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EASL 2015: Liver Function and Survival Improve after Hepatitis C Treatment with Viekira Pak

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Hepatitis C patients treated with AbbVie's Viekira Pak "3D" regimen saw improvements in liver function biomarkers, had better quality of life, and had increased survival compared to untreated people, according to mathematical model studies presented at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) 50th International Liver Congress last month in Vienna. One model showed that treatment can be cost-effective at all stages of liver disease.

Over years or decades, chronic HCV infection can lead to advanced liver disease including cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, a type of liver cancer), and decompensated liver failure. The old interferon-based therapy was generally reserved for patients with progressive liver disease due to its poor tolerability. Many experts believe everyone with hepatitis C can benefit from treatment with the new well-tolerated and highly effective interferon-free therapies, but due to their high cost many payers still want to limit treatment to patients with advanced disease.

Short-term Liver Biomarkers

Heiner Wedemeyer of Medizinische Hochschule in Hannover, Germany, and colleagues looked at short-term markers of liver disease progression among participants in the AbbVie TURQUOISE-II trial, which evaluated the 3D regimen for HCV genotype 1 patients with compensated cirrhosis (abstract P0808).

The 3D regimen consists of the HCV protease inhibitor paritaprevir with a ritonavir booster plus the NS5A inhibitor ombitasvir in a once-daily coformulation, taken with the NS5B polymerase inhibitor dasabuvir twice-daily. The full regimen is sold as Viekira Pak in the U.S. In Europe the coformulation (Viekirax) and dasabuvir (Exviera) are sold separately.

In this open-label trial, 380 participants were randomly assigned to receive the 3D regimen plus ribavirin for 12 or 24 weeks. More than two-thirds had harder to treat HCV subtype 1a and nearly 60% were treatment-experienced.

The researchers evaluated various non-invasive markers of liver function and fibrosis at 48 weeks after completion of treatment, including non-invasive estimates of liver fibrosis (APRI, FIB-4, Forns Index, and FibroTest); hepatic synthetic function, or the liver's ability to produce proteins (albumin level, international normalized ratio [INR], platelet count); and alpha fetoprotein (AFP), a biomarker associated with liver cancer.

SVR12 rates were 92% for patients treated for 12 weeks and 97% for those treated for 24 weeks. Overall, successful HCV clearance led to improvements in liver fibrosis, synthetic function, and AFP levels. For many of these markers, continued improvement was seen through post-treatment week 48.

All fibrosis indices fell (indicating less fibrosis), starting as soon as treatment week 1, primarily due to decreases in liver enzyme levels used to calculate these scores. Albumin levels rose, platelet counts and INR showed improved blood clotting ability, and AFP levels fell dramatically.

"Greater improvements in liver function tests were observed in patients with more advanced disease at baseline," the researchers noted.

Liver Morbidity and Mortality

A series of mathematical models by Scott Johnson from Medicus Economics and colleagues from AbbVie's Global Health Economics and Outcomes Research looked at longer-term outcomes among patients treated with the 3D regimen with or without ribavirin.

As described in the first poster (abstract P0850), the researchers developed a Markov health state model to estimate lifetime outcomes -- including decompensated cirrhosis, liver cancer, liver transplantation, and liver-related death -- for treated patients in AbbVie Phase 3 clinical trials compared to people who received no treatment.

The patient population included both previously untreated patients and prior non-responders. A majority had absent to moderate fibrosis at baseline (Metavir F0-F2), but nearly 10% had advanced fibrosis (F3), and 12% of treatment-naive and 31% of treatment-experienced patients had cirrhosis (F4). Overall SVR12 rates were 97% for people with F0-F3 fibrosis, 95% for treatment naive patients with cirrhosis, and 97% for treatment-experienced cirrhotic patients.

The model predicted that patients treated at all baseline fibrosis stages would have reduced rates of compensated cirrhosis (falling from 78% to 30%), decompensated cirrhosis (from 30% to 5%), HCC (from 17% to 7%), liver transplantation (from 7% to 2%), and liver-related death (from 37% to 9%) compared to people who remained untreated.

In most cases, risk reductions ranged from 5- to 7-fold lower. However, there was no change in the likelihood of HCC or liver transplantation for people treated when they already had cirrhosis, confirming that people who wait too long continue to have excess risk despite viral clearance.

"The percent of genotype 1 HCV patients developing liver morbidity (compensated cirrhosis, decompensated cirrhosis, HCC, liver transplantation, and liver death) was significantly reduced with 3D +/- ribavirin treatment compared to HCV patients who were not treated," the researchers concluded. "Morbidity rates were higher when treatment was deferred to patients with greater baseline disease severity."

Cost and Cost-effectiveness

In another model, Johnson's team looked at quality of life and survival among patients in the same clinical trial population treated at different fibrosis stages, compared to the interferon-era strategy of "watchful waiting" for disease progression (abstract P0806).

Here, they developed a Markov disease utility state-transition model to estimate survival benefits over a lifetime horizon for treated and untreated patients from the perspective of a private U.S. payer, aiming to quantify and estimate a monetary value for life-years (LYs) and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained. They used a threshold of $100,000 per LY or QALY, a common value in health economics studies.

They found that lifetime survival benefits varied substantially according to the fibrosis stage at treatment initiation. The value of the survival benefit increased 6-fold, from $61,096 for patients treated at stage F0 to $372,130 for those treated at stage F4. The quality-adjusted value of these survival benefits increased nearly 3-fold, from $178,313 at stage F0 to $482,242 at stage F4.

"Treatment with 3D +/- ribavirin prolongs the survival of genotype 1 HCV patients and improves quality of life compared to watchful waiting," they concluded. "The survival costs of watchful waiting (measured as the differential value of survival with treatment relative to no treatment) are substantially greater at more advanced levels of liver fibrosis."

A third mathematical model aimed to determine the average annual lifetime post-treatment medical costs for patients treated with the 3D regimen at varying stages of liver disease, again using the same clinical trial population (abstract P0816).

A Markov model of the natural history of HCV was developed based on previous models. Monetary values were based on a systematic literature review of U.S. costs of hepatitis C management. All direct medical expenses were included in the model except for the cost of treatment (drugs, viral load and side effects monitoring, and management of adverse events).

Patients who started treatment before they developed fibrosis (stage F0) had an annual average medical cost of $297, which gradually increased for those treated at stage F1 ($416), stage F2 ($563), and stage F3 ($760). But the cost rose dramatically, to $3187, for people who were not treated until they developed cirrhosis -- more than 10-fold greater than the cost of treating at stage F0. Starting treatment at later fibrosis stages resulted in increased average lifetime cost, even as life years decreased.

"Our model suggests that genotype 1 HCV patients who are treated with 3D +/- ribavirin earlier in the disease process incur lower average annual lifetime medical costs compared to patients treated with 3D +/- ribavirin later in the disease process," they concluded. "Consistent with existing literature, annual medical costs were much higher for patients in stage F4 compared to earlier fibrosis stages."

Finally, Johnson's team developed a model to determine the cost-effectiveness of 3D treatment compared to no treatment at different fibrosis stages, using the same patient population (abstract P0815).

Unlike the previous model, this one also included the cost of the drugs and expenses related to adverse events. For drug prices they used $922 per day for the 3D regimen and $14 per day for ribavirin. Estimated adverse event costs ranged from $318 for skin rash to $1221 for anemia to $2414 for thrombocytopenia (low platelets).

Total costs came out to $82,783 for treatment plus $10,445 for other direct medical costs for people treated with the 3D regimen, compared to $42,636 in direct medical costs for untreated patients. The model showed that 3D with or without ribavirin was cost-effective compared to no treatment for patients at any fibrosis stage and with any treatment history, with an overall cost of $16,978 per QALY. Even when looking just at people who had not yet developed fibrosis (F0), treatment was cost-effective at $37,230 per QALY.

These findings support the growing consensus among medical providers that all people with chronic hepatitis C -- regardless of current disease stage -- should be eligible for treatment, and that early treatment can be cost-effective.

6/15/15

References

H Wedemeyer, T Berg, SL Flamm, et al. Improvement in Liver Function and Non-Invasive Estimates of Liver Fibrosis 48 Weeks after Treatment With Ombitasvir/Paritaprevir/r, Dasabuvir, and Ribavirin in HCV Genotype 1 Patients With Cirrhosis. 2015 International Liver Congress: 50th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Vienna, April 22-26, 2015. Abstract P0808.

SJ Johnson, H Parise, S Virabhak, et al. Percent of Subjects Experiencing Liver Morbidity Over a Lifetime Horizon with AbbVie 3D (ABT-450/Ritonavir/ Ombitasvir and Dasabuvir) Versus No treatment. 2015 International Liver Congress: 50th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Vienna, April 22-26, 2015. Abstract P0850.

SJ Johnson, H Parise, Y Sanchez-Gonzalez, et al. The Value of Survival Benefits from Treating Hepatitis C at Different Fibrosis Stages with All-Oral, Interferon-Free Therapy Relative to 'Watchful Waiting'. 2015 International Liver Congress: 50th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Vienna, April 22-26, 2015. Abstract P0806.

DA Misurski, SJ Johnson, JC Samp, et al. Reduction in Annual Medical Costs with Early Treatment of HCV Using AbbVie 3D (ABT-450/Ritonavir/ Ombitasvir and Dasabuvir) +/− Ribavirin in the United States. 2015 International Liver Congress: 50th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Vienna, April 22-26, 2015. Abstract P0816.

SJ Johnson, DA Misurski, TR Juday, et al. Cost-effectiveness of Treating Different Stages of Genotype 1 Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) with AbbVie 3D (ABT-450/Ritonavir/Ombitasvir and Dasabuvir) +/− Ribavirin Compared To No Treatment in the United States. 2015 International Liver Congress: 50th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Vienna, April 22-26, 2015. Abstract P0815.