We have now entered a new era in hepatitis C

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1 Will IL28B Polymorphism Remain Relevant in the Era of Direct-Acting Antiviral Agents for Hepatitis C Virus? Alexander J. Thompson 1,2,3 and John G. McHutchison 4 See Editorial on Page 5 We have now entered a new era in hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapeutics. Direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies directly inhibit specific steps in the HCV viral life cycle, with targets including the HCV NS3 protease, the NS5B polymerase, and the NS5A phosphoprotein, as well as host cell proteins involved in HCV replication (e.g., cyclophilin inhibitors). All have potent antiviral effects in vitro. Unfortunately, monotherapy is associated with the rapid selection of resistant HCV variants and virological breakthrough. Therefore, the clinical efficacy of the firstgeneration DAAs will be reliant on combination with a pegylated interferon (pegifn) and ribavirin (RBV) backbone. The first agents are the NS3 inhibitors boceprevir (BOC) and telaprevir (TVR), both recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). 1,2 The relevance of IL28B polymorphism to DAA treatment regimens is not yet clear. The key questions for the field relate to IL28B genotype as a predictor of on-treatment virological response rates, overall sustained virological response (SVR) rates, the emergence of antiviral resistance, and necessary treatment duration in the context of first-generation triple therapy regimens, as well as future interferon-free regimens. Abbreviations: BOC, boceprevir; cevr, complete early virological response; DAA, direct-acting antiviral; ervr, extended rapid virological response; EVR, early virological response; HCV, hepatitis C virus; IL28B, interleukin-28b; pegifn, pegylated interferon; RBV, ribavirin; RGT, response-guided therapy; SVR, sustained virological response; TVR, telaprevir. From the 1 Gastroenterology Department, St. Vincent s Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; 2 Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; 3 Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; 4 Gilead Sciences, Inc, Foster City, CA. Received September 19, 2011; accepted March 5, Address reprint requests to: Alexander J Thompson, Gastroenterology Department, St. Vincent s Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. alexander.thompson@svhm.org.au; fax: þ Copyright VC 2012 by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com. DOI /hep Potential conflict of interest: A.J.T and J.G.M are coinventors of a patent related to the IL28B discovery. A.J.T has received research support from Merck, Roche and Gilead Sciences, has served as a consultant for Merck, Roche and Janssen-Cilag, and has served on speaker bureaus for Merck. J.G.M. is an employee of Gilead Sciences. Treatment-Naive Patients Boceprevir. BOC plus pegifn and RBV therapy increases rates of SVR compared to pegifn and RBV alone in both treatment-naive (the SPRINT-2 study 3 ) and pegifn-experienced patients (the RESPOND-2 study, 4 see below). The BOC treatment paradigm involves 4 weeks of lead-in phase pegifn and RBV, before an additional weeks of triple therapy with BOC plus pegifn and RBV (BOC/PR) according to the rate of on-treatment virological suppression (responseguided therapy, RGT). The primary clinical utility of the lead-in phase of PR is risk stratification according to IFN responsiveness. 3 ReductioninHCVRNA 1log 10 IU/ ml at the end of the lead-in phase predicts for a higher rate of viral clearance and lower rate of BOC resistance. Analysis of the SPRINT-2 data according to IL28B genotype (rs ) was recently presented. 5 In all, 653 of 1,048 (62%) patients were recalled and consented to genetic testing (Table 1). 5 BOC attenuated the association between IL28B genotype and treatment outcome, relative to the PR control arm. IL28B genotype remained an independent predictor of SVR, however (P < ). 5 Among C/C patients, the rates of SVR were high regardless of treatment arm (80%, 82%, and 78% for BOC/PR48, BOC/RGT, and PR control, Table 1). 5 Although BOC was not associated with an increased rate of SVR in C/C patients, 89% of C/C patients were HCV RNA undetectable at week 8 and eligible for short-duration therapy. This suggests that the major benefit of BOC in the C/C population might be to allow short treatment duration. BOC therapy was associated with a much greater increment in SVR in patients with the non-c/c IL28B genotypes, where BOC therapy lead to a 2-fold increase in SVR compared to control (Table 1). A lower percentage of the non-c/c patients (52%) had undetectable HCV RNA at week 8 of treatment and were eligible for short-duration therapy using the response-guided strategy. The clinical utility of the lead-in phase for identifying IFN responsiveness differed according to IL28B genotype. 97% of C/C patients in the SPRINT- 2/RESPOND-2 studies achieved a 1 log reduction in HCV RNA by week 4. The lead-in phase was more 373

2 374 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON HEPATOLOGY, July 2012 Table 1. IL28B Genotype Is Associated With Virological Outcome in Treatment-Naive Patients Who Receive Boceprevir (SPRINT-2). The Association Between IL28B Genotype and Treatment Response Is Attenuated in IFN-Experienced Patients (RESPOND-2). IL28B Genotype Is Associated With Virological Decline During the Lead-in Phase of pegifn Plus RBV Therapy. BOC/PR48 BOC/RGT PR SPRINT-2 IL28B Cohort N¼653/1048 (62%) N¼214 N¼222 N¼217 SVR n (%) Overall 152/214 (71%) 153/222 (65%) 93/217 (38%) C/C (30%) 44/55 (80%) 63/ 77 (82%) 50/64 (78%) C/T (51%) 82/115 (71% ) 67/103 (65%) 33/116 (28%) T/T (19%) 26/44 (59%) 23/42 (55%) 10/37 (27%) Week 8 undetectable HCV RNA, n (%)* C/C 118/132 (89%) - Non-C/C 158/304 (52%) - RESPOND-2 IL28B cohort N¼259/394 (66%) BOC/PR48 BOC/RGT PR N¼259 N¼106 N¼101 N¼52 SVR n (%) Overall 78/106 (74%) 66 /101 (65%) 16/52 (31%) C/C (24%) 17/22 (77%) 22/28 (79%) 6/13 (46%) C/T (61%) 48/66 (73%) 38/62 (61%) 5/29 (17%) T/T (15%) 13/18 (72%) 6/11 (55%) 5/10 (50%) Week 8 undetectable HCV RNA, n (%)* C/C 41/50 (82%) - Non-C/C 80/156 (51%) - Combined Analysis of SPRINT-2/RESPOND-2 Lead-in period - Week 4 HCV RNA reduction 1 log 10 IU/mL C/C 249/259 (97%) C/T 361/484 (75%) T/T 88/158 (56%) SVR rates for each treatment arm according to IL28B genotype (rs , a bi-allelic SNP with three possible genotypes C/C, previously associated with good IFN response; C/T and T/T, previously associated with poor IFN response 40 ). Treatment groups: i) BOC/PR48 (lead-in period of pegifn alfa-2b and RBV (PR) for 4 weeks before boceprevir (BOC) plus PR for 44 weeks; ii) BOC/RGT (lead-in period before BOC/PR for a further 24 weeks; those with a detectable HCV RNA level between weeks 8 and 24 then received placebo plus P/R for an additional 20 weeks [RGT ¼ response-guided therapy]); iii) PR (lead-in before PR for a further 44 weeks). *Decision point for short versus long treatment duration with RGT. useful for risk stratification in non-c/c: 68% of non- C/C patients in the BOC-treatment arms achieved a 1log 10 IU/mL reduction in HCV RNA at week 4. 5 The SVR rate in these patients was 75%-82%. 5 Among non-c/c patients with an HCV RNA reduction < 1 log 10 IU/mL the SVR rate was only 24%-44%. Data on the risk of selection of BOC-resistant variants according to IL28B genotype was not presented, but given the strong relationship between the selection of resistant variants and IFN responsiveness, 6 IL28B genotype can be assumed to predict antiviral resistance. Telaprevir. An analysis of the association between IL28B genotype and genotype 1 HCV treatment outcome in the TVR phase III registration study of treatment-naive patients (the ADVANCE study 7 ) has been performed. This was a retrospective analysis of IL28B genotype tested in deidentified leftover specimens, available for 454/1,088 (42%) participants. Only Caucasian patients were included in the analysis. Detailed clinical and demographic data, including quantitative serum HCV RNA measures and liver fibrosis stage, were not accessible, and formal statistical analysis was not performed. Despite these limitations, the data were informative. TVR-based therapy increased the SVR rate in the setting of all IL28B genotypes (Table 2). As for BOC, the major benefit of TVR-based therapy was in patients with the poor response IL28B genotypes, where SVR rates were more than double that of the control group. TVR-based therapy was also associated with a numerical increase in the SVR rates in the good response C/C patients. The addition of TVR therefore attenuated the association between IL28B genotype and pegifn treatment outcome, although patients with the good response C/C genotype still had higher rates of SVR in each treatment arm (Table 2). IL28B genotype was associated with higher rates of extended rapid virological response (ervr) (Table 2). ervr is used to identify patients

3 HEPATOLOGY, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2012 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON 375 Table 2. Data From ADVANCE. 7 IL28B Genotype Is Associated With Virological Response in Treatment-Naive Patients Who Receive Telaprevir Therapy. T12 PR24/48 T8 PR24/48 PR48 ADVANCE IL28B Cohort N ¼ 454/1088 (42%) N ¼ 140 N ¼ 153 N ¼ 161 SVR n (%) Overall 109/140 (78%) 100/153 (65%) 61/161 (38%) CC (33%) 45/50 (90%) 38/45 (84%) 35/55 (64%) CT (49%) 48/68 (71% ) 43/76 (57%) 20/80 (25%) TT (18%) 16/22 (73%) 19/32 (59%) 6/26 (23%) RVR/eRVR n (%) CC RVR 42/50 (84%) 32/45 (71%) 9/55 (16%) ervr 39/50 (78%) 29/45 (64%) 9/55 (16%) CT RVR 41/68 (60%) 47/76 (62%) 2/80 (2%) ervr 39/68 (57%) 39/76 (51%) 2/80 (2%) TT RVR 13/22 (59%) 16/32 (50%) 0/26 (0%) ervr 10/22 (45%) 16/32 (50%) 0/26 (0%) SVR rates for each treatment arm according to IL28B genotype (rs ) Treatment groups: i) T12 PR24/48 BOC (telaprevir for 12 weeks plus pegifn alfa-2b and RBV (PR) for 24 or 48 weeks total according to the achievement of an ervr); ii) T8 PR24/48 BOC (telaprevir for 8 weeks plus PR for 24 or 48 weeks total according to the achievement of an ervr); iii) PR48 (PR for 48 weeks). ervr ¼ extended rapid virological response (defined as an undetectable HCV RNA [<25 IU/mL] at weeks 4 and 12 of treatment). suitable for short-duration therapy (24 weeks), and the data therefore suggest that most C/C patients will be eligible, compared to only approximately half of patients with the poor response genotypes. As for BOC, the association between IL28B genotype and rapid on-treatment viral suppression, as well as SVR, suggests that IL28B genotype may be relevant to the emergence of TVR-resistant HCV variants. Resistant variants have been observed in most patients who failed to attain SVR in the TVR phase 3 studies. 8 As yet, no analysis of the association between IL28B genotype and the emergence of resistant variants has been presented. Other DAAs in Development. Data concerning the relevance of IL28B genotype to treatment outcomes with the next wave of DAAs are emerging, including NS3 protease inhibitors (TMC435 9,10 ), NS5A inhibitors (BMS ,12 ), NS5B polymerase inhibitors (nucleos(t)ide inhibitors : mericitabine ¼ RG ; GS ; nonnucleos(t)ide inhibitors: ANA ), and cyclophilin inhibitors (alisporivir 16 ), all used in combination with pegifn and RBV (available data summarized in Table 3). The more potent treatment regimens attenuate the association between IL28B and treatment response to a greater extent than BOC or TVR, although most studies have observed a small numerical difference in response rates. Again, the major benefit for most of the DAAs is in patients carrying the poor response IL28B genotypes. This is a rapidly moving field and many of these agents are now entering phase 3 development. The relevance of IL28B polymorphism to IFN-free treatment regimens remains unclear. The INFORM-1 study was the first study to explore combination therapy with two DAAs. Patients were treated with 2 weeks of the nucleoside analog mericitabine (RG7128) plus the NS3 protease inhibitor danoprevir (RG-7227). 17 In a recent analysis of on-treatment viral kinetics stratified by IL28B genotype, the slope of viral decline was steeper in patients with the good response IL28B genotype. 18 The difference in viral kinetics was not statistically significant in this small cohort, but the data suggested that IL28B may remain relevant even in the absence of IFN treatment, perhaps consistent with viral suppression leading to differential immune restoration according to IL28B genotype. This is biologically plausible given the recognized role for the NS3 protease in targeting intracellular IFN signaling pathways through cleavage of TRIF (TLR3) and IPS-1 (RIG- I) Interim data from the SOUND-C2 study 23 also suggested that IL28B genotype may remain relevant to IFN-free treatment regimens, while also pointing to critical roles for HCV subtype and RBV (Table 3). Patients were treated with the NS3 protease inhibitor BI and the NS5B nonnucleoside inhibitor BI with or without RBV. In patients receiving triple therapy, the rate of HCV RNA undetectability at week 12 was higher in HCV-1A patients who carried the good response IL28B genotype compared to the poor response genotypes (Table 3). In contrast, week 12 response was high in all HCV-1B patients. HCV-1A is emerging as a hard-to-cure genotype for IFN-free regimens, likely reflecting a lower barrier to NS3 protease inhibitor resistance, but also perhaps a different sensitivity of these variants to endogenous IFN signaling, compared to subtype HCV-1B. 11,24 This interesting issue will require further evaluation. Among patients who received RBV-free therapy, week 12 response was also higher in good-response IL28B patients, suggesting that the role of RBV may be particularly important for poor-response IL28B patients. Novel Immunomodulators. The relationship between IL28B genotype and novel immunomodulatory therapies is also being investigated. IL28B genotype was strongly associated with week 12 complete early virological response (cevr) in genotype 1/4 HCV patients treated with pegifn-c plus RBV in the EMERGE study. 25,26 In patients carrying the poor response IL28B genotypes, week 12 responses were higher with pegifn-c plus RBV than pegifn-a plus RBV. IL28B genotype was also associated with the antiviral

4 376 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON HEPATOLOGY, July 2012 Table 3. Summary of Recent Data Presenting the Relationship Between IL28B Genotype (Rs ) and Virological Responses for DAA Currently in Development for the Treatment of Genotype 1 HCV (All Data Presented in Abstract Form Only) Study Response Treatment Arm* C/C Non-C/C PILLAR 42 (naïve) SVR24 TMC435 75mg þ PR (n¼109) 84% 73% TMC mg þ PR (n¼107) 97% 78% PR (n¼46) 100% 50% SILEN-C1 43 (naïve) SVR24 BI mg þ PR (n¼70) 100% 71% PR (n¼40) 82% 41% SOUND-C2 23 (naïve) Cevr BI mg þbi mg TID þ RBV (HCV-1A, n ¼ 86) HCV-1A 88% 64% (HCV-1B, n ¼ 118) HCV-1B 92% 86% BI mg þbi mg BD þ RBV (HCV-1A, n ¼ 29) HCV-1A 86% 45% (HCV- 1B, n ¼ 47) HCV-1B 91% 89% BI mg þbi mg TID (HCV-1A, n ¼ 12) HCV-1A 100% 22% (HCV-1B, n ¼ 27) HCV-1B 100% 65% ATLAS 44 (naïve) SVR24 Danoprevir 300mg þ PR (n¼51) 81% 63% Danoprevir 600mg þ PR (n¼57) 95% 79% Danoprevir 900mg þ PR (n¼38) 85% 68% PR (n¼24) 88% 25% ESSENTIAL 16 (Naïve) SVR24 Alisporivir þ PR, 24 weeks (n¼72) 71% 33% Alisporivir þ PR, 48 weeks (n¼72) 100% 62% Alisporivir þ PR, RGT (n¼71) 100% 73% PR (n¼73) 73% 17% PROTON 45 (naïve) SVR12 PSI mg þ PR (n¼48) (SVR12 ¼ 88%) N/A >T/T ¼ 13/13 PSI mg þ PR (n¼47) (SVR12 ¼ 91%) N/A > PR (n¼26) N/A N/A JUMP-C 13 (Naïve) SVR12 Mericitabine þ PR (n¼33) 80% 72% PR (n¼85) N/A N/A 15 cevr ANA mg þ PR (n¼21) 100% 76% ANA mg þ PR (n¼30) 86% 65% PR (n¼24) 82% 46% AI (naïve) cevr BMS mg þ PR (n¼80) 73% C/T ¼ 44% T/T ¼ 47% BMS mg þ PR (n¼78) 68% C/T ¼ 49% T/T ¼ 44% PR (n¼10) 18% C/T ¼ 17% T/T (n¼0) 24 (null responder) SVR24 BMS þ BMS /2 8/8 11 (null responder) SVR24 BMS þ BMS /1 4/10 BMS þ BMS þ PR 1/1 9/9 Abbreviations: PR, peginterferon plus ribavirin; cevr, complete early virological response (undetectable HCV RNA at week 12 on-treatment). *The sample size refers to the number of patients per treatment arm who had IL28B genotyping performed. All patients were infected with HCV-1B. All seven patients who relapsed were infected with HCV-1A. efficacy and week 12 virological response to the TLR-9 ligand IMO-2125 in phase 2 development. 27 IL28B polymorphism may therefore be relevant to any immune modulator where the downstream signaling pathways converge on the intrahepatic IFN-stimulated gene (ISG) response GI-5005, a yeast-based immunotherapy in phase 2 development, is designed to stimulate NS3- and core-specific cytotoxic T-cell responses. 31 Used in combination with pegifn and RBV, GI-5005 was observed to increase SVR rate and augment HCV-specific T-cell responses, with the greatest incremental benefit observed in patients carrying the poor responder IL28B genotype, suggesting GI-5005 may differentially augment adaptive immune responses in the setting of the poor-response IL28B patients. 32,33 This will require prospective confirmation. IFN-Experienced Patient Populations Boceprevir. The RESPOND-2 study investigated the effectiveness of BOC triple therapy in patients with a history of pegifn and RBV therapy. 4 The study enrolled relapsers (undetectable HCV RNA at the end-of-treatment but no SVR), and partial-responders (week 12 reduction in HCV RNA > 2 log 10 IU/mL but persistently detectable HCV RNA on-treatment). Prior null responders, defined by a < 2 log 10

5 HEPATOLOGY, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2012 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON 377 Table 4. Data From REALIZE. 41 The Association Between IL28B Genotype and Treatment Response Is Attenuated and No Longer Clinically Relevant Once Patients Were Stratified According to Prior IFN Response. Overall Prior Relapsers Prior PR Prior Null Responders SVR n (%) Pooled TVR Arms N ¼ 422 PR Control N ¼ 105 Pooled TVR Arms N ¼ 209 PR Control N ¼ 52 Pooled TVR Arms N ¼ 79 PR Control N ¼ 20 Pooled TVR Arms N ¼ 134 PR Control C/C 60/76 (79%) 5/17 (29%) 51/58 (88%) 4/12 (33%) 5/8 (63%) 1/5 (20%) 4/10 (40%) 0 (NA) C/T 160/266 (60% ) 9/58 (16%) 99/117 (85%) 6/30 (20%) 33/57 (58%) 2/10 (20%) 27/92 (29%) 1/18 (6%) T/T 49/80 (61%) 4/30 (13%) 29/34 (85%) 3/10 (30%) 10/14 (71%) 0/5 (0%) 10/32 (31%) 1/15 (7%) SVR rates for each treatment arm according to IL28B genotype (rs ). IU/mL reduction in serum HCV RNA at week 12 of the past treatment course, were excluded. The poor response IL28B genotypes were more common than in the SPRINT-2-naive population (C/C 24%, C/T 61%, and T/T 15%). The rates of SVR in each treatment arm according to IL28B genotype are presented in Table 1. BOC/PR48 was associated with an increase in SVR across all IL28B genotypes. In a multivariate logistic regression model using stepwise selection, IL28B genotype was not independently associated with treatment outcome. However, as in the SPRINT-2 study, IL28B was associated with on-treatment virological decline. 82% of C/C patients had undetectable plasma HCVRNA levels at week 8 and were eligible for short-duration therapy (36 weeks), compared to 51% of non-cc patients. The clinical utility of IL28B genotyping for these treatment-experienced patients is therefore not to predict treatment outcome, but rather to predict the likelihood of short-duration therapy. IL28B genotype was strongly associated with virological response during the lead-in phase (odds ratio [OR] 4.5, , P ¼ 0.007). Telaprevir. The REALIZE study was a phase 3 study of the effectiveness of TVR-based triple therapy for treating pegifn treatment-experienced patients, including prior relapsers, partial responders, and nullresponders. 34 The study compared three treatment arms: T12PR48, 4 weeks of lead-in PR plus T12PR44, and PR48 control. There was no responseguided protocol. The IL28B genotype distribution was C/C 18%; C/T 61%, and T/T 21%, with this nonresponder cohort being enriched for the poor response IL28B genotypes. SVR rates were numerically higher in C/C patients in the overall cohort, although this difference did not reach statistical significance (Table 4). Prior treatment response was the strongest predictor of treatment outcome, and no difference in SVR rate was seen according to IL28B genotype when patients were considered on the basis of treatment history (Table 4). No data on the relationship between IL28B genotype and on-treatment viral decline was presented. The REALIZE study did not have a response-guided arm and therefore could not evaluate whether shorter duration TVR-based therapy might be possible according to IL28B genotype in IFN-experienced patients. Comment on IL28B Genotyping in Patients With a Well-Characterized IFN Treatment History. Once on-treatment responses are defined (e.g., quantitative HCV RNA reduction, week 4, week 8 viral clearance), the predictive power of IL28B for SVR is much less strong measurement of viral decline has captured the information predicted by IL28B genotype. In fact, intensive monitoring of on-treatment viral decline is more accurate for predicting outcome, as it will also capture the influence of other important predictors of IFN treatment response such as liver fibrosis stage, ethnicity, and the metabolic syndrome. 35 The clinical utility of IL28B genotyping for predicting response to DAA therapy is therefore limited in well-characterized patients who have previously failed pegifn-based therapy, as the IFN responsiveness of these patients has been defined by their treatment history. It may remain more relevant in the real world, where patients often have poorly documented treatment histories, particularly where adherence may have been limited, or the primary treatment regimen involved standard IFN or pegifn monotherapy. The most accurate measure of IFN responsiveness in this case would be a real-time assessment using a lead-in phase of pegifn and RBV. Genotype 2/3 HCV. IL28B genotype is less relevant to pegifn and RBV treatment of genotype 2/3 HCV, which are much more IFN-responsive. As yet there is no clear clinical utility for testing IL28B genotype prior to standard-of-care therapy. It may be relevant to non-rvr patients, as a trigger for 24 versus 48 weeks of treatment, but this requires prospective investigation. 36 Newer DAAs, including the nucleoside NS5B inhibitors, NS5A inhibitors, and the cyclophilin inhibitors appear to have cross-genotypic actions. In the phase 2 ELECTRON study 40 patients with chronic genotype 3 HCV infection were randomized to 12 weeks of treatment with the NS5B pyrimidine

6 378 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON HEPATOLOGY, July 2012 Fig. 1. Treatment paradigms for the use of the DAAs in the treatment-naive population may differ according to a patient s IL28B genotype, considering both efficacy and cost effectiveness. (A) In patients carrying the good response IL28B genotype, first- generation DAA therapy is associated with a small increment in SVR only, and the major benefit of triple therapy will be to shorten treatment duration. Access may therefore be restricted by cost in some regions. Strategies may include use only in patients who fail pegifn/ RBV therapy, or in non-rvr patients, identified by a lead-in period of pegifn and RBV (population IL28B genotype frequencies are approximate estimates based on multiple studies from the literature [first-line triple therapy may be most suitable for C/C patients who are cirrhotic]). (B) In patients carrying the poor response IL28B genotypes, TVR/BOC regimens offer a large increment in SVR; the lead-in stratifies patient for likelihood of SVR and the risk of selection of NS3 variants associated with resistance. Patients with poor IFN responsiveness should be counseled about the risk of resistance and treatment offered on an individual basis. (C) Hypothetical future strategies for the use of DAAs 6 IFN according to IL28B genotype. PR, peginterferon plus ribavirin; RBV, ribavirin; DAA, direct acting antiviral agent. nucleotide analog GS mg daily plus RBV, with or without the addition of variable duration pegifn therapy (4, 8, or 12 weeks). 37 All of the patients in the study achieved SVR12, including 10/10 in the IFN-free treatment arm. Such high response rates are seen in larger studies, IL28B genotype will not be clinically relevant.

7 HEPATOLOGY, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2012 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON 379 Future Questions How Will IL28B Genotyping Be Incorporated Into the BOC/TVR Treatment Paradigms in Treatment-Naive Patients? IL28B genotyping cannot be recommended as a routine test, but it provides useful clinical information. In C/C patients treated with TVR/ BOC, there is little increment in SVR compared to pegifn and RBV standard of care. Rather, the aim of triple therapy will be to shorten treatment duration to weeks (Fig. 1). Uptake will therefore depend on the willingness of providers to fund triple therapy in this group (see below), as well as clinician/patient preferences regarding the risk-benefit of weeks of triple therapy versus the known morbidity of pegifn/ RBV over 48 weeks. The benefit of the lead-in phase of pegifn and RBV therapy prior to BOC therapy in these IFN-responsive patients is not clear. The lead-in strategy does not have great clinical utility for C/C patients where it is being used to stratify patients according to a 1 log 10 IU/mL reduction in HCV RNA at 4 weeks this is almost universal in these C/C patients, raising the possibility that it could be dispensed with altogether. It may be more useful in the difficult-to-cure patients as above. Unfortunately, there is no prospective data that have investigated the efficacy of BOC-based therapy in C/C patients without a lead-in phase. In non- C/C patients, TVR/BOC-based therapy is associated with > 2-fold increases in SVR. 5,7 For these patients, the cost-effectiveness and risk-benefit of triple therapy will be more favorable (see below, Fig. 1). The lead-in strategy will be more useful for refining IFN responsiveness by identifying a 1 log response, stratifying for likelihood of SVR 5, and the risk of selection of resistant variants also. In addition, IL28B genotyping may be relevant to clinical decision-making where there is concern about the added toxicity of TVR/BOC, or where there is potential for problematic drug/drug interactions. In such a scenario, pegifn and RBV may be preferred if the patient carries the good response IL28B genotype. What Is the Most Cost-Effective Strategy for the Introduction of DAA-Based Therapy for Genotype 1 HCV?. This is an important question. The wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) of a 48-week course of pegifn and RBV in the US is approximately $US30,000. The current pricing schedule for BOC will be $US1,100 per week, translating to $US26,400 for 24 weeks, $US35,200 for 32 weeks, and $US48,400 for 44 weeks of treatment. TVR has a $US49,200 WAC price for 12 weeks. The cost for both BOC and TVR will be in addition to the cost of the pegifn and RBV backbone, meaning that for most patients the costs of treatment will more than double. IL28B genotyping has been proposed as a strategy for prioritizing treatment access (Fig. 1). 38 A recent analysis of strategies for using TVR in good response IL28B patients concluded that pegifn and RBV response-guided therapy, with TVR therapy reserved for patients who relapsed, was more cost-effective than universal TVR treatment. 38 Such analyses are particularly important for Asia, where the majority of the population carry the good response IL28B genotype, and the cost:benefit ratio for population-based DAA therapy will differ from the West. Should the Field Develop Different DAA Treatment Strategies According to IL28B Genotype? It may be possible to develop personalized DAA treatment strategies according to IL28B genotype. Looking forward, IL28B genotyping might be used to identify a group of patients for whom IFN should continue to be part of the treatment regimen (Fig. 1). This will be predicated on IFN-containing regimens offering one of the following benefits: higher SVR rates and/or lower rates of resistance, shorter treatment duration, or lower cost, than emerging IFN-free regimens. The majority of naive IL28B good responder patients treated with BOC or TVR will be candidates for short-duration therapy of weeks. More abbreviated durations may be possible. Viral kinetic modeling of TVR effectiveness has predicted that weeks of therapy should be sufficient to clear HCV in 95% of fully compliant patients. 39 Even shorter-duration therapy may be possible with more potent single/dual combination DAAs. Investigation of this approach is warranted and a number of short-duration studies are now under way ( In patients with the poor response IL28B genotypes, IFN has a weaker antiviral effect and is therefore less useful for preventing the emergence of resistant variants in combination DAA regimens. Combination therapy with potent DAAs targeting different steps in the viral lifecycle will be required to maximize efficacy and prevent resistance. For the immediate future pegifn and RBV backbone will remain necessary, but it is this group for whom future IFN-free regimens are most attractive (Fig. 1). Effective IFN-free regimens may be available sooner than expected, particularly for HCV-1B infection, within a 3-5 year timeframe. Conclusions IL28B polymorphism is strongly associated with treatment response to pegifn and RBV in patients chronically infected with genotype 1 HCV. Although

8 380 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON HEPATOLOGY, July 2012 the mechanism remains unclear, this occurs as a result of improved viral kinetics in the setting of the good response variant. The addition of DAA therapy with TVR or BOC also improves on-treatment kinetics, increases SVR rates, and attenuates the association between IL28B genotype and outcomes. In treatmentnaive patients the IL28B genotype continues to be significantly associated with SVR. In patients with the good response IL28B genotype the major benefit of DAA appears to be to allow short treatment duration (24-28 weeks) with response-guided therapy, while still achieving SVR rates > 80%. The cost-effectiveness of this approach remains unproven. In the future, even shorter treatment duration of 12 weeks should be explored. Poor-responder IL28B patients have the most to gain from the addition of DAAs, with SVR rates increasing 2-fold with BOC/TVR to 55%-70% among the treatment-naive. 5,7 The cost-effectiveness of DAAs for these patients appears favorable. In treatment-experienced patients planned for BOC/TVR therapy, there is little utility for IL28B genotyping once patients have been stratified for prior treatment response. In summary, DAAs attenuate the association between IL28B polymorphism and treatment outcome. We believe that IL28B polymorphisms will retain some clinical relevance while IFN continues to be used as the backbone for antiviral therapy. The ongoing relevance of IL28B polymorphism to treatment decisions for HCV patients will require the development of specific treatment algorithms for good versus poor responder IL28B patients, where IL28B genotype identifies patients for whom IFN offers the benefit of improved rate of SVR, shorter treatment duration, or lower consumer cost. References htm. 3. Poordad F, McCone J Jr, Bacon BR, Bruno S, Manns MP, Sulkowski MS, et al. Boceprevir for untreated chronic HCV genotype 1 infection. N Engl J Med 2011;364: Bacon BR, Gordon SC, Lawitz E, Marcellin P, Vierling JM, Zeuzem S, et al. Boceprevir for previously treated chronic HCV genotype 1 infection. N Engl J Med 2011;364: Poordad F, Bronowicki JP, Gordon SC, Zeuzem S, Jacobson IM, Sulkowski MS, et al. IL28B Polymorphism predicts virologic response in patients with hepatitis C genotype 1 treated with boceprevir (BOC) combination therapy [Abstract 12]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S6. 6. Poordad F, McCone J, Bacon BR, et al. Boceprevir combined with peginterferon alfa-2b/ribavirin for treatment-naive patients with HCV genotype 1: SPRINT-2 final results [Abstract LB4]. HEPATOLOGY 2010; 52(Suppl). 7. Jacobson IM, Catlett I, Marcellin P, et al. Telaprevir substantially improved SVR rates across all IL28B genotypes in the ADVANCE trial [Abstract 1369]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S542 S Sullivan JC, De Meyer S, Bartels DJ, et al. Evolution of treatmentemergent resistant variants in telaprevir phase 3 clinical trials [Abstract 8]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S4. 9. Aerssens J, Fanning G, Scholliers A, Lenz O, Peeters M, De Smedt G, et al. Impact of IL28B genotype and pretreatment serum IP-10 in treatment-naive genotype-1 HCV patients treated with TMC435 in combination with peginterferona-2a and ribavirin in PILLAR study [Abstract 11]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S5-S Zeuzem S, Foster GR, Fried MW, et al. The ASPIRE trial: TMC435 in treatment-experienced patients with genotype-1 HCV infection who have failed previous pegifn/rbv treatment [Abstract 1376]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S Lok AS, Gardiner DF, Lawitz E, et al. Combination therapy with BMS and BMS alone or with pegifn/rbv results in undetectable HCV RNA through 12 weeks of therapy in HCV genotype 1 null responders [Abstract LB-8]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl): 877A. 12. Pol S, Ghalib RH, Rustgi VK, Martorell C, Everson GT, Tatum HA, et al. First report of SVR12 for a NS5A replication complex inhibitor BMS in combination with Peg-IFNa-2A and RBV: Phase 2A trial in treatment-naive HCV-genotype-1 subjects [Abstract 1373]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S544-S Pockros P, Jensen D, Tsai N, et al. First SVR data with the nucleoside analogue polymerase inhibitor mericitabine (RG7128) combined with peginterferon/ribavirin in treatment-naive HCV G1/4 patients: interim analysis from the JUMP-C trial [Abstract 1359]. J Hepatol 2011; 54(Suppl 1):S Nelson DR, Lalezari J, Lawitz E, Hassanein T, Kowdley K, Poordad F, et al. Once daily PSI-7977 plus peg-ifn/rbv in HCV GT1: 98% rapid virologic response, completely early virologic responet: The PRO- TON study [Abstract 1372]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S Muir AJ, Lawitz E, Rodriguez-Torres M, et al. IL28B polymorphism and kinetics of antiviral activity for ANA598 in combination with pegylated interferon alpha-2a plus ribavirin in treatment-naive genotype-1 chronic HCV patients [Abstract 1852]. HEPATOLOGY 2010;52(Suppl);1200A. 16. Flisiak R, Pawlotsky JM, Crabbe R, et al. Once daily alisporivir (DEB025) plus pegifnalfa2a/ribavirin results in superior sustained virologic response (SVR24) in chronic hepatitis C genotype 1 treatment naive patients [Abstract 4]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S Gane EJ, Roberts SK, Stedman CA, Angus PW, Ritchie B, Elston R, et al. Oral combination therapy with a nucleoside polymerase inhibitor (RG7128) and danoprevir for chronic hepatitis C genotype 1 infection (INFORM-1): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, doseescalation trial. Lancet 2010;376: Chu T, Kulkarni R, Gane EJ, et al. The effect of host IL28B genotype on early viral kinetics during interferon-free treatment in patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) [Abstract 1323]. J Hepatol 2011;54 (S1):S Foy E, Li K, Sumpter R Jr, Loo YM, Johnson CL, Wang C, et al. Control of antiviral defenses through hepatitis C virus disruption of retinoic acid-inducible gene-i signaling. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2005;102: Li K, Foy E, Ferreon JC, Nakamura M, Ferreon AC, Ikeda M, et al. Immune evasion by hepatitis C virus NS3/4A protease-mediated cleavage of the Toll-like receptor 3 adaptor protein TRIF. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2005;102: Loo YM, Owen DM, Li K, Erickson AK, Johnson CL, Fish PM, et al. Viral and therapeutic control of IFN-beta promoter stimulator 1 during hepatitis C virus infection. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2006;103: Meylan E, Curran J, Hofmann K, Moradpour D, Binder M, Bartenschlager R, et al. Cardif is an adaptor protein in the RIG-I antiviral pathway and is targeted by hepatitis C virus. Nature 2005;437: Zeuzem S, Soriano V, Asselah T, et al. Virololgic Rresponse to an interferon-free regimen of BI and BI207127, with and without

9 HEPATOLOGY, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2012 THOMPSON AND MCHUTCHISON 381 rivavirin, in treatement-naive patients with chronic genotype-1 HCV infection: Week 12 interim results of the SOUND-C2 STUDY [Abstract LB-15]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):1436A. 24. Chayama K, Takahashi S, Kawakami Y, Ikeda K, et al. Dual oral combination therapy with the NS5A inhibitor BMS and the NS3 protease BMS achieved 90% sustained virologic response (SVR12) in HCV genotype 1B-infected null responders [Abstract LB- 4]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):1428A. 25. Muir AJ, Lawitz E, Ghalib RH, et al. Pegylated interferon lambda (PEG-IFN-k) phase 2 dose-ranging, active controlled study in combination with ribavirin (RBV) for treatment naive HCV patients (genotype 1,2,3 or 4): safety, viral response and impact of IL28B host genotype through week 12 [Abstract 821]. HEPATOLOGY 2010; 52(Suppl):715A. 26. Zeuzem S, Arora S, Bacon BR, et al. Pegylated interferon-lambda (PegIFN-k) shows superior viral response with improved safety and tolerability versus PegIFN-2a in HCV patients (G1/2/3/4): EMERGE phase IIb through week 12 [Abstract 1360]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl 1):S538-S Muir AJ, Lawitz E, Rodriguez-Torres M, et al. IL28B polymorphism and kinetics of antiviral activity for ANA598 in combination with pegylated interferon a 2A plus ribavirin in treatment-naive genotype-1 chronic HCV patients [Abstract 1852]. HEPATOLOGY 2010;52(Suppl): 1200A. 28. Sarasin-Filipowicz M, Krol J, Markiewicz I, Heim MH, Filipowicz W. Decreased levels of microrna mir-122 in individuals with hepatitis C responding poorly to interferon therapy. Nat Med 2009;15: Honda M, Sakai A, Yamashita T, Nakamoto Y, Mizukoshi E, Sakai Y, et al. Hepatic ISG expression is associated with genetic variation in IL28B and the outcome of IFN therapy for chronic hepatitis C. Gastroenterology 2010;139: Urban TJ, Thompson AJ, Bradrick SS, Fellay J, Schuppan D, Cronin KD, et al. IL28B genotype is associated with differential expression of intrahepatic interferon-stimulated genes in patients with chronic hepatitis C. HEPATOLOGY 2010;52: Schiff ER, Everson GT, Tsai N, et al. HCV-specific cellular immunity, RNA reductions, and normalization of ALT in chronic HCV subjects after treatment with GI-5005, a yeast-based immunotherapy targeting NS3 and core: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 1b study. HEPATOLOGY 2007;46(Suppl):A Pockros P, Jacobson IM, Boyer TD, et al. GI-5005 Therapeutic vaccine plus Peg-IFN/ribavirin improves sustained virologic response versus Peg-IFN/ribavirin in prior non-responders with genotype 1 chronic HCV infection [Abstract LB-6]. HEPATOLOGY 2010;52(Suppl):107A. 33. Vierling JM, McHutchison JG, Jacobson IM, et al. GI-5005 therapeutic vaccine improves deficit in cellular immunity in IL28B genotype T/ T, treatment-naive patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype 1 when added to standard of care (SOC) Peg-IFN-alfa-2A/ribavirin [Abstract 1973]. HEPATOLOGY 2010;52(Suppl):1258A. 34. Zeuzem S, Andreone P, Pol S, Lawitz E, Diago M, Roberts S, et al. Telaprevir for retreatment of HCV infection. N Engl J Med 2011;364: Thompson AJ, Muir AJ, Sulkowski MS, Ge D, Fellay J, Shianna KV, et al. Interleukin-28B polymorphism improves viral kinetics and is the strongest pretreatment predictor of sustained virologic response in genotype 1 hepatitis C virus. Gastroenterology 2010;139: ;e Mangia A, Thompson AJ, Santoro R, Piazzolla V, Tillmann HL, Patel K, et al. An IL28B polymorphism determines treatment response of hepatitis C virus genotype 2 or 3 patients who do not achieve a rapid virologic response. Gastroenterology 2010;139: ;7 e Gane EJ, Stedman CA, Hyland RH, Sorensen RD, e al. Once daily PSI-7977 plus RBV: pegylated interferon-alfa not required for complete rapid viral response in treatment-naive patients with Gt2 or Gt3 [Abstract 34]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):377A. 38. Gellad ZF, Naggie S, Reed SD, et al. The cost-effectiveness of a telaprevir-inclusive regimen as initial therapy for genotype 1 hepatitis C infection in individuals with the C/C IL28B polymorphism [Abstract 118]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):417A. 39. Guedj J, Perelson AS. Second-phase hepatitis C virus RNA decline during telaprevir-based therapy increases with drug effectiveness: implications for treatment duration. HEPATOLOGY 2011;53: Ge D, Fellay J, Thompson AJ, Simon JS, Shianna KV, Urban TJ, et al. Genetic variation in IL28B predicts hepatitis C treatment-induced viral clearance. Nature 2009;461: Pol S, Aerssens J, Zeuzem S, et al. Similar SVR rates in IL28B CC, CT or TT prior relapser, partial- or null-responder patients treated with telaprevir/peginterferon/ribavirin: retrospective analysis of the RE- ALIZE study [Abstract A13]. J Hepatol 2011;54(Suppl):S Fried M, Buti M, Dore GJ, Flisiak R, et al. TMC435 in combination with peginterferon and ribavirin in treatment-naive HCV genotype 1 patients: final analysis of the PILLAR phase IIB study [Abstract LB-5]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):1429A. 43. Sulkowski M, Asselah T, Ferenci P, et al. Treatment with the second generation HCV protease inhibitor BI results in high and consistent SVR rates results from SILEN-C1 in treatment naive patients across different baseline factors [Abstract 226]. HEPATOLOGY 2011; 54(Suppl):473A. 44. Terrault N, Cooper C, Balart L, Larrey D, Box TD, et al. High sustained SVR 24 rates with response-guided danoprevir plus PEGIFNa2a and ribavirin in treatment-naive HCV genotype 1 patients: results from the ATLAS study [Abstract 79]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):398A. 45. Lawitz E, Lalezari JP, Hassanein T, Kowdley K, et al. Once-daily PSI plus PEG/RBV in treatment-naive patients with HCV Gt1: robust end-of-treatment response rates are sustained post-treatment [Abstract 225]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):472A. 46. Hezode C, Hirschfield GM, Ghesquiere W, Sievert W, Rodriguez- Torres M, et al. BMS , a NS5A replication complex inhibitor, combined with peginterferon alfa-2a and ribavirin ion treatment-naive HCV-genotype 1 or 4 patients: phase 2B AI study interim week 12 results [Abstract 227]. HEPATOLOGY 2011;54(Suppl):474A.

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