| Long-term 
Entecavir (Baraclude) Reverses Liver Fibrosis in HBeAg Positive and HBeAg Negative 
Chronic Hepatitis B Patients By 
Liz Highleyman Several 
antiviral agents have potent activity against hepatitis 
B virus (HBV), but the ability of the virus to develop resistance mutations 
as it evolves is a potential challenge to long-term treatment success.
 Evidence 
continues to accumulate, however, showing that newer anti-HBV agents appear to 
have a higher barrier to resistance that the old standard of care, lamivudine 
(Epivir-HBV). Furthermore, combination therapy -- the mainstay of antiretroviral 
therapy for HIV -- can help slow or halt the emergence of resistance mutations.
 
 Several 
presentations this week at the 59th Annual Meeting of the American Association 
for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) in San Francisco looked at long-term data 
in chronic hepatitis B patients treated with entecavir 
(Baraclude).
 
 Study ETV-901 is an extended follow-up analysis of individuals 
with chronic HBV who were initially treated in earlier clinical trials. The multinational 
studies ETV-022 and ETV-027 previously found that 0.5 mg once-daily entecavir 
monotherapy decreased HBV viral load and improved liver histology more than lamivudine 
at 48 weeks in hepatitis B "e" antigen (HBeAg) positive and HBeAg negative 
patients, respectively. Participants could then opt to remain on entecavir (1.0 
mg daily) in ETV-901.
 
 Yun-Fan Liaw and colleagues presented histological 
results for a subset of 69 ETV-901 participants (47 HBeAg positive, 16 HBeAg negative) 
with at least 3 years of cumulative entecavir treatment and evaluable liver biopsy 
samples at baseline. Within this group, 56 also had evaluable biopsies at 48 weeks 
and 57 had long-term biopsies, with a median interval of 6 years (range 3-7 years).
 
 The 
long-term cohort was mostly male (82%), predominantly Asian (67%), and the mean 
age was 40 years. HBV genotypes were well distributed (ranging from 13% for genotype 
D to 33% for genotype C).
 
 The primary histology endpoints were proportion 
of patients with histological improvement (> 2 point decrease in Knodell 
necroinflammatory score and no worsening of Knodell fibrosis score) and improvement 
in Ishak fibrosis score (> 1 point decrease) compared with baseline. 
Secondary endpoints included proportions with HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, ALT 
normalization (< 1 x upper limit of normal), and those with a baseline 
histological activity index (HAI) score > 4 who achieved a score of 
< 3 during follow-up.
 Results  
 
     44 of 56 patients (73%) showed histological 
improvement at 48 weeks and 55 of 57 (96%) did so long-term.
  
     18 patients (32%) and 50 patients (88%), 
respectively, showed > 1 point improvement in Ishak fibrosis score.
 
  
     3 of 42 patients (7%) at 48 weeks and 
25 of 43 (58%) experienced > 2 points improvement in fibrosis score.
 
  
     The mean change from baseline is Ishak 
fibrosis score was -0.2 at 48 weeks and -1.53 in the long-term biopsies.
 
  
     All 10 patients with advanced fibrosis 
or cirrhosis (Ishak fibrosis score 4-6) at baseline experienced > 1 
point improvement.
 
  
     4 patients with cirrhosis at baseline 
(Ishak score ? 5) experienced improvement, with a median change of -3 (range -1 
to -4).
 
  
     The mean change in Knodell necroinflammatory 
scores was -3.39 at week 48 and -6.37 long-term.
 
  
     Among patients with a baseline Knodell 
HAI score > 4 at baseline, 12 of 54 patients (22%) had a score < 
3 at 48 weeks, and 41 of 55 (75%) did so long-term.
 
  
     40 of 57 patients (70%) had HBV DNA < 
300 copies/mL at 48 weeks, and 57 of 57 (100%) did so long-term.
 
  
     ALT normalization occurred in 38 of 57 
patients (67%) at 48 weeks, and 49 of 57 (86%) long-term.
 
  
     1 of 41 (2%) HBeAg positive patients experienced 
HBeAg loss at 48 weeks, rising to 22 of 40 (55%) long-term.
 
  
     1 of 41 (2%) experienced HBe seroconversion 
at 48 weeks, increasing to 13 of 40 (33%) long-term.
 
  
     The safety profile of entecavir was consistent 
with previous experience.
 
  
     25% experienced serious adverse events 
(AEs) and 3% experienced ALT flares while on treatment, but none discontinued 
due to AEs.
 
 Based 
on these findings, the investigators concluded, "Long-term treatment with 
entecavir in a cohort of nucleoside-naive chronic hepatitis B patients treated 
for a median of 6 years resulted in profound and durable virologic suppression, 
histologic improvement, and normalization of liver histology, with regression 
of fibrosis/cirrhosis.  "These 
data suggest that long-term treatment with Baraclude has the potential to stop 
liver damage and may even improve liver fibrosis caused by chronic hepatitis B 
infection," said Dr. Liaw in a press release issued by Bristol-Myers Squibb. 
"The ability to provide effective long-term treatment with a potent antiviral 
with minimal resistance represents a positive step forward."
 Chang 
Gung Memorial Hospital, Chang Gung University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan; 
National Cheng Kung University Medical College, Tainan, Taiwan; Changhua Christian 
Hospital, Changhua, Taiwan; University Of Miami Hospital & Clinics, Miami, 
FL; Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea; Queen Mary's Hospital, 
University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China; Hadassah Medical Center, Jerusalem, 
Israel; University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Klinika Chorob Zakaznych 
AM, Bydgoszcz, Poland; Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, WA; Research 
& Development, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, CT and Princeton, NJ.
 
 Entecavir 
Discontinuation
 In 
another ETV-901 analysis, Daniel Shouval and colleagues looked at 3-year outcomes 
in HBeAg negative patients who re-initiated entecavir after discontinuing therapy. 
In ETV-207, participants who met protocol-defined response endpoints were taken 
off therapy after 52 weeks. Those who relapsed within 6 months could re-enroll 
in ETV-901.  The 
re-treatment cohort included 99 patients who enrolled in ETV-901 with a treatment 
gap of at least 60 days between studies and were re-treated with 1 mg daily entecavir; 
76 and 66 patients, respectively, were included in 2-year and 3-year analyses. Results  
 
     After 2 years of entecavir re-treatment, 
91% of patients had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL and 95% did so after 3 years.
  
     79% experienced ALT normalization at 2 
years and 86% did so at 3 years.
 
  
     Here, too, safety data was consistent 
with previous experience.
 In 
conclusion the researchers stated, "ETV-027 demonstrated that discontinuation 
of effective antiviral therapy in HBeAg negative patients after 52 weeks of treatment 
results in rebound of viremia and increases in ALT."
 Liver Unit, 
Hadassaha Medical Organization, Jerusalem, Israel; Queen Mary Hospital, University 
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China; National Cheng Kung University Medical College, 
Tainan, Taiwan; Hospital Italiano, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Changhua Christian 
Hospital, Changhua, Taiwan; Klinika Chorob Zakaznych AM, Bydgoszcz, Poland; Monash 
University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI; 
Research & Development, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Wallingford, CT.
 
 11/04/08
 
 References
 
 Y 
Liaw, T Chang, S Wu, and others. Long-term entecavir therapy results in reversal 
of fibrosis/cirrhosis and continued histologic improvement in patients with HBeAg(+) 
and (-) chronic hepatitis B: Results from studies ETV-022, -027 and -901. 59th 
Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD 
2008). San Francisco. October 31-November 4, 2008. Abstract 894.
 
 D Shouval, 
C Lai, T Chang, and others. Three years of entecavir (ETV) re-treatment of HBeAg(-) 
ETV patients who previously discontinued ETV treatment: Results from study ETV-901. 
59th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases 
(AASLD 2008). San Francisco. October 31-November 4, 2008. Abstract 927.
 
 Other 
source
 Bristol-Myers Squibb. New Data Suggest Long-Term Treatment with 
BARACLUDE (entecavir) May Reduce Liver Damage Caused by Chronic Hepatitis B. Press 
release. November 2, 2008.
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