HCV
Polymerase Inhibitor VX-222 Demonstrates Good Safety and Antiviral
Activity in Treatment-naive Genotype 1 Hepatitis C Patients
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SUMMARY:
The experimental hepatitis C virus (HCV) polymerase
inhibitor VX-222, being developed by Vertex, was generally
well-tolerated and exhibited good antiviral activity
over 3 days across a range of doses in treatment-naive
genotype 1 patients, according to a Phase 1b study presented
last week at the 45th Annual Meeting of the European
Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL
2010) in Vienna. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
While the protease inhibitors telaprevir
and boceprevir
are the directly-targeted anti-HCV agents furthest along in the
development pipeline, HCV polymerase -- an enzyme responsible
for copying viral genetic material -- is also a promising target.
VX-222 is a novel non-nucleoside HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitor
with potent in vitro activity.
Maribel Rodriguez-Torres and colleagues conducted a Phase 1b/2a
trial to evaluate the short-term antiviral activity, safety, tolerability,
and pharmacokinetics of VX-222.
This international multicenter dose-ascending study included 32
previously untreated patients with chronic genotype 1 HCV infection
(75% with genotype 1a, the rest with 1b). Most (about 80%) were
men, a similar proportion were white, and the mean age was about
50 years.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive VX-222 at doses
of 250 mg twice-daily, 500 mg twice-daily, 750 mg twice-daily,
or 1500 mg once-daily, or else placebo, for 3 days. At the end
of the 3-day period, they were offered the opportunity to receive
standard therapy using pegylated
interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys) plus ribavirin for up to 48 weeks.
Results
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HCV
viral load decreases were apparent within 1 day after the
first dose in all VX-222 dose arms. |
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Between
baseline and the end of the 3-day treatment period, HCV RNA
viral load decreased by at least 3 log IU/mL in all VX-222
arms: |
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250
mg twice-daily: -3.1 log10 IU/mL; |
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500
mg twice-daily: -3.4 log10 IU/mL; |
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750
mg twice-daily: -3.2 log10 IU/mL; |
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1500
mg once-daily: -3.4 log10 IU/mL; |
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Placebo:
no notable decline. |
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VX-222
demonstrated similar good antiviral efficacy against both
genotypes 1a and 1b. |
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VX-222
was generally safe and well tolerated. |
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No
serious adverse events, significantly laboratory abnormalities,
or electrocardiogram changes were observed. |
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No
participants discontinued early due to side effects. |
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The
most common side effects -- typically mild to moderate --
were diarrhea, nausea, headache, and fever. |
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Pharmacokinetic
analysis indicated that VX-222 exposure increased in a dose-proportional
manner. |
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The
drug's half-life in the body was 4-6 hours. |
"VX-222
was well tolerated and a mean HCV RNA decline of > 3 log10
at day 4 was observed in each cohort," the investigators
concluded. "These results support further evaluation of VX-222
in combination with peginterferon and ribavirin in the treatment
of HCV."
Vertex is now starting
a Phase 2 trial to test VX-222 in combination with its lead
HCV protease inhibitor, telaprevir, both as an all-oral regimen
and in combination with pegylated interferon/ribavirin.
"In
this Phase 1b clinical trial, treatment with VX-222 for three
days resulted in a reduction in viral load across all the dose
groups studied," Dr. Rodriguez-Torres, MD, said in a press
released issued by Vertex. "I am pleased that additional
development efforts for VX-222 are advancing, including the first
trial to evaluate a two-drug regimen of VX-222 dosed in combination
with the HCV protease inhibitor telaprevir."
Fundacion de Investigacion de Diego, Santurce, Puerto Rico;
Alamo Medical Research, San Antonio, TX; University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; University of Manitoba, Winnipeg,
MB, Canada; GI Specialists of Georgia, Marietta, GA; The Liver
Institute at Methodist Dallas, Dallas, TX; ACLIRES, Buenos Aires,
Argentina; University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada; Hospital
Universitario Austral, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Vertex Pharmaceuticals
Incorporated, Cambridge, MA; ViroChem Pharma Inc., Laval, QC,
Canada; Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
4/20/10
Reference
M
Rodriguez-Torres, E Lawitz, B Conway, and others. Safety and antiviral
activity of the HCV non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor VX-222
in treatment-naive genotype 1 HCV-infected patients. 45th Annual
Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
(EASL 2010). Vienna, Austria. April 14-18, 2010. Abstract
137.
Other
Source
Vertex
Pharmaceuticals. Hepatitis
C Virus Polymerase Inhibitor VX-222 Reduced Viral Levels Over
Three Days in Phase 1b Trial. Press release. April 15, 2010.