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Novel antiviral for chronic hepatitis C backed for approval

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Drug is huge advance in HCV

An FDA Advisory Committee voted unanimously to endorse FDA approval of sofosbuvir for treatment of chronic HCV. Sofosbuvir is a first-in-class molecule. Significantly increased sustained virologic response (SVR) rates, excellent tolerability, and shortened treatment courses have been observed in clinical trials.

For genotypes 2 and 3, the combination of sofosbuvir and ribavirin represents the first all-oral regimen for treatment of chronic HCV, a truly seminal event in the therapy of this life threatening disease. For the genotype 1 patients, far more common in the United States than genotypes 2 or 3, a course of pegylated interferon-alfa, ribavirin, and sofosbuvir was administered for 12 weeks. SVR rates of 89% were noted in treatment naive patients, significantly higher than any other regimen for treatment-naive genotype 1 patients. Genotype 4 patients (treatment naive) had a 96% SVR rate with this combination.

Fortuitously, there were no significant safety signals identified for sofosbuvir in more than 1,000 patients studied.

Although the addition of sofosbuvir to the armamentarium for treatment of chronic HCV represents a momentous advance, the evolution of therapy for HCV is not over. For genotype 1, this regimen will serve as a placeholder until highly effective interferon free regimens are available, likely within the next year or so. For genotype 3, regimens that offer higher SVR rates with shorter courses will be sought. Studies with interferon-free regimens are underway to provide data on special populations such as HIV-HCV coinfected and pre-and post-liver transplantation populations that represent significant unmet medical needs.

FDA approval of sofosbuvir is a remarkable achievement and is the first step toward the availability of short courses of highly effective and well-tolerated interferon-free medical regimens for patients with chronic HCV. Daunting challenges remain. The new CDC screening recommendations to identify patients with HCV, more than half of whom remain undiagnosed, must be implemented. Strategies must be devised to enlarge the pool of health care providers who treat patients with HCV by providing innovative educational initiatives. Approaches to ensure access for afflicted patients to receive the new expensive regimens will also be paramount.

Dr. Steven Flamm is chief of transplantation hepatology, professor of medicine and surgery, at Northwestern University, Chicago. He is a speaker for Vertex and Gilead; consultant for and has received research support from AbbVie, Vertex, Merck, Janssen, Gilead, and BMS; and he has received research support from Boerhinger-Ingelheim.


 

AT THE FDA ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING

The regimens of sofosbuvir combined with ribavirin or PR in the study were well tolerated in the different groups of patients, including those waiting for liver transplant, and there were no clusters or trends of any specific types of adverse events identified. An evaluation of cardiac disorders in treated patients found no obvious safety issues related to cardiac toxicity, according to the FDA. A drug in development in the same class was associated with cardiac toxicity.

The FDA is expected to make a decision by Dec. 8. Sofosbuvir also is under review in the European Union, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Switzerland and Turkey, according to Gilead.

The FDA usually follows the recommendations of its advisory panels. Members of FDA panels have usually been cleared of conflicts related to the product under review; occasionally, a panelist is given a waiver, but not at this meeting.

emechcatie@frontlinemedcom.com

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