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Peginterferon lambda for the treatment of HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B: A randomized phase 2b study (LIRA-B)

Authors
 Henry L.Y. Chan  ;  Sang Hoon Ahn  ;  Ting-Tsung Chang  ;  Cheng-Yuan Peng  ;  David Wong  ;  Carla S. Coffin  ;  Seng Gee Lim  ;  Pei-Jer Chen  ;  Harry L.A. Janssen  ;  Patrick Marcellin  ;  Lawrence Serfaty  ;  Stefan Zeuzem  ;  David Cohen  ;  Linda Critelli  ;  Dong Xu  ;  Megan Wind-Rotolo  ;  Elizabeth Cooney 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, Vol.64(5) : 1011-1019, 2016 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
ISSN
 0168-8278 
Issue Date
2016
MeSH
Adult ; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ; Double-Blind Method ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Hepatitis B e Antigens/immunology* ; Hepatitis B virus/immunology* ; Hepatitis B, Chronic/drug therapy* ; Hepatitis B, Chronic/immunology ; Hepatitis B, Chronic/virology ; Humans ; Interleukins/administration & dosage* ; Male ; Polyethylene Glycols/administration & dosage* ; Time Factors ; Treatment Outcome
Keywords
Human ; Immunomodulatory therapy ; Viral hepatitis
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Peginterferon lambda-1a (lambda) is a Type-III interferon, which, like alfa interferons, has antiviral activity in vitro against hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV); however, lambda has a more limited extra-hepatic receptor distribution. This phase 2b study (LIRA-B) evaluated lambda in patients with chronic HBV infection.

METHODS: Adult HBeAg+ interferon-naive patients were randomized (1:1) to weekly lambda (180 μg) or peginterferon alfa-2a (alfa) for 48 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was HBeAg seroconversion at week 24 post-treatment; lambda non-inferiority was demonstrated if the 80% confidence interval (80% CI) lower bound was >-15%.

RESULTS: Baseline characteristics were balanced across groups (lambda N=80; alfa N=83). Early on-treatment declines in HBV-DNA and qHBsAg through week 24 were greater with lambda. HBeAg seroconversion rates were comparable for lambda and alfa at week 48 (17.5% vs. 16.9%, respectively); however lambda non-inferiority was not met at week 24 post-treatment (13.8% vs. 30.1%, respectively; lambda vs. alfa 80% CI lower bound -24%). Results for other key secondary endpoints (virologic, serologic, biochemical) and post hoc combined endpoints (HBV-DNA <2000 IU/ml plus HBeAg seroconversion or ALT normalization) mostly favored alfa. Overall adverse events (AE), serious AE, and AE-discontinuation rates were comparable between arms but AE-spectra differed (more cytopenias, flu-like, and musculoskeletal symptoms observed with alfa, more ALT flares and bilirubin elevations seen with lambda). Most on-treatment flares occurred early (weeks 4-12), associated with HBV-DNA decline; all post-treatment flares were preceded by HBV-DNA rise.

CONCLUSIONS: On-treatment, lambda showed greater early effects on HBV-DNA and qHBsAg, and comparable serologic/virologic responses at end-of-treatment. However, post-treatment, alfa-associated HBeAg seroconversion rates were higher, and key secondary results mostly favored alfa. ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT01204762.
Full Text
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168827815008594?via%3Dihub
DOI
10.1016/j.jhep.2015.12.018
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Ahn, Sang Hoon(안상훈) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3629-4624
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/152340
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