1. Daclatasvir plus asunaprevir in treatment-naïve patients with hepatitis C virus genotype 1b infection.
- Author
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Wei L, Wang FS, Zhang MX, Jia JD, Yakovlev AA, Xie W, Burnevich E, Niu JQ, Jung YJ, Jiang XJ, Xu M, Chen XY, Xie Q, Li J, Hou JL, Tang H, Dou XG, Gandhi Y, Hu WH, McPhee F, Noviello S, Treitel M, Mo L, and Deng J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Carbamates, China, Double-Blind Method, Drug Administration Schedule, Drug Therapy, Combination adverse effects, Drug Therapy, Combination methods, Female, Genotype, Hepacivirus genetics, Hepatitis C, Chronic virology, Humans, Imidazoles therapeutic use, Isoquinolines therapeutic use, Liver Function Tests, Male, Middle Aged, Placebos, Pyrrolidines, Republic of Korea, Russia, Sulfonamides therapeutic use, Sustained Virologic Response, Treatment Failure, Valine analogs & derivatives, Young Adult, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Hepacivirus drug effects, Hepatitis C, Chronic drug therapy
- Abstract
Aim: To assess daclatasvir plus asunaprevir (DUAL) in treatment-naïve patients from mainland China, Russia and South Korea with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1b infection., Methods: Patients were randomly assigned (3:1) to receive 24 wk of treatment with DUAL (daclatasvir 60 mg once daily and asunaprevir 100 mg twice daily) beginning on day 1 of the treatment period (immediate treatment arm) or following 12 wk of matching placebo (placebo-deferred treatment arm). The primary endpoint was a comparison of sustained virologic response at posttreatment week 12 (SVR12) compared with the historical SVR rate for peg-interferon plus ribavirin (70%) among patients in the immediate treatment arm. The first 12 wk of the study were blinded. Safety was assessed in DUAL-treated patients compared with placebo patients during the first 12 wk (double-blind phase), and during 24 wk of DUAL in both arms combined., Results: In total, 207 patients were randomly assigned to immediate ( n = 155) or placebo-deferred ( n = 52) treatment. Most patients were Asian (86%), female (59%) and aged < 65 years (90%). Among them, 13% had cirrhosis, 32% had IL28B non-CC genotypes and 53% had baseline HCV RNA levels of ≥ 6 million IU/mL. Among patients in the immediate treatment arm, SVR12 was achieved by 92% (95% confidence interval: 87.2-96.0), which was significantly higher than the historical comparator rate (70%). SVR12 was largely unaffected by cirrhosis (89%), age ≥ 65 years (92%), male sex (90%), baseline HCV RNA ≥ 6 million (89%) or IL28B non-CC genotypes (96%), although SVR12 was higher among patients without (96%) than among those with (53%) baseline NS5A resistance-associated polymorphisms (at L31 or Y93H). During the double-blind phase, aminotransferase elevations were more common among placebo recipients than among patients receiving DUAL. During 24 wk of DUAL therapy (combined arms), the most common adverse events (≥ 10%) were elevated alanine aminotransferase and upper respiratory tract infection; emergent grade 3-4 laboratory abnormalities were infrequently observed, and all grade 3-4 aminotransferase abnormalities (alanine aminotransferase, n = 9; aspartate transaminase, n = 6) reversed within 8-11 d. Two patients discontinued DUAL treatment; one due to aminotransferase elevations, nausea, and jaundice and the other due to a fatal adverse event unrelated to treatment. There were no treatment-related deaths., Conclusion: DUAL was well-tolerated during this phase 3 study, and SVR12 with DUAL treatment (92%) exceeded the historical SVR rate for peg-interferon plus ribavirin of 70%., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: All authors have no conflicts of interest for this manuscript.
- Published
- 2018
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