to be transplanted (p<0.001). In patients selected for liver transplantation, 5-year survival rates in NAFLD were not significantly different from HCV-HCC (44% and 56% respectively, p=0.102).

Conclusion: In this study NAFLD patients presented with larger tumours that were less likely to be amenable to curative therapy, as compared with HCV patients. Despite this disadvantage, patients with NAFLD had similar overall survival compared to patients with HCV.

Keywords: hepatocellular carcinoma, hepatitis C, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, survival, liver
transplantation. 

Friday, 16 September 2016

Cokiera (dasabuvir/ombitasvir/paritaprevir/ritonavir) Withdrawal of the marketing authorisation application

16/09/2016
Meeting highlights from the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) 12-15 September 2016

The application for a marketing authorisation for Cokiera (dasabuvir / ombitasvir / paritaprevir / ritonavir) has been withdrawn.

What was the recommendation of the CHMP at that time?
Based on the review of the data at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP had some concerns and was of the provisional opinion that Cokiera could not have been approved for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C in adults.

The CHMP considered that the data provided did not properly show how the size of meals affect absorption of the active substances from Cokiera and therefore how well Cokiera works.
Therefore, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP was of the opinion that the company had not provided enough data to support the application for Cokiera.

16 September 2016 EMA/541043/2016 EMEA/H/C/0004235

Questions-and-answers document on this withdrawal

Questions and answers
On 3 August 2016, AbbVie Ltd officially notified the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) that it wishes to withdraw its application for a marketing authorisation for Cokiera, for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. 

What is Cokiera?

Cokiera is an antiviral medicine containing the active substances dasabuvir, ombitasvir, paritaprevir and ritonavir. It was to be available as tablets.

What was Cokiera expected to be used for?
Cokiera was expected to be used for treating adults with chronic (long-term) hepatitis C. Hepatitis C is an infection of the liver caused by the hepatitis C virus.

How is Cokiera expected to work?
All four active substances in Cokiera are already available in authorised medicines for treating chronic hepatitis C. It was expected that combining the substances in a single tablet would make it simpler for patients to take their medicine.

The active substances in Cokiera work in different ways. Dasabuvir blocks the action of an enzyme in the hepatitis C virus, called ‘NS5B RNA-dependent polymerase’, which the virus needs to multiply. Ombitasvir blocks the action of a protein in the hepatitis C virus called ‘NS5A’ and paritaprevir blocks the action of another protein called ‘NS3/4A’, both of which the virus needs to multiply. Ritonavir, the fourth active substance, slows down the removal of paritaprevir from the body by blocking an enzyme called CYP3A that breaks down paritaprevir. Ritonavir itself does not have an antiviral effect on hepatitis C virus.

The active substances in Cokiera are effective against hepatitis C virus genotypes 1a and 1b.

What did the company present to support its application?
Because all the active substances in Cokiera were already included in authorised medicines, the company presented the results of studies to see whether the active substances from Cokiera were ‘bioequivalent’ to the authorised medicines. Medicines are bioequivalent when they produce the same levels of the active substance in the body. The company also provided results of a mathematical (modelling and simulation) exercise to predict the levels of the active substances and the medicine’s effectiveness in clearing the virus from the blood in different circumstances.

How far into the evaluation was the application when it was withdrawn?
The application was withdrawn after the CHMP had evaluated the documentation provided by the company and formulated lists of questions. The company had not yet responded to the last round of questions at the time of the withdrawal.

What was the recommendation of the CHMP at that time?
Based on the review of the data at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP had some concerns and was of the provisional opinion that Cokiera could not have been approved for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C in adults.

The CHMP considered that the data provided did not properly show how the size of meals affect absorption of the active substances from Cokiera and therefore how well Cokiera works.
Therefore, at the time of the withdrawal, the CHMP was of the opinion that the company had not provided enough data to support the application for Cokiera.

What were the reasons given by the company for withdrawing the application?

In its letter notifying the Agency of the withdrawal of application, the company stated that the withdrawal is based on strategic business reasons for this specific product.

The withdrawal letter is available here.

What consequences does this withdrawal have for patients in clinical trials or compassionate use programmes?
The company informed the CHMP that there are no ongoing clinical trials or compassionate-use programmes for this specific product.

Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Second-generation direct-acting-antiviral hepatitis C virus treatment: Efficacy, safety, and predictors of SVR12

World J Gastroenterol. Sep 21, 2016; 22(35): 8050-8059
Published online Sep 21, 2016. doi: 10.3748/WJG.v22.i35.8050

Second-generation direct-acting-antiviral hepatitis C virus treatment: Efficacy, safety, and predictors of SVR12

Christoph R Werner, Julia M Schwarz, Daniel P Egetemeyr, Robert Beck, Nisar P Malek, Ulrich M Lauer, Christoph P Berg

Abstract
AIM
To gather data on the antiviral efficacy and safety of second generation direct acting antiviral (DAA) treatment with respect to sustained virological response (SVR) 12 wk after conclusion of treatment, and to determine predictors of SVR12 in this setting.

METHODS
Two hundred and sixty patients treated with SOF combination partners PR (n = 51), R (n = 10), SMV (n = 30), DCV (n = 81), LDV (n = 73), or 3D (n = 15). 144/260 were pre-treated, 89/260 had liver cirrhosis, 56/260 had portal hypertension with platelets < 100/nL, 25/260 had a MELD score ≥ 10 and 17/260 were post-liver transplantation patients. 194/260 had HCV GT1, 44/260 HCV GT3.

RESULTS
Two hundred and forty/256 (93.7%) patients achieved SVR12 (mITT); 4/260 were lost to follow-up. SVR12 rates for subgroups were: 92% for SOF/DCV, 93% for each SOF/SMV, SOF/PR, 94% for SOF/LDV, 100% for 3D, 94% for pretreated, 87% for liver cirrhosis, 82% for patients with platelets < 100/nL, 88% post-liver transplantation, 95% for GT1a, 93% for GT1b, 90% for GT3, 100% for GT2, 4, and 6. 12 patients suffered from relapse, 6 prematurely discontinued treatment, of which 4 died. Negative predictors of SVR12 were a platelet count < 100/nL, MELD score ≥ 10 (P < 0.0001), liver cirrhosis (P = 0.005) at baseline. In Interferon-free treatment GT3 had significantly lower SVR rates than GT1 (P = 0.016). Side effects were mild.

CONCLUSION
Excellent SVR12 rates and the favorable side-effect profile of DAA-combination therapy can be well translated into “real-world”. Patients with advanced liver disease, signs of portal hypertension, especially with platelets < 100/nL and patients with GT3 are in special need for further research efforts to overcome comparatively higher rates of virological failure.

Key Words: Sofosbuvir, Simeprevir, Ledipasvir, Hepatitis C, Liver transplant, Sustained virological response, Liver cirrhosis, Side effects, Resistance, Daclatasvir

Core tip: From 2014 on the second wave of direct acting antiviral agents was available for treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection. Due to the more heterogeneous character of patients in the “real world”, the therapeutic performance of these new drugs outside randomized clinical trials is of interest. Therefore, in this monocentric retrospective cohort study, we analyzed the efficacy, safety, and predictors of sustained virological response 12 for treatment with combinations of second generation direct acting antivirals in a “real-world” setting.

DISCUSSION ONLY
Access - Full Article(HTML)
This “real-world” monocentric retrospective cohort study analyzing safety, efficacy, and predictors of SVR12 of second generation DAA treatment shows impressive overall SVR rates (93.7%).
Due to the relatively small number of patients and the retrospective character of this study a comparison between subgroups according to DAA combination partners is only of limited significance.

Furthermore, due to the lesser tolerability and presumed lower activity of SOF/PR in patients with advanced liver disease, this treatment a priori was reserved in our hands to patients showing up with a well-compensated liver function only.

The results in our heterogeneous cohort, containing meaningful fractions of hard-to-treat patients (liver cirrhosis, portal hypertension, post-liver transplantation) are similar to SVR rates of so far published study trials: our cohort of PR or R co-treated patients achieved a SVR rate of 93%, while in the NEUTRINO trial the cohort treated with SOF/PR achieved a SVR rate in previously untreated patients of 90%[19], and the VA-real world cohort achieved SVR12 in 66.8%-79%[20].
In other “real-world” analyses with SMV ± R as combination partners of SOF, SVR rates of 74.1%-84.2% were achieved[20-22]. In the OPTIMIST study, a phase III trial, a SVR12 rate of 97% in non-cirrhotic patients[23], while in the OPTIMIST-2 study treating cirrhotic patients with SOF, SMV ± R, SVR 12 in 83% of patients was achieved[24]. However, in our cohort, with more than half of patients being patients with liver cirrhosis, we achieved a SVR rate of 93% with this combination of drugs.

For patients with SOF, DCV ± R as combination partners, SVR rates of 86%-93% have been reported[25]. In our cohort, we were in line with those results and could achieve a SVR rate of 92%, including two patients with recurrent cholestatic Hepatitis C post-liver transplantation, one of those being a non-responder to a prior Telaprevir triple therapy being undertaken post-liver transplantation, and both decompensated at the beginning of treatment.

In previously treated and untreated patients with HCV, a combination of LDV ± R, and SOF led to SVR rates of 94%-99%[26-28], which is in line with results of our cohort, in which we could register a SVR12 rate of 94%, while in another real-world analysis, SVR rates of 91.3%-92% were achieved[29].

For our small group of 3D regimen-receiving patients, we could achieve SVR in 100%, while in the Phase III trials SVR rates of 91.8%-99.5% were observed[30,31].

Thus, altogether, favorable SVR rates achieved in the randomized controlled clinical trials could be translated into the “real-world”, and importantly, in our cohort; even extra hard-to-treat groups of patients exhibited favorable treatment outcomes (SVR12 post-liver transplantation: 88%, SVR12 in cirrhotic patients with platelets < 100/nL: 82%), which exceed results with former treatment options by far[15,32].

Nevertheless, patients with liver cirrhosis show significantly lower response rates (87% with liver cirrhosis, 97% without; P = 0.005), and especially those with advanced portal hypertension (platelets < 100/nL), or high MELD score (≥ 10) show significantly lower SVR12 rates than patients without (P < 0.0001, uni- and multivariate analysis). These findings were also observed in other real world studies with low platelets, low albumin and liver cirrhosis as negative predictors of SVR in larger cohorts[21,33,34]. Thus, this subgroup of patients still resembles a group of patients in the “catch 22”-situation of being in the greatest need of treatment while showing the lowest response rates. Moreover, the whole drug class of HCV protease inhibitors (represented by SMV, and Paritaprevir/r) is not recommendeded for those patients (CTP B “plus”) due to hepatotoxicity. Therefore, new strategies are needed to tackle this problem, e.g., by implementation of screening programs to identify patients infected with HCV at an early stage of their liver disease, and more importantly by development of more potent agents in the near future. However, 4 patients were lost in our cohort. Even if not associated with anti-HCV medication, this emphasizes, that treatment of patients with advanced liver disease should remain in the hands of experienced tertiary centers even in times of “easy” treatment with second generation DAA.

In our cohort, results of early viral kinetics had no impact on prediction of SVR12, thus costly “in-between” measurements of HCV viral load possibly are expendable.

Previous treatment with PR may not play a role any more in treatment decisions, as in our cohort previous treatment was not identified as a negative predictor of SVR, as it was in the HCV-TARGET cohort[21].

Most probably due to the favorable tolerability and low-toxicity profile of second generation DAA, and the omission of pegylated Interferon, now also senior patients benefit from SOF-based DAA treatment on the same scale as younger patients do[21].

Another subgroup of patients in need of further research efforts seems to be the one with GT3: Even though we could achieve a favorable overall SVR rate of 90%, at least in IFN-free treatment regimens, the SVR rates in a “per-protocol” analysis are significantly lower in GT3 patients than in GT1 (80% in GT3, 98% in GT1, respectively, P = 0.016; univariate analysis), again with a special negative focus on patients with GT3 and concomitant advanced liver disease. Moreover, means are limited with respect to treatment of GT3 due to the insufficient antiviral activity of protease- and NS5A-inhibitors (except DCV) in this GT. However, new pangenotypic NS5A inhibitors like Velpatasvir or upcoming new pangenotypic protease inhibitors hopefully close that gap in the near future.

However, since DAA treatment forms RAVs in the viriom of patients, pretreatment with DAA of any generation has to be considered more and more in future treatment attempts after any prior exposure to DAA. All patients in our cohort, who suffered from virological relapse showed RAVs at time-point of relapse. Especially NS5A-RAVs are frequent due to the low resistance barrier of NS5A-inhibitors, as exemplified also in our “real-word” cohort. Since NS5A-RAVs lead to just minimal impairment of viral “fitness”, unfortunately they are detectable for a long time in exposed patients[35]. While for some RAVs (like NS5A L31M, Y93H) clear associations between existence of RAV and virological failure exist, for others (like NS5A A30S) this association is not well established[35].

This may lead to confusion in case of a future re-treatment, if minor RAVs have been detected, and even more in case of a baseline test in treatment naïve patients. However, as the population of patients with relapse after DAA treatment grows, the need for controlled trials with new DAA-combinations (e.g., pangenotypic protease inhibitor) for those patients to address this problem is obvious. Therefore, after virological relapse we recommend resistance testing for individualized adjustment of future DAA therapies.

In our retrospective analysis excellent SVR12 rates of second generation DAA could be translated from the large study trials into “real-world” scenarios. Patients with advanced liver disease, signs of portal hypertension, especially with platelets < 100/nL, or MELD ≥ 10, and patients with GT3 are at relatively higher risk to suffer from virological failure and development of resistance associated variants after exposure to DAA. To overcome this unsolved problem, further research efforts are needed.

COMMENTS
Background
From 2014 on, successively the second wave of direct acting antiviral agents (Sofosbuvir, Daclatasvir, Simeprevir, Ledipasvir, Dasabuvir, Ombitasvir, Paritaprevir/r) was available for treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection. In randomized clinical trials, superb rates of sustained virological response (SVR) 12 could be achieved.

Research frontiers
Due to the more heterogeneous character of patients in the “real world”, the therapeutic performance of these new drugs outside randomized clinical trials is of interest. Therefore, in this monocentric retrospective cohort study, we analyzed the efficacy, safety, and predictors of SVR 12 for treatment with combinations of second generation direct acting antivirals in a “real-world” setting.

Innovations and breakthroughs
In this retrospective study, similar SVR rates could be achieved compared to randomized clinical trials. However, certain subgroups of patients have significantly lower viral response rates: Significant negative predictors of SVR12 were a platelet count < 100/nL, a MELD score ≥ 10 (both P < 0.0001), liver cirrhosis at baseline (P = 0.005). Moreover, in Interferon-free treatment patients with HCV genotype 3 had significantly lower SVR rates than patients with HCV genotype 1 (P = 0.016). In the future, these subgroups of patients should be more in the focus of research efforts to overcome lower rates of SVR.

Applications
Current retrospective analysis shows that excellent SVR12 rates and the favorable side-effect profile of direct acting antiviral-combination therapy can be well translated into “real-world”.

Peer-review
Good level-study to be ameliorated in the presentation of characteristics of cirrhotic patients that are an important part of the studied population.

  • Abstract
  • Core Tip
  • Full Article (PDF)
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  • Tuesday, 13 September 2016

    Too Few Diabetes Patients Receiving Statins

    Too Few Diabetes Patients Receiving Statins

    Last Updated: September 13, 2016.
    http://www.doctorslounge.com/index.php/news/pb/66457

    Nearly all middle-aged patients with diabetes should be taking statins, but cardiologists fail to prescribe these medications for two out of every five such patients in their care, according to a study published in the Sept. 20 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

    TUESDAY, Sept. 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Nearly all middle-aged patients with diabetes should be taking statins, but cardiologists fail to prescribe these medications for two out of every five such patients in their care, according to a study published in the Sept. 20 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

    Researchers analyzed the records of 215,193 patients (age 40 to 75 years) with diabetes but no overt cardiovascular disease who visited a cardiologist between May 2008 and October 2013. The data on the patients came from 204 cardiology practices.

    The researchers found that only 61.6 percent of patients were prescribed a statin. Those prescribed statins were more likely to have cardiovascular risk factors. They also were more likely to receive non-statin cholesterol-lowering therapy (28 percent, versus 13 percent for patients not receiving a statin) and had lower mean low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (90 versus 103 mg/dL). The team noted a 57 percent variation in statin prescribing practices, even after accounting for individual patient factors such as age, gender, race, hypertension, dyslipidemia, tobacco use, and insurance coverage.

    "The new cholesterol guideline recommends statin therapy in diabetic patients 40 to 75 years of age with low-density lipoprotein cholesterol 70 to 189 mg/dL without atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease," the authors write. "The current gap in care identified in this study supports national efforts to improve the use of statins in patients with diabetes."

    Full Text (subscription or payment may be required)

    Expanding access: First clinical trial transplants hepatitis C-infected kidneys at Penn Medicine

    Expanding access: First clinical trial transplants hepatitis C-infected kidneys at Penn Medicine

    Clinical trial tests the effect of giving organ recipients antiviral therapy after being transplanted with kidneys that otherwise go unused

    University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

    EMBARGOED: PHILADELPHIA -- Patients who need a kidney transplant may have new hope, through an innovative Penn Medicine clinical trial using kidneys from deceased donors who had the Hepatitis C virus (HCV). The first study participant received a kidney transplant in July 2016, and after being treated with a full regimen of Zepatier - a recently-approved oral medication prescribed to eradicate HCV - her doctors announced today that there is no evidence of the virus in her blood. Irma Hendricks of East Stroudsburg, PA, faced upwards of five years on the transplant waiting list with dialysis three days a week for many hours, before enrolling and receiving a kidney transplant as part of this trial. The research team says if the new approach works, for patients who do not have HCV, there is the potential to provide a chance at a lifesaving kidney transplant for hundreds more patients each year.

    The clinical trial, known as THINKER, led by David S. Goldberg, MD, MSCE, and Peter Reese, MD, MSCE, both assistant professors of Medicine and Epidemiology at Penn, aims to determine the safety and efficacy of transplanting kidneys from Hepatitis C-positive donors into patients currently on the kidney transplant waitlist who do not have the Hepatitis C virus.

    "There are more than 99,000 Americans are awaiting a kidney transplant," said Reese, who is also an assistant professor of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at Penn and chair of the Ethics Committee for the United Network of Organ Sharing (UNOS). "Yet despite very long waiting times for transplant, hundreds of otherwise good kidneys from deceased donors infected with Hepatitis C are discarded each year. If we can demonstrate that it's possible to eradicate HCV from patients who contract the virus from a transplant, this approach could open up access to an entirely new pool of donor organs that are currently being discarded. Ultimately, our hope is that this trial will show that it is possible, and will then afford far more patients who are on the waiting list an opportunity to receive a lifesaving transplant much sooner."

    Reese and Goldberg estimate that if this experimental course of transplantation and treatment proves effective in the long term, at least 500 more kidneys could become available for transplantation each year. Currently, individuals who have Hepatitis C are only eligible to donate organs to recipients who also have the virus. But in most cases, these HCV-infected organs would be discarded, and never used for transplantation.

    The study is enrolling patients between 40 and 65 years of age, with a blood type A, B, or O, with varying ethnicities and socioeconomic statuses, who do not have Hepatitis C and are receiving chronic dialysis, a treatment that often causes severe fatigue and medical complications and can require a tremendous time investment. Typically, patients must undergo dialysis to filter their blood often three or more times a week, for upwards of three hours each session. Though many patients who receive kidney transplants are able to obtain a donor organ from a relative or matching unrelated donors, thousands have no such option and can wait years for a kidney to become available from a suitable, deceased donor. After a rigorous informed consent process, participants in the new Penn study are enrolled and eligible to receive kidneys from donors with Hepatitis C.

    In this study, only donated kidneys that are infected with a certain strain of HCV are used. There are six genotypes of HCV that have been identified, but patients will only receive HCV genotype 1-infected kidneys, since the viral treatment used in this study has a 95 percent success rate in eradicating this type of HCV in the general population. Additional steps are taken to ensure that the kidneys study participants receive are high quality, with the best possible chance of successful transplant.

    "While these kidney quality criteria may be more selective than our usual approach to choosing organs, we are aiming to evaluate safety and efficacy in only the most viable organs in this initial pilot phase of the clinical trial," said Goldberg, who is also the medical director for Living Donor Liver Transplantation at Penn. "We realized that the amazing transformation of treatment options for Hepatitis C should also transform how we think about organs with Hepatitis C. At this very early point in the study, we are pleased with how our first patients have responded to transplantation and antiviral treatment."

    Researchers intend to transplant and treat 10 patients in this pilot study. Patients who receive an HCV-infected kidney, who are then treated with an extended regimen of Zepatier, can be classified as HCV-free or "cured" if they have undetectable levels of the virus three months after completion of the oral medication. One risk of participating in this clinical trial, which is discussed during the informed consent process, is that patients who receive the HCV-positive kidney may become infected with the Hepatitis C, and may never be cleared of the virus despite the mediation regimen.

    There are an estimated 3.9 million Americans living with the Hepatitis C virus, a contagious viral disease that causes inflammation of the liver and can range in severity from mild illness lasting a few weeks to a lifelong disease leading to weakened liver function or liver failure. HCV often goes unnoticed as many of those infected don't show symptoms until significant liver damage is detected. Those with ongoing HCV can develop cirrhosis - scarring of the liver - leading to complications such as bleeding, yellowing of the skin or eyes, fluid buildup, infections and even liver cancer. New treatments for Hepatitis C approved over the past several years have high cure rates and much better side effect profiles than historical treatment options.

    Additional Penn Medicine experts involved in this study span disciplines including infectious diseases, transplantation surgery, gastroenterology, hepatology, and pathology and laboratory medicine, including Deirdre Sawinski, Roy Bloom, Raj Reddy, Emily Blumberg, Jennifer Trofe-Clark, Vivianna Van Deerlin, Midhat Farooqi, Peter Abt, Matthew Levine, Paige Porrett, Susanna Nazarian, Ali Naji, Maureen McCauley, and Anna Sicilia. The study is supported by a research grant from the Merck Investigator Initiated Studies Program.

    Penn Medicine is one of the world's leading academic medical centers, dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and excellence in patient care. Penn Medicine consists of the Raymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (founded in 1765 as the nation's first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System, which together form a $5.3 billion enterprise.

    The Perelman School of Medicine has been ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States for the past 18 years, according to U.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $373 million awarded in the 2015 fiscal year.

    The University of Pennsylvania Health System's patient care facilities include: The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center -- which are recognized as one of the nation's top "Honor Roll" hospitals by U.S. News & World Report -- Chester County Hospital; Lancaster General Health; Penn Wissahickon Hospice; and Pennsylvania Hospital -- the nation's first hospital, founded in 1751. Additional affiliated inpatient care facilities and services throughout the Philadelphia region include Chestnut Hill Hospital and Good Shepherd Penn Partners, a partnership between Good Shepherd Rehabilitation Network and Penn Medicine.

    Penn Medicine is committed to improving lives and health through a variety of community-based programs and activities. In fiscal year 2015, Penn Medicine provided $253.3 million to benefit our community.

    http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/

    Inventor of Hepatitis C Cure Wins a Major Prize - and Turns to the Next Battle

    Inventor of Hepatitis C Cure Wins a Major Prize—and Turns to the Next Battle  

    Lasker Award winner Michael Sofia created a pill to fight an incurable virus. Now he is setting his sights on another

    By Dina Fine Maron on September 13, 2016

    Better known as Sovaldi, the drug managed to recast hepatitis C from a hard-to-treat illness into an easily managed one that can be cured in just a few months...

    ...Michael Sofia, has netted a prestigious Lasker Award for revolutionizing hepatitis C care. Lasker Awards, which recognize scientists’ major contributions to medical science or those who have performed public service on behalf of the field, are often considered a pit stop on the way to a Nobel Prize....

    [An edited transcript of the interview follows.]

    From a drug research standpoint, what is particularly challenging when it comes to hepatitis C as opposed to hepatitis B or hepatitis A [both of which have vaccines available]?
    Each of these viruses have their own unique challenges. I’m working on trying to identify a cure for hepatitis B right now. It is a very different virus than hepatitis C.

    Continue Reading...

    Title:
    Inventor of Hepatitis C Cure Wins a Major Prize--and Turns to the Next Battle   
    Author:
    Dina Fine Maron
    Publication:
    Scientific American
    Publisher:
    Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.
    Date:
    Sep 13, 2016

    Monday, 12 September 2016

    HCV NEXT September Issue - Creating a world with “NOhep” by 2030

    "HCV Next" features cutting edge news on the latest HCV research developments. With in-depth articles on a range of topics; diagnosis, hepatitis c treatment regimens, side effects, drug/drug interaction, guidelines, practice management issues, to name a few.

    The following articles appeared in the September print edition of HCV NEXT, available online @ Healio.






    ILCA Annual Conference Coverage - Conflicting Evidence Surfaces on Anti-HCV Drugs for Liver Cancer

    The 2016 International Liver Cancer Association Annual Conference took place in Vancouver, Canada from September 9 to 11, 2016.

    The 10th ILCA Annual Conference welcomed over 600 participants from 46 different countries and proved to be a great success!

    This multidisciplinary meeting is an outstanding scientific forum for all clinical, translational and basic researchers, physicians and allied professionals across liver cancer related disciplines to exchange their experiences and best practices.

    Conference articles and multimedia coverage is available online at OncLive.

    Conference Articles
    Conflicting Evidence Surfaces on Anti-HCV Drugs for Liver Cancer
    A new generation of drugs has proved highly effective against the hepatitis C virus but there is conflicting evidence about whether the therapies promote cancer recurrence in infected patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who already have responded to curative treatment.

    Expert Describes Potential Therapeutic Vaccine for Advanced HCC
    Ghassan K. Abou-Alfa, MD, discusses research into the use of the immunotherapeutic vaccinia virus Pexa-Vec as a frontline treatment for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

    New Roles May Evolve for Competing Embolization Techniques in HCC
    Two competing methods of delivering locoregional therapy to patients with hepatocellular carcinoma both have advantages and may be most successful in subgroups of individuals with intermediate-stage disease.

    Large Analysis Sheds Light on Risk Factors for Non-Cirrhotic NASH-Associated HCC
    About one quarter of patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis-associated hepatocellular carcinoma present without cirrhosis at diagnosis, suggesting a crucial subset of patients for future research with implications for HCC screening and surveillance.

    Nivolumab Maintains Positive Results in Latest HCC Findings
    Nivolumab continues to post durable responses in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma regardless of whether they had hepatitis B or C or whether they had received prior treatment with sorafenib.

    Regorafenib Moves Ahead of Field With Success in Advanced HCC
    After 9 years of failed trials for once-promising drugs, regorafenib (Stivarga) has emerged as the clear choice for second-line therapy in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma after demonstrating survival improvements for patients whose disease has progressed after systemic treatment.

    Regorafenib Poised as Second-Line Standard of Care in HCC
    Although regorafenib is not currently approved, Morris Sherman, MD, PhD, already views the agent as the standard second-line therapy, with hopes for moving the agent into the frontline setting.

    Early Signals Positive for Immunotherapy Plus Standard Therapy in HCC
    Early evidence suggests that the combination of locoregional therapy with an immune checkpoint inhibitor is a safe and effective strategy to pursue for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

    Liver Cancer Experts Mark a Decade of Milestones in HCC
    Although it has been nearly 10 years since a new drug was approved for the treatment of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, the past decade has been marked by advances on the scientific and radiology fronts and the prospects for the development of new therapies are bright.

    View all updates, here....

    Saturday, 10 September 2016

    HCV Weekend Reading - The Changing Landscape of HCV Treatment

    HCV Weekend Reading - The Changing Landscape of HCV Treatment

    Hello folks welcome to yet another gorgeous weekend, hope you didn't work too hard this week.

    We begin with a few articles written by your favorite bloggers, followed by two learning activities covering an array of HCV topics. 

    Blog Updates

    Sick and Tired of Feeling Sick and Tired
    By Daryl Luster - September 10, 2016
    If I have said it once I have said it a million times, and although that might be an exaggeration, it sure feels that way sometimes. You may have said it too,...

    Why People with Hepatitis C Should Stick to a Low Fat Diet for Liver
    By Jenelle Marie Davis - September 9, 2016
    What does the liver do? Although the liver interacts with many of the organs in the abdomen, the liver has three main jobs. The first job is that the liver cleans the...

    I Don’t Feel Like It with Hep C
    By Karen Hoyt - September 8, 2016
    There are times when you just don’t feel like doing something. It may be something important or something small. When you’re not in the mood, it feels like a burden. I personally...

    By NVHR Staff
    Unfortunately, hepatitis C remains endemic in many African countries, and countless African immigrant and refugee community bear the burden of these silent epidemics. 

    Has hepatitis C ever left you feeling stuck?
    By Matt Starr
    I spent the better part of the last decade with physical and emotional pain from hepatitis C and advanced liver disease. I remember, during a post-transplant emotional descent, how all my trials seemed like they were causing too much worry and trouble for my family and loved ones. I began to think that just ending it all would be best for everyone.

    When government block's access to care...
    By Greg Jefferys
    Sweden and the Ukraine have not much in common, one is a poor ex-Soviet nation struggling with getting democracy working properly the other is a wealthy western nation with a long history of democracy.

    It's a year since I took my last lot of tablets. A whole year.
    By Grace Campbell
    This morning a memory popped up on my Facebook feed from this time a a year ago. It was a link to a blog entry here called "One Day More". I had written it when I had one day left on Viekira Pak, the drug that cured me.

    Australian news coverage exposes corruption
    By Greg Jefferys
    In Australia right now there is a lot of news coverage about some politicians who were getting payments from property developers through a fake "not for profit" organisation. One politician was getting payments from a Chinese company with close ties with the Chinese government. Some of these politicians are facing criminal charges because we all know that property developers only give money to politicians to gain favours.

    Do You Forget Your Daily Hepatitis B Antiviral? Why We “Forget” Our Meds, and How to Improve Compliance
    Your daily antiviral pill can save your life when you have liver damage from chronic hepatitis B. Entecavir or tenofovir (Viread) quickly reduce the amount of virus in your liver and the damage it causes.

    Off The Cuff

    Exercise can cancel out the booze? Association ≠ causation
    What the study, in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, stated was “We found a direct association between alcohol consumption and cancer mortality risk.”  And – repeat after me –  association ≠ causation.  So a statement of causation – such as “exercise can cancel out the booze” – is an overstatement.

    Why don’t more doctors apologize for their mistakes?
    A recent JAMA article about disclosing medical error described a hypothetical situation involving a dermatologist who, after completing skin biopsies on two patients, discovered that the instruments had not been sterilized. He wondered if he should tell the patients and what he should say.

    Updates Around The Web

    Featured in this edition of Weekend Reading is a learning activity that provides a window into current medications used to treat HCV, testing, availability, drug-drug interactions and other issues related to treatment. Although the CME is aimed at health care professionals and maybe a bit clinical the video modules were easy to follow. The three part program; The Changing Landscape of HCV Treatment is available for your viewing pleasure over at ViralEd.  Follow the links provided below to view the program; with a few suggestions for your consideration

    Main Menu - Three Part Program
    Click here to launch the full three part program  

    Index - Part 3
    HCV Management And Treatment Clinical Practice Videos
    Ten video presentations, each covering a critical phase of HCV management and treatment.

    Highlights
    HCV  Management Pre-Treatment
    What's In, What's Out
    Fibrosis and Non-invasive Fibrosis Test
    Basic Labs
    Health Care Provider - Getting HCV Therapy Approved

    Genotypes
    Selecting The Best HCV Therapy: Genotype 1

    Selecting The Best HCV Therapy: Non - 1 Genotype 
    Genotypes 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6

    Monitoring Patients On HCV Therapy
    Key Information Needed To Decide How To Treat A Person With HCV

    Menu - List of all ten videos here.

    Index - Part 2
    Case-Based Panel Discussions;  case-based panel discussions that review and discuss current clinical data and practice strategies in HCV treatment; a great discussion about Genotype 3

    Index - Part 1
    Thought Leaders Interviews; Thought leader interview featuring a variety of backgrounds and practice approaches in HCV management and treatment.

    Begin here....

    In June "ViralEd" also released "HCV Virtual Patient" an easy to follow video CME with a look at different case scenarios. This activity is a helpful starting point for people who failed treatment, have cirrhosis or want to learn more about current treatment options for various HCV genotypes. After each video module participants can either answer the questions, or click on Curbside Consult.

    The Weekly.Bull
    For over a decade HepCBC a Canadian non-profit organization has published an incredible monthly newsletter offering awareness, personal stories and basic information about HCV. Recently the highly successful newsletter has been retired, here is The Final Edition of the hepc.bull, however without fail a new publication "The Weekly.Bull" will continue to serve us well. Here is the first issue; What Do You Say? written by C.D. Mazoff webmaster and managing editor at HCV Advocate.

    In Case You Missed It

    Resistance to HCV Treatment Can Still Be a Challenge
    The treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus has been revolutionized by the development of direct-acting antivirals, but a small fraction of patients do experience resistance and treatment failure

    Illinois expands Medicaid access to hepatitis C drugs
    The Sun Herald-59 minutes ago
    Illinois is allowing more hepatitis C patients on Medicaid to access drugs that can ... According to state data, 12,000 Illinoisans covered by Medicaid had hepatitis ...

    5th International Symposium on Hepatitis Care in Substance Users
    INHSU 2016 brings together research from around the world to address this issue, forming evidence-based recommendations for the optimal management of Hepatitis C in substance users. 
    The full conference program, with links to abstracts, is available online

    Coverage - HIV and Hepatitis
    INHSU 2016: Effective Antiviral Treatment Reduces Fatigue in People with Hepatitis C
    Fatigue -- a common symptom among people living with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection -- is associated with liver inflammation and fibrosis, but antiviral therapy that leads to a cure significantly reduces the likelihood of fatigue, according to a Danish study presented at the 5th International Symposium on Hepatitis Care in Substance Users (INHSU 2016) this week in Oslo

    Coming Soon

    EASL- AASLD Special Conference
    New perspectives in hepatitis C virus infection - The roadmap for cure
    EASL will live stream the upcoming HCV Recommendations session to take place in Paris, France, on Thursday 22 September 2016. If you can't travel to Paris, you can still take part online!

    Abstracts released for the upcoming European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Special Conference
    View Now

    View All Updates: Conference Reports

    Enjoy the weekend!
    Tina

    Resistance to HCV Treatment Can Still Be a Challenge

    Resistance to HCV Treatment Can Still Be a Challenge
    The treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus has been revolutionized by the development of direct-acting antivirals, but a small fraction of patients do experience resistance and treatment failure

    Published Online: September 10, 2016
    Jackie Syrop
    More than 3% of the global population is chronically infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). In the United States, chronic HCV infection is the most common cause of liver-related death and liver transplantation, and recently surpassed HIV infection as a cause of mortality.

    The treatment of chronic HCV has been revolutionized by the development of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). According to a recent editorial in a special issue of Viruses that is devoted to HCV drug resistance, French researchers Che C. Colpitts, PhD, and Thomas F. Baumert, MD, wrote that the development of DAAs provides the first real opportunity for global cure of a chronic viral infection and have markedly improved the outlook for HCV patients. However, as the editorial notes, a small fraction of patients taking DAAs do experience resistance and treatment failure.

    Although antiviral resistance has been a significant challenge for interferon-based HCV therapies, drug resistance in patients taking DAAs seems to be limited to a small fraction of patients, the editorial states. Distinct genotypes, patients with advanced liver disease, liver transplantation, or patients with HIV/HCV co-infection may pose special challenges.

    Resistant variants are seen in most patients who do not achieve a sustained virological response (SVR) to DAAs, underscoring the fact that resistance is a critical determinant of treatment outcome, Colpitts and Baumert noted. The mechanisms of resistance may vary depending upon the class of DAA, the genotype of HCV, and the patient group. The editorial notes that the research into these aspects of resistance is important because understanding these mutations has substantial clinical implications. Clinically relevant resistance data can help guide the choice and combination of DAAs used in therapy.

    About 10% to 20% of patients with decompensated cirrhosis do not respond to current DAAs. And viral resistance and treatment failure has been observed among patients taking state-of-the-art DAAs pre- or post-liver transplantation, making management of patients difficult.

    The editorial describes research now under way in a number of areas related to resistance to DAAs:

    • DAAs that target the HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp)
    • Mode of action of different classes of RdRp and mechanisms of antiviral resistance.
    • The selection of DAA-resistant viruses through the lens of quasispecies dynamics, highlighting genetic and phenotypic barriers to resistance that could be used to diminish the probability of viral breakthrough during therapy.
    • Diagnostic tools that can monitor HCV resistance to new drugs in development and in patients receiving DAA therapy.
    • The ability of DAAs to prevent liver graft reinfection.
    • Host-targeting agents that target cellular factors involved in the HCV life cycle as a potential option to prevent and treat viral resistance, particularly in the context of liver transplantation.
    • Chronic viral infections and an ongoing state of chronic inflammation that may contribute to the development of HCV-induced liver disease.
    • The creation of in-vivo HCV infection models that will be critical for the assessment of HCV therapy response and the emergence of resistant variants.
    There are new strategies under way to prevent and address the challenges of DAA resistance that will help to bring the goal of global HCV eradication closer to reality.
    Source - http://www.ajmc.com/newsroom/resistance-to-hcv-treatment-can-still-be-a-challenge

    Read the editorial: Addressing the Challenges of Hepatitis C Virus Resistance and Treatment Failure
    by Che C. Colpitts and Thomas F. Baumert
    Viruses 2016, 8(8), 226; doi:10.3390/v8080226
    Received: 29 July 2016 / Accepted: 9 August 2016 / Published: 16 August 2016
    Show/Hide Abstract | PDF Full-text (155 KB) | HTML Full-text | XML Full-text

    Abstract: Chronic hepatitis C is a major cause of chronic liver disease, including liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The development of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) revolutionized hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment by offering genuine prospects for the first comprehensive cure of a chronic viral infection in humans. While antiviral resistance is a significant limitation for interferon-based therapies, resistance and treatment failure still appear to be present in a small fraction of patients even in state-of-the-art DAA combination therapies. Therefore, treatment failure and resistance still remain a clinical challenge for the management of patients not responding to DAAs. In this special issue of Viruses on HCV drug resistance, mechanisms of antiviral resistance for different classes of antiviral drugs are described. Furthermore, the detection and monitoring of resistance in clinical practice, the clinical impact of resistance in different patient groups and strategies to prevent and address resistance and treatment failure using complementary antiviral strategies are reviewed.
    (This article belongs to the Special Issue HCV Drug Resistance)

    Friday, 9 September 2016

    EASL/AASLD2016 - Achillion Reports 100% SVR In Phase2a Trial:Odalasvir, AL-335, and Simeprevir for Geno 1 Treatment-Naive

    Achillion Announces 100% SVR Reported in Janssen’s Phase 2a Trial Evaluating Triple Combination of Odalasvir, AL-335, and Simeprevir for Genotype 1 Treatment-Naive HCV

    New data released today in abstract for upcoming EASL / AASLD Special Conference: New Perspectives in Hepatitis C Virus Infection – The Roadmap For Cure -
    - Janssen advancing triple combination into Phase 2b clinical trial -

    NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 09, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq:ACHN) announced today that new interim results from a phase 2a study being conducted by Alios BioPharma, Inc., part of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies (Janssen), were published as part of the abstracts released for the upcoming European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Special Conference, September 23 - 24, 2016, in Paris, France.

    This ongoing phase 2a study was designed to confirm the required dose and treatment duration for an all-oral combination regimen containing odalasvir (ODV) and AL-335 with or without simeprevir (SMV) for durations of eight or six weeks of treatment in treatment-naïve patients with genotype 1 (GT1) chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.

    “We are delighted by the significant progress Janssen has made in advancing the all-oral, short-duration treatment regimen of odalasvir, AL-335 and simeprevir and are impressed with the Phase 2a study results being presented. Based on these interim results, Janssen plans to advance a phase 2b program for the triple combination to further understand the potential of this 3DAA drug combination to shorten the duration of treatment for patients suffering from HCV,” commented Dr. Milind Deshpande, President and Chief Executive Officer of Achillion. “Despite recent therapeutic advances, we believe there remains a significant unmet need in addressing the global burden of hepatitis C virus in those living with the disease.”

    Data included in the abstract were as of the time of submission in July 2016. Updated results, including sustained viral response 12 weeks after completion of therapy (SVR12) for all cohorts, are scheduled to be presented on Friday, September 23, 2016, in an ePoster entitled "Short duration treatment with AL-335 and odalasvir (ODV), with or without simeprevir (SMV), in treatment naïve patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype (GT) 1 infection." Interim results from cohorts 1-4, summarized in the table below, showed that the triple combination regimen was highly effective and well tolerated in non-cirrhotic patients with GT1 HCV.

    Table 1: Interim Phase 2a Results for Cohorts 1 – 4 
    Cohort
    #
    DoseDosing
    Duration
    (weeks)
    Number (%) withundetectable* HCV RNA
    (EOT or SVR) 
    AL-335
    (mg QD)
    ODV
    (mg)
    SMV 
    (mg QD)
    140050 QD100820/20 (100%), SVR24
    280050 QOD--818/20 (90%), SVR12
    380050 QOD75820/20 (100%), SVR4
    480050 QOD75620/20 (100%), EOT
    *Or below the limit of quantitation (N=2; Cohort 4 only)
    EOT: end of treatment; QD: every day; QOD: every other day; RNA: ribonucleic acid

    Summary of Phase 2a Study Design and Interim Results
    This phase 2a study was designed to determine the pharmacokinetics, efficacy and safety of ODV and AL-335 with or without SMV, in treatment naïve patients with GT1 or 3 HCV infection for treatment durations of eight weeks or less.

    Of the 20 patients treated in cohort 1, who received the triple combination of odalasvir (50mg QD), AL-335 (400mg QD) and simeprevir (100mg QD) for eight weeks (triplet, 8 weeks), 100 percent remained HCV RNA undetectable 24 weeks after completing therapy (SVR24). Additional patients were subsequently enrolled into two further cohorts (3 & 4), where they received adjusted doses of the same triplet combination for either eight or six weeks. In cohort 3 all were HCV RNA negative and remained HCV RNA undetectable 4 weeks after completing therapy (SVR4) and in cohort 4 all were HCV RNA negative (N=18) or below the limit of quantitation (N=2) at end of treatment. Of the 20 patients treated in cohort 2, who received the dual combination of odalasvir (50mg QOD) and AL-335 (800mg QD) for eight weeks (doublet, 8 weeks), 90 percent remained HCV RNA undetectable twelve weeks after completing therapy (SVR12).  

    All-oral combination regimens, containing odalasvir, AL-335 with or without simeprevir were generally safe and well tolerated. The majority of adverse events (AEs) were mild, most commonly headache, fatigue, and upper respiratory tract infection. In cohort 1, there was a single serious adverse event (Mobitz Type 1 2nd degree atrioventricular block), which was attributed to treatment. This ECG abnormality was not associated with clinical or echocardiographic abnormalities, and resolved following treatment discontinuation. No clinically significant laboratory abnormalities were observed. 

    Ongoing Phase 2 Development Program
    Based upon the interim results from the phase 2a study, which confirmed the required dose for each component and the treatment duration, the triple combination is being advanced into a phase 2b program consisting of once daily odalasvir 25mg, AL-335 800mg, and simeprevir 75mg. The development program will include two multi-center, randomized, open-label studies that will enroll treatment-naive and treatment-experienced non-cirrhotic patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus genotypes 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6. These studies will be complemented by an expansion of the ongoing phase 2a study focusing on patients with or without compensated cirrhosis and on patients with HCV genotype 2 and 3 infection. The results from the phase 2 program will guide further development.  
    Further information on this study can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov. Study identifier: CT02765490.

    Thursday, 8 September 2016

    Effective Antiviral Treatment Reduces Fatigue in People with Hepatitis C

    INHSU 2016 - the 5th International Symposium on Hepatitis Care in Substance Users - the only international, scientific conference dedicated to hepatitis C in people who use drugs.
    Wednesday 7 September - Friday 9 September
    Oslo, Norway

    Coverage - HIV and Hepatitis

    Written by Liz Highleyman

    Fatigue -- a common symptom among people living with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection -- is associated with liver inflammation and fibrosis, but antiviral therapy that leads to a cure significantly reduces the likelihood of fatigue, according to a Danish study presented at the 5th International Symposium on Hepatitis Care in Substance Users (INHSU 2016) this week in Oslo

    PRISONS COULD UNLOCK HEPATITIS C FREE FUTURE

    PRISONS COULD UNLOCK HEPATITIS C FREE FUTURE

    Treatment in prisons a public health priority, says new research

    (Thursday, 8 September 2016: Oslo) Prisons provide one of the most significant opportunities to drive down the prevalence of hepatitis C, and help reach global WHO elimination goals, says new research presented at the 5th International Symposium on Hepatitis Care in Substance Users today.

    “On the downside, it is clear that prisons act as incubators of hepatitis C, driving the epidemic both within the prison system and in the community at large,” said Professor Andrew Lloyd of the University of New South Wales in Australia who leads hepatitis research in the prison system in that country.

    “On the plus side, they also offer a unique environment to cure people of the disease and address the risk behaviour that fuels transmission. If we can turn prisons around, and use them to treat hepatitis C rather than facilitate its spread, then we can save lives, reduce the overall burden of disease and take concrete steps towards disease elimination.”

    Hepatitis C - virus which if left untreated can lead to cirrhosis and liver cancer - affects approximately 64-103 million people around the world, resulting in around 700 000 deaths per year. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has prioritised the disease, setting ambitious targets to reach elimination by 2030.

    In high income countries 80% of new infections are in people who use drugs. Prisoners have a particularly high prevalence of hepatitis C with as many as 1 in 6 inmates carrying the disease in parts of Europe and the US, reflecting the fact that imprisonment and injecting drug use are closely linked. This high prevalence means that use of non-sterile injecting equipment whilst in prison carries a high risk of transmission.

    A new modelling analysis - presented at INHSU 2016 and led by Professor Peter Vickerman at Bristol University’s Division of Global Public Health - looked at hepatitis C transmission in scenarios mimicking four global settings: Scotland, Australia, Ukraine and Thailand. It found that prison could contribute massively to overall HCV transmission, whereas introducing prevention programs in prison and amongst individuals transitioning back to the community could significantly reduce these infections. The study is published as part of a recent Lancet-commissioned report on drugs and health.

    Additional modelling studies in the UK have also shown that treatment with new highly effective therapies could also have a substantial impact, and could be cost-effective if continuity of care is ensured.

    “It is clear from our modelling that incarceration is a very important driver of HCV transmission in many settings. It is unlikely that it will be controlled without focusing prevention and control measures on incarcerated individuals and those being released from prison,” said Professor Vickerman.

    So far, Australia is one of the only countries to look at the mass scale up of new hepatitis C treatment combined with prevention programs in a prison setting. Health experts at INHSU 2016 say the evidence indicates it is now time for other countries to follow their lead.

    “The high level of mobility between prison and the community means that the health of prisoners should be a major public-health concern,” said President of the International Network of Hepatitis C in Substance Users (INHSU), Associate Professor Jason Grebely, the Kirby Institute, UNSW Australia.

    “Scaling up harm reduction programs and introducing testing and treatment strategies could potentially reduce and even reverse hepatitis C transmission and help us reach the WHO elimination goals. Yet, screening and treatment for hepatitis C is rarely made available to inmates.

    If we are serious about treating this disease, we need to seize the opportunity prisons present and make testing, treatment and prevention in this setting a priority.”

    To arrange interviews please contact: Petrana Lorenz petrana@arkcommunications.com.au

    +61 405 158 636

    +47 9208 6713

    ABOUT INHSU 2016

    This symposium is the leading international conference focused on the management of hepatitis among substance users. It is organised by the International Network for Hepatitis in Substance Users (INHSU). The symposium is held biennially and was first held in Zurich, Switzerland, in 2009, Brussels, Belgium, in 2011, Munich, Germany, in 2013 and Sydney, Australia, in 2015.

    INHSU 2016: NEW RESEARCH ON THE MANAGEMENT OF HEPATITIS C IN PRISONS

    Absence of NSPs in prisons makes HCV prevention difficult
    Incarceration may contribute substantially to HCV transmission among PWID
    High HCV incidence is observed in Australian prisons
    Risk behaviours for HCV acquisition in the prison are high


    Wednesday, 7 September 2016

    Limited Generalizability of Registration Trials in Hepatitis C: A Nationwide Cohort Study

    Limited Generalizability of Registration Trials in Hepatitis C: A Nationwide Cohort Study
    Floor A. C. Berden, Robert J. de Knegt, Hans Blokzijl, Sjoerd D. Kuiken, Karel J. L. van Erpecum, Sophie B. Willemse, Jan den Hollander, Marit G. A. van Vonderen, Pieter Friederich, Bart van Hoek, Carin M. J. van Nieuwkerk, Joost P. H. Drenth , Wietske Kievit

    PLOS Published: September 6, 2016 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161821

    View Full Text Article

    Abstract
    Background
    Approval of drugs in chronic hepatitis C is supported by registration trials. These trials might have limited generalizability through use of strict eligibility criteria. We compared effectiveness and safety of real world hepatitis C patients eligible and ineligible for registration trials.

    Methods
    We performed a nationwide, multicenter, retrospective cohort study of chronic hepatitis C patients treated in the real world. We applied a combined set of inclusion and exclusion criteria of registration trials to our cohort to determine eligibility. We compared effectiveness and safety in eligible vs. ineligible patients, and performed sensitivity analyses with strict criteria. Further, we used log binomial regression to assess relative risks of criteria on outcomes.

    Results
    In this cohort (n = 467) 47% of patients would have been ineligible for registration trials. Main exclusion criteria were related to hepatic decompensation and co-morbidity (cardiac disease, anemia, malignancy and neutropenia), and were associated with an increased risk for serious adverse events (RR 1.45–2.31). Ineligible patients developed significantly more serious adverse events than eligible patients (27% vs. 11%, p< 0.001). Effectiveness was decreased if strict criteria were used.

    Conclusions
    Nearly half of real world hepatitis C patients would have been excluded from registration trials, and these patients are at increased risk to develop serious adverse events. Hepatic decompensation and co-morbidity were important exclusion criteria, and were related to toxicity. Therefore, new drugs should also be studied in these patients, to genuinely assess benefits and risk of therapy in the real world population.

    View Complete Research Article: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0161821

    Letter to Gilead Sciences on attempts to remove generic sofosbuvir from Ukraine


    Letter to Gilead Sciences on attempts to remove generic sofosbuvir from Ukraine
    Mr. Gregg Alton
    Executive Vice President
    Corporate and Medical Affairs
    Gilead Sciences Inc.
    333 Lakeside Dr Foster City, CA 94404

    Re: Gilead Sciences attempts to remove generic sofosbuvir from Ukraine

    Dear Mr. Alton,

    On behalf of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), I am writing to express our serious concerns and strong opposition to Gilead’s on-going efforts to remove the only existing source of generic sofosbuvir in Ukraine.

    MSF is in the process of planning and beginning to deliver hepatitis C treatment to patients in Ukraine, a country suffering from the highest hepatitis C prevalence in the region - and which has one of the world’s highest rates of hepatitis C infection. The availability of multiple sources of new DAAs - and, in particular, sofosbuvir - is critical for treatment providers, including MSF, to manage a sustainable and affordable supply for medical operations.

    With the continued reduction of API prices for sofosbuvir and other DAAs, treatment providers and countries can anticipate much lower prices from generic producers in the next few years. Availability of generic versions of DAAs is critical for reducing prices (and ensuring that such prices remain affordable) and increasing availability of hepatitis C treatment to all patients.

    Multiple suppliers for DAAs and other medicines are also critical to avoid shortages and stock outs. In our experience, having only one registered supplier of an essential medicine per country can lead to shortages and stock outs, including recent shortages and stock-outs of critical medicines to treat HIV and AIDS.

    There are no patent barriers to the introduction of more affordable generic versions of sofosbuvir in Ukraine. In fact, Gilead did not file for the primary patents on sofosbuvir in Ukraine, and weak secondary patents have not been granted in the country.

    We are now concerned to learn that Gilead is attempting to remove the only existing source of generic sofosbuvir in Ukraine, by legally challenging the market authorization of the generic company, the distributor and multiple government agencies, pressuring them to withdraw the generic sofovbuvir from the market. The current attempt to remove the existing generic source of sofosbuvir could limit our ability to scale-up hepatitis C treatment in Ukraine. We consider that this attempt was initiated without consideration of the serious public health consequences.

    Over the past two years, MSF has requested that Gilead revise its commercial strategies on many occasions. These strategies threaten sustainable access to hepatitis C treatment in a number of countries where MSF is treating patients. Our requests have included asking Gilead to revise the current voluntary license agreements with generic manufacturers to include high-burden middle-income countries including Ukraine, and to eliminate its restrictive anti-diversion DAA distribution programme.

    Once again, MSF urges Gilead to drop the case in Ukraine, and reconsider its business strategy in high-burden middle-income countries, especially Ukraine since it has been excluded from relevant voluntary license agreements.

    We look forward to upcoming discussions with company representatives.

    Yours sincerely,
    Rohit Malpani Director of Policy & Analysis Médecins Sans Frontières - Access Campaign