Gilead Sciences, Inc. announced new data from the open-label phase of two pivotal Phase 3 clinical trials (Studies 102 and 103) evaluating the four-year efficacy of Viread (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate) for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Significantly, no resistance to Viread emerged over 192 weeks of treatment, and 10.8 percent of patients receiving Viread in Study 103 (HBeAg-positive) for four years experienced surface, or "s", antigen (HBsAg) loss, which is a marker of the resolution of chronic HBV infection. Additional data from these studies and from Study 106 show the durable antiviral efficacy of Viread among several key patient subpopulations, including patients with high baseline viral levels, individuals of Asian descent and treatment-experienced patients. These findings are being presented at the 61st annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseasesin Boston. "The complete absence of Viread-related resistance detected among study participants shows that this therapy has a high and durable barrier to viral resistance, which is essential for the long-term success of HBV therapy," said Patrick Marcellin, MD, of Hôpital Beaujon in Clichy, France, INSERM CRB3 and University of Paris Denis Diderot, and the principal investigator of Study 102. "These four-year results underscore the long-term benefits of Viread for diverse patient populations, including those who are difficult to treat."
The 192-week data from Studies 102 and 103 evaluate the intent-to-treat population (with the exception of those who left the study for administrative reasons). In Studies 102 and 103, the majority of patients who received Viread for up to 192 weeks experienced sustained suppression of HBV DNA levels in the blood below 400 copies/mL and normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT, an enzyme that serves as a measure of liver damage). Notably, no HBV pol/RT amino acid substitutions associated with tenofovir resistance were detected through 192 weeks of Viread.
Among HBeAg-positive patients, 29 percent (based on observed data at week 192) experienced "e" antigen seroconversion, which is defined as both the disappearance of the hepatitis B "e" antigen, a marker of HBV replication (rendering the patient "HBe-antigen negative"), and the appearance of antibodies to this antigen (making the patient "HBe-antibody positive"). Additionally, among HBeAg-positive patients receiving Viread through 192 weeks, the cumulative probability (estimated by Kaplan-Meier) of "s" antigen loss, suggesting that HBV infections may have cleared completely, was 10.8 percent.
"Over the years, physicians have come to understand the critical role of 's' antigen loss in the cessation of disease activity," said Jenny Heathcote, MD, of the University of Toronto, Canada, and the principal investigator for Study 103. "The 10.8 percent 's' loss observed in this trial is a significant finding that makes Viread a highly attractive treatment option for HBV."
Viread for HBV was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2008 and has since become the most-prescribed HBV medicine in the United States. It is the only recommended first-line therapy for hepatitis B to demonstrate continuous efficacy and safety through four years in pivotal studies. In October 2010, the FDA expanded Viread's indication to include the treatment of chronic hepatitis B among patients with decompensated liver disease, the end stage of hepatitis B in which liver function is marginal and clinical complications frequently occur. Decompensated liver disease is an indication for consideration of liver transplantation.
Date: October 30, 2010
Source: Gilead Sciences
The 192-week data from Studies 102 and 103 evaluate the intent-to-treat population (with the exception of those who left the study for administrative reasons). In Studies 102 and 103, the majority of patients who received Viread for up to 192 weeks experienced sustained suppression of HBV DNA levels in the blood below 400 copies/mL and normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT, an enzyme that serves as a measure of liver damage). Notably, no HBV pol/RT amino acid substitutions associated with tenofovir resistance were detected through 192 weeks of Viread.
Among HBeAg-positive patients, 29 percent (based on observed data at week 192) experienced "e" antigen seroconversion, which is defined as both the disappearance of the hepatitis B "e" antigen, a marker of HBV replication (rendering the patient "HBe-antigen negative"), and the appearance of antibodies to this antigen (making the patient "HBe-antibody positive"). Additionally, among HBeAg-positive patients receiving Viread through 192 weeks, the cumulative probability (estimated by Kaplan-Meier) of "s" antigen loss, suggesting that HBV infections may have cleared completely, was 10.8 percent.
"Over the years, physicians have come to understand the critical role of 's' antigen loss in the cessation of disease activity," said Jenny Heathcote, MD, of the University of Toronto, Canada, and the principal investigator for Study 103. "The 10.8 percent 's' loss observed in this trial is a significant finding that makes Viread a highly attractive treatment option for HBV."
Viread for HBV was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2008 and has since become the most-prescribed HBV medicine in the United States. It is the only recommended first-line therapy for hepatitis B to demonstrate continuous efficacy and safety through four years in pivotal studies. In October 2010, the FDA expanded Viread's indication to include the treatment of chronic hepatitis B among patients with decompensated liver disease, the end stage of hepatitis B in which liver function is marginal and clinical complications frequently occur. Decompensated liver disease is an indication for consideration of liver transplantation.
Date: October 30, 2010
Source: Gilead Sciences
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