Hepatitis C Clinical Trial
Official title:
Antiviral & Antifibrotic Liver Therapy in HCV + Drinkers and Non-Drinkers
The primary aim of this investigation is to evaluate the effect of a combined antiviral, antifibrotic and antioxidant treatment on the progression of liver disease in patients with hepatitis C who either abstain from alcohol or continue to drink. All subjects are given state-of-the-art antiviral treatment (pegylated interferon + ribavirin), supplemented with either placebo or polyenylphosphatidylcholine (PPC), a purified soybean extract consisting of 95-96% polyunsaturated phosphatidylcholines (PC) and which has both antifibrotic and antioxidant properties. Secondary aims are to verify whether moderate alcohol consumption interferes with the antiviral effect of pegylated interferon + ribavirin on HCV and to validate the reliability of various circulating markers as substitute for liver biopsies to indicate the stage of liver pathology and its propensity for progression.
Current therapy for HCV disease focuses on anti-viral treatment. The combination of
pegylated interferon and ribavirin is approved by the FDA for treating HCV disease. Subjects
in this study will be given ribavirin and pegylated interferon. One innovative aspect of
this proposal is that the state-of-the-art antiviral treatment will be supplemented by an
anti-fibrotic agent, namely polyenylphosphatidylcholine (PPC), or placebo, administered in a
double blind randomized fashion. Current therapy focuses on anti-viral treatment, neglecting
the fact that what causes the medical symptoms and eventually the demise of the HCV patient
is the liver fibrosis, the resulting cirrhosis and the associated complications, including
hepatocellular carcinoma. If the fibrotic process could be stopped or even prevented, the
hepatitis C virus would lose much of its impact on health. Available anti-fibrotic agents
are too toxic to be used in patients, except for one, namely PPC, which has been shown in
various experimental models to have striking anti-fibrotic actions, and was found recently,
in a European study, to be beneficial in patients with hepatitis C in terms of their
circulating levels of transaminases. Various studies have indicated that HCV is associated
with an oxidative stress and thus it is noteworthy that PPC was discovered to have also
significant anti-oxidant effects.
The study has been approved by the Institutional Review Board at each Center, and all the
patients are provided written informed consent. After screening, patients are randomly
assigned to one of 2 treatment groups (PPC or placebo). The two treatment groups are given
the combination of pegylated interferon (180 μg injected once weekly) (Shiffman et al, 1999;
Sulkowski et al, 1999), and ribavirin for 48 weeks (genotype I) or 24 weeks (other
genotypes). If the latter do not respond in terms of HCV RNA, they are also treated for 48
weeks. Ribavirin is administered orally twice a day at a total daily dose of 1000 mg for
patients who weigh 75 kg or less and 1200 mg for those who weigh more than 75 kg. These
drugs are started and stopped at the same time, the PPC (5 chewable tablets of 0.9 gm each
per day) or corresponding placebo (obtained from PHOSPHOLIPID GmbH, a successor of
Rhone-Poulenc Rorer, Cologne, Germany) are given to each patient for the 3 years.
The patients in whom the hemoglobin falls by more than 2 g per deciliter are followed every
2 weeks until stabilization. The dose of ribavirin is reduced to 600 mg per day in patients
whose hemoglobin concentrations fall below 10 g per deciliter, and it is discontinued if the
concentration falls below 8.5 g per deciliter. For severe adverse events other than anemia,
the dose of interferon is reduced in half and the dose of ribavirin to 600 mg per day. The
full dose can be resumed after the event, or discontinued if the effect persists.
The patients are evaluated as outpatients at weeks 1, 2, 4 and then every 4 weeks during the
24-48 weeks of interferon-ribavirin-PPC (or placebo) treatment as well as during the
subsequent PPC (placebo) therapy. Upon cessation of antiviral treatment, study patients may
be seen on a quarterly basis if, in the Investigator's judgment, this flexible schedule will
not impact negatively on patient care but will impact positively on patient retention.
Biochemical testing is performed by a central laboratory. Plasma HCV RNA levels are
determined before treatment, during interferon-ribavirin treatment at 24 and 48 weeks, after
interferon-ribavirin therapy at months 18, 24 and 30 and at the end of the 3 years. Plasma
HCV RNA is measured by a quantitative reverse-transcription-polymerase-chain-reaction assay
(Cobas Amplicor for HCV Monitor v.2, Roche Diagnostic Systems, Inc.) that has a sensitivity
of 3000 IU/ml with a linearity up to 2.5 X 106 IU/ml. Samples negative with the quantitative
HCV-RNA are retested with the qualitative HCV-PCR assay (Cobas Amplicor for HCV 2.0, Roche
Diagnostic Systems, Inc.) that has a sensitivity of 60 IU/ml. HCV genotyping is carried out
according to Stuyver et al, (1993; Inno-LIPA HCVII, Immunogenetics).
Compliance in terms of PPC (or placebo) will be monitored by 4 methods: patient diary, pill
count of the medication and monthly urine analysis for the presence of a riboflavin marker.
Patients will consume 60 mg riboflavin per day. Riboflavin is rapidly excreted in the urine
and is fluorescent when passed under an ultraviolet lamp. In addition, spot checks of blood
levels of dilinoleoylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC, the main phosphatidylcholine species of PPC)
will validate compliance.
Alcohol intake will be monitored by 3 methods: patient diary, collateral history and monthly
blood tests for markers of alcohol consumption (carbohydrate deficient transferrin)(CDT).
Liver biopsies are performed at the end of 3 years and the specimens analyzed by two
pathologists who are unaware of the patients' identification and treatment regimen. Fibrosis
is the major criterion, with some assessment in additional areas, such as virologic response
examined in both drinkers and non-drinkers.
1. Fibrosis: The primary statistical analysis will compare the PPC and placebo groups with
regard to changes in fibrosis score from baseline to the value after 36 months of
treatment. The primary fibrosis end point is histological with degrees of fibrosis
graded on liver biopsy according to Ishak et al (1995). Furthermore, we count the
number of α-smooth muscle actin (SMA) expressing stellate cells (Reeves et al, 1996),
the principal collagen producing cells. Activation of stellate cells and their
transformation to myofibroblast-like cells has been demonstrated in experimental
fibrosis (Mak et al, 1984, 1994). Smooth muscle actin α is an actin isoform typical of
smooth muscle cells (Skalli et al, 1986), that may be localized in stellate cells of
the human liver. Its expression in the stellate cells has been considered an indication
of phenotypic modulation of stellate cells to myofibroblasts. In the human liver the
appearance of smooth muscle actin α was closely related to the process of hepatic
fibrosis (Reeves et al, 1996) and the formation of cirrhotic nodules (Nouchi et al,
1991). In addition, circulating break-down products of collagen or other components of
the extracellular matrix (ECM) are being used as markers of liver pathology. These
include laminin, the major noncollagenous glycoprotein of basement membranes. Indeed,
extracellular basement membranes undergo a continuous turnover and elevation of laminin
has been described in the sera of patients with alcoholic liver disease (Niemelä et al.
1988; Sato et al. 1986). Tenascin, a molecule expressed in proliferating ECM, TIMP-1 an
inhibitor of the matrix degrading metalloproteinases (MMPs), collagen IV, collagen VI,
a molecule that forms filaments between large collagen fibrils, the N-terminal
propeptide of procollagen type III (PIIINP), considered a marker of fibrogenesis,
hyaluronic acid (HA), an ubiquitous glycosaminoglycan with high extraction by the liver
sinusoidal endothelium, and MMP-2. All these have been assessed before as markers of
fibrosis, some specifically in patients with chronic hepatitis C (Kasahara et al, 1997;
McHutchison et al, 2000; Kojima et la, 2001; Murawaki et al, 2001) but not in subjects
who were also drinkers.
2. Sustained virologic response, defined as the absence of plasma HCV RNA a minimum of 24
weeks after antiviral treatment is completed.
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