Chronic Hepatitis C Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective, Open-label, Randomised Controlled Trial on Efficacy and Tolerability of PegIFN-alpha 2a + Serum Level-adapted RBV vs. PegIFN-alpha 2a + Weight-based RBV in Treatment-naive Patients With Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 1
Treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C infected with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus
(HCV) consists of combined peginterferon/ribavirin for 48 weeks. Approximately 50% of
patients experience sustained virological response which equals cure. All other patients
either do not respond or experience recurrence of HCV virus and chronic hepatitis. Important
predictors of successful treatment are sustained dosing of both peginterferon and ribavirin.
With regard to the latter, clinical evidence indicates that higher ribavirin doses may in
fact even improve treatment outcome. However, high ribavirin doses cause hemolytic anemia
which require dose reductions. Recent clinical experience show that erythropoetic growth
factors, including erythropoetin, can counteract hemolytic anemia caused by antiviral
treatment in chronic hepatitis C patients. Therefore, the current trial aims to test whether
higher ribavirin doses adapted to a target plasma concentrations instead of a weight-based
dosing result in better healing rates, and whether ribavirin-associated hemolytic anemia can
be compensated by concommitant erythropoetin treatment.
Using a randomized, controlled, open-label design, the investigators hypothesize that
patients with high ribavirin doses adapted to plasma levels experience better viral
clearance than patients treated with standard weight-based ribavirin doses. In addition, the
investigators hypothesize that erythropoetin treatment will counteract hemolytic anemia
induced by ribavirin thereby allowing maintenance of target plasma concentrations without
ribavirin dose reductions.
Background
Prevalence and incidence of chronic hepatitis C (CHC) are rising worldwide. Complications
include chronic liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma, and chronic hepatitis C is a
major indication for liver transplantation. Effective treatment is required to prevent these
outcomes.
Current treatment consists of a combination of peginterferon (PegIFN) and ribavirin (RBV)
given for 24 or 48 weeks depending on the viral genotype. While genotypes 2 and 3 respond
well to 24 weeks of PegIFN/RBV with approximately 80% viral clearance, genotype 1 infected
patients only achieve about 40-50% sustained viral response (SVR) with 48 weeks of
combination therapy.
RBV is a nucleoside analog with structural similarities to guanosine, which modulates RNA
and DNA synthesis. RBV reveals antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial (RS)-virus,
influenza virus, Lassa virus uand others. The exact mode of antiviral activity is yet
unknown but believed to relate to reducing survival of HCV-infected hepatocytes thereby
allowing for elimination of infected cells by interferon-stimulated immune mechanisms.
Generally, RBV is well tolerated. With standard daily doses between 1.000 and 1.200mg,
irritability, sleeping abnormalities, cough and pruritus. The most prevalent and typical
side effect of RBV is a dose-dependent hemolytical anemia which responds well to dose
reduction or interruption of RBV therapy. RBV-associated anemia impairs quality of life and,
overall, 25-36% of patients require dose reductions and/or RBV cessation. However,
reduction/cessation of RBV is associated with a significant drop of SVR and measures to
maintain RBV doses are clearly warranted. Several recent studies have shown that
erythropoetin can counteract RBV-induced hemolytic anemia, and improve quality of life.
The relevance of RBV dose with regard to therapeutic response to combination therapy is
well-established and currently, RBV is dosed according to weight: patients with CHC genotype
1 are treated with 1.000mg if body weight is <65kg, and receive 1.200mg if >65kg.
Retrospective studies have shown that relapsers and non-responders to antiviral treatment
with RBV had lower RBV levels than those who had a SVR. In a retrospective analysis of 4
studies investigating a total of 1105 patients treated with RBV, RBV plasma concentrations
measured at 4 weeks of treatment correlated with viral clearance: SVR was 31.8% in those
with RBV levels <1,000ng/ml, and increased to 62.5% with RBV concentrations at >4,000ng/ml.
A pilot trial from Sweden investigated whether dosing RBV according to a plasma level of
15mcmol/l (3.7mcg/ml) in 10 patients. Median RBV dose was 2.540mg/day and all patients
received erythropoetin.SVR was achieved in 9 of 10 patients.
So far, a randomized, controlled trial comparing weight-based RBV (standard) vs. RBV dosed
according to kidney function and plasma levels.
Objective
Comparison of efficacy and tolerability of treatment with PegIFN-alpha 2a + RBV dosed
according plasma concentrations vs PegIFN-alpha 2a + weight-based RBV in patients with
chronic hepatitis C genotype 1
Methods
Prospective, controlled, open label randomized human trial
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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