Weight-based ribavirin dosing achieves high success rates in hepatitis C/HIV co-infected patients

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Increasing the dose of ribavirin in interferon/ribavirin therapy and basing it on the patient’s weight can achieve impressive treatment success rates, approaching if not yet equalling those seen in HIV-uninfected patients, Spanish researchers reported last week.

Study results from the PRESCO trial of pegylated interferon and eight-based ribavirin were presented by Vincent Soriano to the Eighth Glasgow International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection in Glasgow.

PRESCO is a trial of hepatitis C (HCV) therapy in reasonably well patients: participants had to have a CD4 cell count of over 300 cells/mm3, were not allowed to take AZT (zidovudine, Retrovir) or ddI (diadosine, Videx) and were not cirrhotic. It was an open-label study, with no comparison with other regimens.

Glossary

sustained virological response (SVR)

The continued, long-term suppression of a virus as a result of treatment. In hepatitis C, refers to undetectable hepatitis C RNA after treatment has come to an end. Usually SVR refers to RNA remaining undetectable for 12 or 24 weeks after ending treatment and is considered to be a cure (SVR12 or SVR24).

pegylated interferon

Pegylated interferon, also known as peginterferon, is a chemically modified form of the standard interferon, sometimes used to treat hepatitis B and C. The difference between interferon and peginterferon is the PEG, which stands for a molecule called polyethylene glycol. The PEG does nothing to fight the virus. But by attaching it to the interferon (which does fight the virus), the interferon will stay in the blood much longer. 

relapse

The return of signs and symptoms of a disease after a patient has been free of those signs and symptoms. 

response rate

The proportion of people asked to complete a survey who do so; or the proportion of people whose health improves following treatment.

interferon alfa

A natural protein produced by the human body in response to infection. Manufactured interferon alfa is a treatment against hepatitis B, hepatitis C, genital warts and some cancers. See also ‘pegylated interferon’ – this is the form of the most commonly used drug.

The study gave patients 180 micrograms of pegylated interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys) per week and combined it with a daily dose of either 1000mg ribavirin if the patient weighed less than 75kg or 1200mg if they weighed more.

The original PRESCO protocol, devised in December 2002, prescribed 48 weeks of treatment for patients with genotypes 1 or 4 of HCV and 24 weeks for genotypes 2 or 3. However after the APRICOT study results came out, this was amended in August 2004 to allow 72 weeks of treatment for genotypes 1 or 4 and 48 weeks for 2-3.

In the end 192 patients with genotype 1/4 took 48 weeks of treatment and 45 for 72 weeks. Ninety-six patients with genotype 2/3 took treatment for 24 weeks and 56 for 48 weeks.

Presenter Vincent Sorriano commented that it had been difficult to persuade patients to extend their treatment period and results were “hampered by voluntary withdrawal”.

The Sustained Viral Response (SVR) rates were 49.6% for all patients, 35.6% for genotype 1, 32.6% for genotype 4 and 72.4% for genotype 3 – there were virtually no genotype 2 patients in the study.

Extended treatment did convey additional benefit. SVR results for patients with genotypes 1/4 were 53% for patients who took treatment for 72 weeks and 82% for patients with genotypes 2/3 who took 48 weeks of treatment.

Hepatitis C treatment can appear to be successful, with undetectable HCV viral loads at the end of treatment, but it can then relapse and HCV can reappear, which is why the SVR is measured twelve weeks after the end of treatment and is the measure of treatment success. The relapse rate for patients with genotype 1 was 35% and with genotype 4 was 20%, with few relapsers for genotypes 2/3.

About a third (34.6%) of patients discontinued their treatment with 8.2% doing so for adverse events and 16.4% withdrawing voluntarily. About 15% of patients had their interferon dose reduced for toxicity and about 20% of patients had their ribavirin dose reduced.

The dose-limiting toxicity of ribavirin is usually anaemia. Four had to stop treatment at twelve weeks for this reason, four at 24 weeks and one at 48 weeks.

There was one death attributed to treatment in the trial – a patient who committed suicide, presumably due to the depression which is a notorious side-effect of interferon.

Sorriano contrasted his trial results with those from two previous trials: the APRICOT trial (Torriani), which is the largest study ever conducted in HIV/HCV co-infected patients but used an 800mg fixed dose of ribavirin, and the PISG trial (Fried) which used weight-based ribavirin but in monoinfected patients.

The SVR results for these three trials were as follows:

Genotype 1

Genotypes 2/3

Sustained virological response rate (SVR)

APRICOT

29%

62%

PRESCO

36%

72%

PISG

46%

76%

In an additional poster, Sorriano also analysed the early response rates, which are usually indicators of eventual treatment success. At week 12 of each trial, the proportion of patients with an undetectable HCV viral load were as follows:

Genotype 1

Genotypes 2/3

Week 12 virological response rate

APRICOT

34%

72%

PRESCO

60%

93%

PISG

71.4%

96%

Sorriano said that PRESCO was the largest trial using weight-based ribavirin conducted in co-infected people so far and said that his results justified using this approach in future.

Main references

Nuñez M et al. The PRESCO trial: role of extended duration of therapy with pegylated interferon alfa-2a plus weight-based ribavirin dose in 389 HCV/HIV co-infected patients. Eighth International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection, Glasgow, abstract PL13.1, 2006.

Ramos B et al. Critical role of ribavirin for the achievement of early virological response to HCV therapy in HCV/HIV co-infected patients. Eighth International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection, Glasgow, abstract 314, 2006.

Other references

Fried MW. Peginterferon alfa-2a plus ribavirin for chronic hepatitis C virus infection. New England Journal of Medicine 347(13): 975-982, 2002.

Torriani FJ et al (for the APRICOT Study Group). Peginterferon alfa-2a plus ribavirin for chronic hepatitis C virus infection in HIV-infected patients. 351(5): 438-450, 2004.