Reuters Health Information: 8-week sofosbuvir-velpatasvir-voxilaprevir less effective for HCV
8-week sofosbuvir-velpatasvir-voxilaprevir less effective for HCV
Last Updated: 2017-04-24
By Lorraine L. Janeczko
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - For patients with chronic
hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, eight weeks of combined
sofosbuvir-velpatasvir-voxilaprevir may not be as effective as
12 weeks of only sofosbuvir-velpatasvir, results from two phase
3 open-label trials suggest.
But patients with HCV genotype 3 and cirrhosis may have
similar rates of sustained virologic response (SVR) to either
treatment, researchers report in Gastroenterology, online April
5.
"Among patients who have not been treated with direct-acting
antiviral agents (DAAs), the triple regimen of the DAAs
sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir for eight weeks achieved
very high rates of efficacy, curing 95% of patients with chronic
HCV infection; however, it failed to achieve noninferiority
against the 12-week regimen of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir, which
cured 98% of patients," said lead author Dr. Ira M. Jacobson of
the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, in New York City.
"Therefore, an 8-week regimen of the three-drug combination
cannot be recommended as an equally effective alternative for
all patients," he told Reuters Health by email.
In each of the two studies, POLARIS-2 and POLARIS-3, Dr.
Jacobson and his colleagues randomly assigned patients with HCV
infection who had not previously been treated with a DAA to
receive either the three-drug combination for eight weeks or the
two-drug combination for 12 weeks.
In POLARIS-2, the team enrolled 941 participants at 117
sites in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France,
Germany, Australia and New Zealand. Patients infected with any
of the HCV genotypes, with or without cirrhosis, were included,
except those with genotype 3 and cirrhosis. In POLARIS-3, they
enrolled 219 participants infected with HCV genotype 3 and
compensated cirrhosis who were excluded from POLARIS-2.
In POLARIS-2, 95% of the 501 participants on triple therapy
for eight weeks showed SVR, which did not meet the
non-inferiority criterion compared with the 98% SVR seen in the
440 participants on the 12-week dual therapy.
The difference in efficacy was mainly due to a lower rate of
SVR (92%) among participants with HCV genotype 1a infection who
were on the three drugs for 8 weeks. In POLARIS-3, 96% of both
treatment groups showed SVR.
In both studies, the most common adverse events reported
were headache, fatigue, diarrhea and nausea, with diarrhea and
nausea more frequent in patients on voxilaprevir; in both
trials, only between 0% and 1% of participants discontinued
treatment due to adverse events.
"There is a universal desire to shorten the duration of
therapy for hepatitis C to maximize patient compliance, which
may decline in the process of a longer course of therapy," Dr.
Jacobson noted.
As Dr. Jacobson and his co-authors write, for HCV-infected
people who are homeless, incarcerated, or have addictions,
access to highly effective treatment can be challenging; and
overall, nonadherence has become the biggest risk factor for
treatment failure.
But, he added, "The already-approved 12-week regimen of
sofosbuvir/velpatasvir, along with other already-approved
regimens, appears unlikely to be routinely replaced by a shorter
duration of the triple regimen for patients who have not been
treated with direct-acting antiviral agents.�
Co-author Dr. Brian L. Pearlman of the Medical College of
Georgia in Augusta, said, "DAAs have been a major advance
relative to the difficult-to-tolerate interferon-containing
therapies of the past. It was presumed that adding medications
with multiple mechanisms of action would further engender
improvements in efficacy rates and/or durations of therapy."
"One of the few remaining 'difficult-to-treat' chronic
hepatitis C patients is the genotype 3-infected cirrhotic. The
triple-combination antiviral therapy studied in POLARIS-3 will
likely represent a new, effective 8-week treatment option for
this patient group, even in those who have failed prior
therapies," Dr. Pearlman, also at Emory University School of
Medicine in Atlanta, told Reuters Health by email.
Gilead Sciences supported the study. Most of the authors,
including Drs. Jacobson and Pearlman, have financial
relationships with the company, and several are employees.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2pcX9bq
Gastroenterology 2017.
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