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Sustained virologic response rates with telaprevir-based therapy in treatment-naive patients evaluated by race or ethnicity.

Authors :
Flamm SL
Muir AJ
Fried MW
Reddy KR
Nelson DR
Bzowej NH
Sullivan JC
Bengtsson L
DeMasi R
Wright CI
Kieffer TL
George S
Adda N
Dusheiko GM
Source :
Journal of clinical gastroenterology [J Clin Gastroenterol] 2015 Apr; Vol. 49 (4), pp. 336-44.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: The phase 3 studies of telaprevir (T) in combination with peginterferon α-2a and ribavirin (PR) in treatment-naive genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C virus-infected patients (ADVANCE/ILLUMINATE) were not designed a priori to assess the effect of race and ethnicity on treatment response. However, these factors are important given the lower sustained virologic response (SVR) rates observed in black and Hispanic/Latino patients treated with PR.<br />Goals: This retrospective pooled analysis evaluated the effect of race or ethnicity on treatment-naive patient response to telaprevir-based therapy and assessed resistant variant profiles.<br />Materials and Methods: This analysis comprised patients enrolled in ADVANCE (N=363) and ILLUMINATE (N=540) who received 12 weeks of telaprevir in combination with PR followed by 12 or 36 weeks of PR alone and patients in ADVANCE (N=361) who received 48 weeks of PR alone. Race and ethnicity were self-reported and not mutually exclusive.<br />Results: Higher SVR rates were observed with telaprevir-based therapy compared with PR in blacks [n=99 (62%) vs. n=28 (29%), respectively] and in Hispanics/Latinos [n=89 (72%) vs. n=38 (39%)]. The SVR was lower in telaprevir-treated blacks [n=99 (62%)] compared with nonblacks [n=791 (78%)] and in Hispanic/Latinos compared with non-Hispanics/Latinos [n=89 (72%) vs. n=801 (76%)]. Low discontinuation rates due to adverse events, including rash and anemia, were observed across subgroups. Resistance profiles were similar among the subgroups.<br />Conclusions: Treatment-naive black and Hispanic/Latino patients with genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C virus infection may benefit from telaprevir-based therapy, an important finding given the lower SVR rates observed in these patients when they are treated with PR alone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1539-2031
Volume :
49
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of clinical gastroenterology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24828357
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/MCG.0000000000000150