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Efficacy and Safety of Bepirovirsen in Chronic Hepatitis B Infection

Authors :
Man-Fung, Yuen
Seng-Gee, Lim
Robert, Plesniak
Keiji, Tsuji
Harry L A, Janssen
Cristina, Pojoga
Adrian, Gadano
Corneliu P, Popescu
Tatyana, Stepanova
Tarik, Asselah
Gheorghe, Diaconescu
Hyung Joon, Yim
Jeong, Heo
Ewa, Janczewska
Alexander, Wong
Nevin, Idriz
Michio, Imamura
Giuliano, Rizzardini
Koichi, Takaguchi
Pietro, Andreone
Manuela, Arbune
Jinlin, Hou
Sung Jae, Park
Andrei, Vata
Jennifer, Cremer
Robert, Elston
Tamara, Lukić
Geoff, Quinn
Lauren, Maynard
Stuart, Kendrick
Helene, Plein
Fiona, Campbell
Melanie, Paff
Dickens, Theodore
Norah, Terrault
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Source :
New England Journal of Medicine, 387(21), 1957-1968. Massachussetts Medical Society
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Bepirovirsen is an antisense oligonucleotide that targets all hepatitis B virus (HBV) messenger RNAs and acts to decrease levels of viral proteins. Methods We conducted a phase 2b, randomized, investigator-unblinded trial involving participants with chronic HBV infection who were receiving or not receiving nucleoside or nucleotide analogue (NA) therapy. Participants were randomly assigned (in a 3:3:3:1 ratio) to receive weekly subcutaneous injections of bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 24 weeks (group 1), bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks then 150 mg for 12 weeks (group 2), bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks then placebo for 12 weeks (group 3), or placebo for 12 weeks then bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks (group 4). Groups 1, 2, and 3 received loading doses of bepirovirsen. The composite primary outcome was a hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) level below the limit of detection and an HBV DNA level below the limit of quantification maintained for 24 weeks after the planned end of bepirovirsen treatment, without newly initiated antiviral medication. Results The intention-to-treat population comprised 457 participants (227 receiving NA therapy and 230 not receiving NA therapy). Among those receiving NA therapy, a primary-outcome event occurred in 6 participants (9%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 31) in group 1, in 6 (9%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 43) in group 2, in 2 (3%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 16) in group 3, and 0 (0%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 8) in group 4. Among participants not receiving NA therapy, a primary-outcome event occurred in 7 participants (10%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 38), 4 (6%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 25), 1 (1%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 6), and 0 (0%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 8), respectively. During weeks 1 through 12, adverse events, including injection-site reactions, pyrexia, fatigue, and increased alanine aminotransferase levels, were more common with bepirovirsen (groups 1, 2, and 3) than with placebo (group 4). Conclusions In this phase 2b trial, bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg per week for 24 weeks resulted in sustained HBsAg and HBV DNA loss in 9 to 10% of participants with chronic HBV infection. Larger and longer trials are required to assess the efficacy and safety of bepirovirsen. (Funded by GSK; B-Clear ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04449029.)

Details

ISSN :
15334406, 04449029, and 00284793
Volume :
387
Issue :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....36ea42bdd6bb1b7917fda03fc5cc928f