» Articles » PMID: 27494410

Resistance Analyses of HCV NS3/4A Protease and NS5B Polymerase from Clinical Studies of Deleobuvir and Faldaprevir

Overview
Journal PLoS One
Date 2016 Aug 6
PMID 27494410
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background & Aim: The resistance profile of anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) agents used in combination is important to guide optimal treatment regimens. We evaluated baseline and treatment-emergent NS3/4A and NS5B amino-acid variants among HCV genotype (GT)-1a and -1b-infected patients treated with faldaprevir (HCV protease inhibitor), deleobuvir (HCV polymerase non-nucleoside inhibitor), and ribavirin in multiple clinical studies.

Methods: HCV NS3/4A and NS5B population sequencing (Sanger method) was performed on all baseline plasma samples (n = 1425 NS3; n = 1556 NS5B) and on post-baseline plasma samples from patients with virologic failure (n = 113 GT-1a; n = 221 GT-1b). Persistence and time to loss of resistance-associated variants (RAVs) was estimated using Kaplan-Meier analysis.

Results: Faldaprevir RAVs (NS3 R155 and D168) and deleobuvir RAVs (NS5B 495 and 496) were rare (<1%) at baseline. Virologic response to faldaprevir/deleobuvir/ribavirin was not compromised by common baseline NS3 polymorphisms (e.g. Q80K in 17.5% of GT-1a) or by NS5B A421V, present in 20% of GT-1a. In GT-1b, alanine at NS5B codon 499 (present in 15% of baseline sequences) was associated with reduced response. Treatment-emergent RAVs consolidated previous findings: NS3 R155 and D168 were key faldaprevir RAVs; NS5B A421 and P495 were key deleobuvir RAVs. Among on-treatment virologic breakthroughs, RAVs emerged in both NS3 and NS5B (>90%). Virologic relapse was associated with RAVs in both NS3 and NS5B (53% GT-1b; 52% GT-1b); some virologic relapses had NS3 RAVs only (47% GT-1a; 17% GT-1b). Median time to loss of GT-1b NS5B P495 RAVs post-treatment (5 months) was less than that of GT-1b NS3 D168 (8.5 months) and GT-1a R155 RAVs (11.5 months).

Conclusion: Faldaprevir and deleobuvir RAVs are more prevalent among virologic failures than at baseline. Treatment response was not compromised by common NS3 polymorphisms; however, alanine at NS5B amino acid 499 at baseline (wild-type in GT-1a, polymorphism in GT-1b) may reduce response to this deleobuvir-based regimen.

Citing Articles

Direct-acting antiviral resistance of Hepatitis C virus is promoted by epistasis.

Zhang H, Quadeer A, McKay M Nat Commun. 2023; 14(1):7457.

PMID: 37978179 PMC: 10656532. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42550-6.


Natural polymorphisms in the resistance associated sites of HCV-G1 NS5B domain and correlation with geographic origin of HCV isolates.

Bagaglio S, Uberti-Foppa C, Olgiati A, Messina E, Hasson H, Ferri C Virol J. 2018; 15(1):144.

PMID: 30227876 PMC: 6145338. DOI: 10.1186/s12985-018-1054-z.


Current therapy for chronic hepatitis C: The role of direct-acting antivirals.

Li G, De Clercq E Antiviral Res. 2017; 142:83-122.

PMID: 28238877 PMC: 7172984. DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2017.02.014.

References
1.
Kati W, Koev G, Irvin M, Beyer J, Liu Y, Krishnan P . In vitro activity and resistance profile of dasabuvir, a nonnucleoside hepatitis C virus polymerase inhibitor. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2014; 59(3):1505-11. PMC: 4325770. DOI: 10.1128/AAC.04619-14. View

2.
Larrey D, Lohse A, Trepo C, Bronowicki J, Arasteh K, Bourliere M . Antiviral effect, safety, and pharmacokinetics of five-day oral administration of Deleobuvir (BI 207127), an investigational hepatitis C virus RNA polymerase inhibitor, in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2013; 57(10):4727-35. PMC: 3811456. DOI: 10.1128/AAC.00565-13. View

3.
Zeuzem S, Asselah T, Angus P, Zarski J, Larrey D, Mullhaupt B . Faldaprevir (BI 201335), deleobuvir (BI 207127) and ribavirin oral therapy for treatment-naive HCV genotype 1: SOUND-C1 final results. Antivir Ther. 2013; 18(8):1015-9. DOI: 10.3851/IMP2567. View

4.
Poordad F, Sievert W, Mollison L, Bennett M, Tse E, Brau N . Fixed-dose combination therapy with daclatasvir, asunaprevir, and beclabuvir for noncirrhotic patients with HCV genotype 1 infection. JAMA. 2015; 313(17):1728-35. DOI: 10.1001/jama.2015.3860. View

5.
Manns M, Bourliere M, Benhamou Y, Pol S, Bonacini M, Trepo C . Potency, safety, and pharmacokinetics of the NS3/4A protease inhibitor BI201335 in patients with chronic HCV genotype-1 infection. J Hepatol. 2010; 54(6):1114-22. DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2010.08.040. View