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Strategic Treatment Reduction in Very Early Liver Disease With 4 Weeks Sofosbuvir Plus Glecepravir-pibrentasvir
This study aims to evaluate the efficacy, safety and feasibility of four weeks of sofosbuvir plus glecaprevir-pibrentasvir, followed by immediate retreatment of virological relapse with glecepravir-pibrentasvir for 12 weeks, in treatment-naïve participants with chronic HCV infection and early liver disease (F0-F2).
Study details:
The capacity to eliminate HCV through rapid direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy scale-up would be enhanced by shortened duration therapy in key populations. The "next generation" DAA regimen of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg), an NS3/4a protease inhibitor and NS5A inhibitor, provides key features for potential simplified shortened duration therapy in people with early liver disease (F0-2), including pangenotypic activity, high efficacy, and favourable on-treatment HCV RNA kinetics. The addition of sofosbuvir (400 mg) may provide further feasibility for shortened duration therapy with a potent triple class DAA regimen.
Shortened duration therapy (4-6 weeks) has been evaluated in chronic HCV populations with several DAA regimens, with generally unfavourable outcomes (SVR\<50%) for 4 week durations. 8-11 In a study among a predominantly African American population of 4 week duration therapy of 3 or 4 DAAs, with sofosbuvir/ledipasvir/GS-9451 (protease inhibitor) and sofosbuvir/ledipasvir/GS-9451/GS-9669 (non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor), SVR was only 40% (10/25) and 20% (5/25) in the 3 and 4 DAA regimen groups, respectively. 10 In separate phase II studies that included evaluation of 6 weeks sofosbuvir (400mg)/velpatasvir (100mg)/voxilaprevir (100 mg) in treatment naïve patients without cirrhosis, SVR was 88% (29/33) among patients with genotype 2, 3, 4, or 6,12 93% (14/15) in patients with genotype 13,13 and and 71% (24/34) in patients with genotype 1.
14 Non-published data (provided by Gilead Sciences) from the latter study demonstrates a higher SVR (88%, 14/16) in the sub-population of patients with F0-2. Thus, in patients with relatively early liver disease virological failure is uncommon with 6-week duration sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir therapy. These studies would suggest that a 6-week duration therapy, particularly with a potent 3 DAA triple class regimen, may be feasible for many patients with chronic HCV infection, but a 4-week duration would probably compromise treatment outcomes.
However, in a small study (n=16) among younger people who inject drugs (PWID) with early liver disease (\<50 years, F0-2) in Denmark, a 4-week regimen of sofosbuvir/ledipasvir plus ribavirin provided a per protocol (PP)(n=13) SVR of 92% (one relapse) with intention to treat (ITT) SVR of 75%. In the same study 16 PWID were treated with the same regimen plus pegylated interferon with PP and ITT SVR of 100% and 94%, respectively. Further evidence for the potential of ultra-short duration DAA therapy comes from a response-guided study in Hong Kong.
Patients with HCV genotype 1b were treated with three different triple class DAA regimens, including sofosbuvir/ledipasvir + asunaprevir, sofosbuvir + daclatasvir + simeprevir, or sofosbuvir + daclatasvir + asunaprevir, and those with an ultra-rapid virological response (HCV RNA \<500 IU/mL at day 2; 18/26) had treatment duration shortened to three weeks. The SVR rate was 100% (18/18) in the three-week treated population. While efficacy has been suboptimal in most studies of short duration DAA therapy to date, the emergence of clinically significant resistance-associated substitutions (RAS) has not been seen, and retreatment with the same regimen for 12 weeks has been successful.
8,9 The FOURward study examined the safety and efficacy of short-duration therapy (4 or 6 weeks) with sofosbuvir + daclatasvir/asunaprevir/beclabuvir in patients with HCV genotype 1 and without cirrhosis. 9 Although efficacy was suboptimal (SVR12 43%), among those with virological relapse (n=16), 44% (n=7) had no emergent RAS detected at failure. Furthermore, in the nine patients with treatment-emergent NS5A RAS, the clinical significance was uncertain, as all emergent NS5A RAS conferred low-nanomolar resistance in vitro.
Regardless of RAS emergence, retreatment of patients who experienced virological relapse with 12 weeks sofosbuvir + daclatasvir/asunaprevir/beclabuvir + ribavirin resulted in SVR of 100%. C-SWIFT evaluated the efficacy and safety of sofosbuvir + elbasvir/grazoprevir in patients with HCV genotype 1 and without cirrhosis for four and six weeks, with SVR12 rates of 32% (10/31) and 87% (26/30), respectively. 8 All patients with virological relapse who received retreatment with 12 weeks of sofosbuvir + elbasvir/grazoprevir + ribavirin achieved SVR12, despite the majority having NS5A and/or NS3 RAS.
The combination of sofosbuvir (400 mg) + glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg) has not been evaluated as a shortened duration triple class DAA regimen. It has been evaluated as a 12 and 16-week regimen in combination with ribavirin for treatment of prior glecaprevir-pibrentasvir virological failure (8 or 12-week duration prior therapy), with very high efficacy of 96% (22/23) and good tolerability (Wyles D. et al.
ILC 2018). A non-ribavirin containing regimen would be expected to have further enhanced tolerability.
Eligibility criteria
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. See if you qualify.
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Eligibility
Age eligible for study : 18 and older
Healthy volunteers accepted : No
Gender eligible for study: All
Things to know
Study dates
Study start: 2020-02-11
Primary completion: 2026-02-01
Study completion finish: 2026-02-01
Study type
TREATMENT
Phase
PHASE4
Trial ID
NCT03855917
Intervention or treatment
DRUG: Sofosbuvir 400mg [Sovaldi]
DRUG: Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg)
Conditions
- • Hepatitis C
Find a site
Closest Location:
St Vincent's Hospital
Research sites nearby
Select from list below to view details:
St Vincent's Hospital
Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia
Blacktown Mt Druitt Hospital
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Royal Adelaide Hospital
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Study Plan
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
How is the study designed?
Participant Group/Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
---|---|
EXPERIMENTAL: Sof plus G/P
| DRUG: Sofosbuvir 400mg [Sovaldi]
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary outcome
Primary Outcome Measure | Primary Outcome Description | Primary Outcome Time Frame |
---|---|---|
SVR12 | To evaluate the proportion achieving a sustained virological response at 12 weeks post treatment (SVR12) with sofosbuvir (400 mg) plus glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg) for four weeks. | 16 weeks |
Secondary outcome
Secondary Outcome Measure | Secondary Outcome Description | Secondary Outcome Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Virological relapse | To evaluate virological relapse following 4 weeks sofosbuvir (400 mg) plus glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg) in HCV treatment-naïve chronic HCV patients with early liver disease (F0-2). | 16 weeks |
Relapse characteristics | In patients with virological relapse, to evaluate the time course of relapse and emergence of treatment-associated resistance substitutions. | 32 weeks |
Re-treatment SVR | To evaluate SVR following re-treatment of virological relapse with 12 weeks glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (300mg/120mg). | 32 weeks |
Adherence | To evaluate the proportion adherent to treatment and study visits. | 32 weeks |
Cost-effectiveness | To evaluate cost-effectiveness of a shortened duration with re-treatment of relapse strategy, against a standard duration (8-week, historical data). | 32 weeks |
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