4.8 Article

Retreatment with Telaprevir Combination Therapy in Hepatitis C Patients with Well-Characterized Prior Treatment Response

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 5, Pages 1538-1546

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/hep.24549

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.
  2. Tibotec, a division of Janssen-Cilag Ltd.
  3. Vertex
  4. Anadys
  5. Gilead
  6. GlaxoSmithKline
  7. Idera
  8. Medtronic
  9. Merck
  10. Pfizer
  11. Pharmasset
  12. Santaris
  13. Three Rivers
  14. Zymogenetics
  15. Abbott
  16. Biolex
  17. Bristol Myers-Squibb
  18. Celera Diagnostics
  19. Conatus
  20. Gilead Sciences
  21. Human Genome Sciences
  22. Merck/Schering-Plough
  23. Novartis
  24. Roche/Genentech
  25. Romark
  26. Valeant
  27. Vertex Pharmaceuticals
  28. GlobeImmune
  29. Idenix
  30. Tibotec
  31. Wyeth
  32. Axcan Pharma
  33. Hoffman-La-Roche
  34. Bristol-Myers Squibb

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Retreatment with peginterferon alpha and ribavirin (PR) offers a limited chance of sustained virologic response (SVR) in patients who did not achieve SVR with prior PR treatment. This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of telaprevir-based treatment in combination with PR in well-characterized patients who did not achieve SVR in the control arms of three Phase II clinical trials. Patients eligible to enroll in this open-label non-randomized study either met on-treatment criteria for nonresponse or relapsed after 48 weeks of treatment in the control arm of the three Phase II PROVE studies. The initial protocol was a 24-week regimen: 12 weeks of telaprevir and PR followed by an additional 12 weeks of PR. During the study the protocol was amended to extend PR to 48 weeks for patients with previous null response. All other patients with undetectable hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA at weeks 4 and 12 received 24 weeks of therapy. Those with detectable HCV RNA at weeks 4 or 12 received a total of 48 weeks of therapy. The overall SVR rate was 59% (69/117). SVR rates with T12PR were 37% (19/51) in prior null responders, 55% (16/29) in prior partial responders, 75% (6/8) in prior breakthroughs, and 97% (28/29) in prior relapsers. The overall relapse rate was 16% (13/83). Adverse events were similar to those in previous trials with telaprevir, with 9% of patients discontinuing due to an adverse event (most commonly rash and anemia). Conclusion: This study demonstrated the benefit of retreatment with a telaprevir-based regimen for patients with well-characterized nonresponse (null and partial) or relapse to a prior course of PR treatment. (HEPATOLOGY 2011;54:1538-1546)

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