Efficacy of a 12-Week Simeprevir Plus Peginterferon/Ribavirin (PR) Regimen in Treatment-Naïve Patients with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Genotype 4 (GT4) Infection and Mild-To-Moderate Fibrosis Displaying Early On-Treatment Virologic Response

Other authors

Institut Català de la Salut

[Asselah T] Hepatology Department, Beaujon Hospital, University of Paris, Paris, France. [Moreno C] CUB Hôpital Erasme, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium. [Sarrazin C] Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Hospital, Medizinische Klinik 1, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. [Gschwantler M] Department of Internal Medicine IV, Wilhelminenspital, Vienna, Austria. [Foster GR] Queen Mary Hospital, University of London, Barts Health, London, United Kingdom. [Craxí A] Sezione di Gastroenterologia & Epatologia, Di.Bi.M.I.S., University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy. [Buti M] Unitat d'Hepatologia, Vall d’Hebron Hospital, Barcelona, Spain. Ciberehd del Instituto Carlos III

Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus

Publication date

2021-04-22T07:54:10Z

2021-04-22T07:54:10Z

2017-01-05



Abstract

Esdeveniments adversos; Malalties del fetge; Teràpia amb inhibidors de la proteasa


Eventos adversos; Las enfermedades del hígado; Terapia con inhibidores de proteasa


Adverse events; Liver diseases; Protease inhibitor therapy


Background HCV GT4 accounts for up to 20% of HCV infections worldwide. Simeprevir, given for 12 weeks as part of a 24- or 48-week combination regimen with PR is approved for the treatment of chronic HCV GT4 infection. Primary study objectives were assessment of efficacy and safety of simeprevir plus PR in treatment-naïve patients with HCV GT4 treated for 12 weeks. Primary efficacy outcome was sustained virologic response 12 weeks post-treatment (SVR12). Additional objectives included investigation of potential associations of rapid virologic response and baseline factors with SVR12. Methods This multicentre, open-label, single-arm study (NCT01846832) evaluated efficacy and safety of simeprevir plus PR in 67 patients with HCV GT4 infection. Patients were treatment-naïve, aged 18–70 years with METAVIR F0–F2 fibrosis. Patients with early virologic response (HCV RNA <25 IU/mL [detectable/undetectable in IL28B CC patients or undetectable in IL28B CT/TT patients] at Week 2 and undetectable at Weeks 4 and 8) were eligible to stop all treatment at the end of Week 12, otherwise PR therapy was continued to Week 24. Results Of 67 patients treated, 34 (51%) qualified for 12-week treatment including all but one patient with IL28B CC genotype (14/15). All patients in the 12-week group had undetectable HCV RNA at end of treatment, and 97% (33/34) achieved SVR12. No new safety signals with simeprevir plus PR were identified. The proportion of patients experiencing Grade 3–4 adverse events was lower in the 12-week group than in the 24-week group. Conclusions Our findings on simeprevir plus PR therapy shortened to 12 weeks in patients with HCV GT4 infection with favourable baseline characteristics and displaying early on-treatment virologic response are encouraging. No new safety signals were associated with simeprevir plus PR in this study.


The study described in this manuscript (HPC3014; NCT01846832) was sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals. The funder was involved in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, and preparation of the manuscript. Editorial support was provided by Ian Grieve (Medical Writer at Zoetic Science, an Ashfield Company, part of UDG Healthcare plc, Macclesfield, UK); this support was funded by Janssen Pharmaceuticals. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Related items

PLoS ONE;12(1)

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0168713

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

This item appears in the following Collection(s)