Pegylated
Interferon Lambda for Hepatitis C Produces Good Response with Minimal
Blood Toxicity
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
SUMMARY:
Pegylated interferon lambda and pegyalted interferon alfa-2a
demonstrated similar activity against hepatitis C virus (HCV)
for genotype 2 or 3 patients at week 12, and somewhat better
early response rates at higher doses in people with genotypes
1 or 4, according to a study presented at the recent American
Association for the Study of Liver Diseases "Liver Meeting"
(AASLD 2010) in Boston. Furthermore,
interferon lambda was better tolerated overall, with fewer
cases of anemia and less neutrophil loss. |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
By
Liz Highleyman
Interferon
lambda (also known as interleukin 29, or IL-29) is a cytokine produced
by certain immune system cells in response to viral infection. It uses
a different signalling pathway that type I interferons such as interferon
alfa -- the standard treatment for hepatitis
C. Because interferon lambda uses a receptor that is present on
fewer types of cells in the body, it is expected to have better tolerability
and cause fewer side effects.
Andrew Muir
from Duke University and colleagues conducted a Phase 2 dose-ranging
study comparing pegylated
interferon lambda versus pegylated
interferon alfa as part of combination therapy.
The study
included 55 previously untreated chronic hepatitis C patients. They
were randomly assigned to receive pegylated interferon lambda at doses
of 80, 120, 180, or 240 mcg, or else 180 mcg pegylated interferon alfa-2a
(Pegasys), both in combination with ribavirin. Participants initially
received a single dose to assess pharmacokinetic parameters, and then
after 2 weeks started weekly dosing that continued for 24 weeks for
those with HCV genotypes 2 or 3, or 48 weeks for those with hard-to-treat
genotypes 1 or 4.
The investigators
analyzed safety data through week 12 or the last study visit (for patients
who had not yet reached that point) or discontinuation of treatment.
Week 12 efficacy data for HCV genotype 2 or 3 patients were reported
in the study abstract, while those with genotypes 1 or 4 had not yet
reached this time point.
The researchers
also looked at the effect of rs12897986 polymorphisms, or genetic variations,
in the human IL28B gene, which encodes a form of interferon lambda.
People with the C/C gene pattern have been shown
to respond better to interferon alfa, those with the T/T pattern
respond poorly, and those with C/T fall in between. Here, the distribution
(among 48 patients tested) was 15 with C/C and 33 with C/T or T/T (considered
as a single group).
Results
 |
In an intent-to-treat analysis of genotype 2 and 3 patients, virological
response rates were similar in the 3 highest interferon lambda dose
groups and the interferon alfa arm: |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 80 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 40%; |
- |
Week
4: 60%; |
- |
Week
12: 80%. |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 120 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 75%; |
- |
Week
4: 100%; |
- |
Week
12: 100%. |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 180 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 60%; |
- |
Week
4: 80%; |
- |
Week
12: 80%. |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 240 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 75%; |
- |
Week
4: 100%; |
- |
Week
12: 100%. |
|
 |
Interferon
alfa 180 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 80%; |
- |
Week
4: 100%; |
- |
Week
12: 100%. |
|
|
 |
In an analysis of genotype 1 and 4 patients (who had not been treated
as long at the time of the report), early response appeared slightly
better in the higher interferon lambda dose groups: |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 80 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 0%; |
- |
Week
4: 0%; |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 120 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 29%; |
- |
Week
4: 43%; |
|
 |
Interferon lambda 180 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 33%; |
- |
Week
4: 33%; |
|
 |
Interferon
lambda 240 mcg: |
- |
Week
2: 29%; |
- |
Week
4: 43%; |
|
 |
Interferon
alfa 180 mcg: |
|
- |
Week
2: 20%; |
- |
Week
4: 40%; |
|
|
 |
Overall,
white patients had higher response rates than blacks (only 1 black
participant achieved viral suppression at weeks 2 and 4).
|
 |
Looking
at the 3 highest interferon lambda dose arms combined, the virological
response rates for genotype 1 or 4 patients with the C/C gene pattern
was 71% at both week 2 and week 4. |
 |
For
genotype 1 or 4 patients with the C/T or T/T patterns, the corresponding
response rates were 8% at week 2, rising to 25% by week 4. |
 |
11
participants discontinued therapy ahead of schedule, 4 of them due
to adverse events (1 in the interferon lambda and 1 in the interferon
alfa arms). |
 |
33%
of patients in the interferon lambda arm experienced clinical adverse
events of grade 2 (moderate) or higher, compared with 50% of those
taking interferon alfa. |
 |
The
frequency of grade 2 anemia (hemoglobin ? 10 g/dL) was 10-fold lower
in the interferon lambda arm than in the interferon alfa -- 2% vs
20%, respectively. |
 |
Interferon
lambda recipients were less likely to require ribavirin dose reduction
due to anemia. |
 |
The
median decline in neutrophils (immune white blood cells that protect
against infections) was 0.86 x 109/L for interferon lambda recipients
versus 2.4 x 109/L in the interferon alfa arm. |
 |
Both
arms experience ALT/AST liver enzyme increases (20% vs 30% of participants,
respectively, in the interferon lambda and interferon alfa arms). |
 |
3
patients receiving interferon lambda (7%) reduced doses due to ALT/AST
elevation, while 1 interferon alfa recipient did so due to depression. |
 |
Among
interferon lambda recipients, adverse events did not vary according
to dose. |
Based on
these findings, the researchers concluded, "[Pegyalted interferon
lambda] is associated with rapid viral decline and is well-tolerated
at doses up to 240 mcg, with less hematologic toxicity compared to [pegyalted
interferon alfa-2a]."
Response
was influenced by race, HCV genotype, and patient gene pattern, they
continued. "[Pegyalted interferon lambda] shows promise across
a broad range of doses and viral genotypes, and in difficult to treat
host genotypes."
Investigator
affiliations: Duke University, Durham, NC; Alamo Medical Research, San
Antonio, TX; The Liver Institute, Dallas, TX; University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, UT; Liver and Intestinal Research Centre, Vancouver, BC,
Canada; University of Colorado, Aurora, CO; New York Hospital, New York,
NY; Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, CT; ZymoGenetics, Inc., Seattle,
WA; Fundacion de Investigacion de Diego, Santurce, Puerto Rico.
12/10/10
Reference
AJ Muir, E Lawitz, RH Ghalib, and others. Pegylated Interferon Lambda
(PEG-IFN-?) Phase 2 Dose-Ranging, Active-Controlled Study in Combination
with Ribavirin (RBV) for Treatment-Naive HCV Patients (Genotypes 1,
2, 3 or 4): Safety, Viral Response, and Impact of IL-28B Host Genotype.
61st Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver
Diseases (AASLD 2010). Boston, October 29-November 2, 2010. Abstract
821.
Other
Source
Bristol-Myers
Squibb. ZymoGenetics and Bristol-Myers Squibb to Present PEG-Interferon
Lambda Phase 2a Interim Clinical Trial Results at AASLD 2010. Press
release. October 1, 2010.