Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
229 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-01-31
2015-08-31
Brief Summary
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\- GS-7977, GS-5885, GS-9669, and GS-9451 are new drugs for treating hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. GS-7977 may help treat the infection when used with other treatments like interferon therapy. GS-5885, and GS-9669, and GS-9451 also lower the amount of HCV in the body. Researchers want to see whether GS-7977 can be combined with any of the other three drugs to treat HCV infection. Some participants will take GS-7977 and GS-5885. Others will take GS-7977, GS-5885 and GS-9669 or GS-7977, GS-5885 and GS-9451.
Objectives:
\- To see whether GS-7977 with GS-5885 alone or in combination with either GS-9669 or 9451 can be used to treat HCV infection.
Eligibility:
Individuals at least 18 years of age who have chronic HCV infection and have never been treated for it.
Individuals at least 18 years of age who have chronic HCV infection and have not responded to interferon therapy.
Individuals at least 18 years of age who have chronic HCV infection with advanced liver disease and have never been treated for HCV
Design:
Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. Blood samples will be collected. A liver biopsy may also be performed.
Some participants will take the two study drugs and some will take three study drugs. Those who take GS-7977 and GS-5885 will have one daily tablet named fixed dose combination or FDC. Those who take GS-7977 and CS-9669 will have three daily tablets taken once daily. Those who take GS-7977 and GS-5885 and GS-9451 will take 2 pills once a day. GS-7977 and GS-5885 will be combined in one pill and GS-9451 will be in another pill.
Treatment will be monitored with frequent blood tests. These tests will check liver function and the level of HCV infection. Participants may have other blood tests as needed for treatment.
Participants will have 4, 6 or 12 weeks of treatment depending on which study drugs are scheduled to take. After they complete their schedule, they will stop treatment with the study drugs. They may also have another liver biopsy.
Participants will have regular follow-up visits over the next 48 weeks. They will have physical exams and provide blood samples....
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Detailed Description
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This is an open label study to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of treatment with GS-7977 with GS-5885, alone or in combination with GS-9669 and/or GS-9451 (selective HCV nucleotide NS5B, NS5A, nonnucleotide NS5B and NS3 inhibitors, respectively) in HCV infected treatment naive and treatment experienced patients with early and advanced liver disease. The findings from this study will aid in our understanding of determinants of response to an IFN-free regimen in HCV infected patients for both patients with early and advanced liver disease as well as in patients who are treatment naive and those who have been treated before for HCV.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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A: HCV GT-1, tx naïve, 12 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), once daily, for 12 weeks in HCV genotype 1, treatment naïve patients
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
B: HCV GT-1, tx naïve, 6 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir/GS-9669
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977), Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), GS-9669 500mg, once daily, for 6 weeks in HCV genotype 1, treatment naïve patients
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9669
C: HCV GT-1, tx naïve, 6 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir/GS-9451
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977), Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), GS-9451 80mg, once daily, for 6 weeks in HCV genotype 1, treatment naïve patients
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9451
D: HCV GT-1, tx-relapsed, 12 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), once daily, for 12 weeks in HCV genotype 1, treatment-relapsed patients who previously received Sofosbuvir plus Ribavirin
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
E: HCV GT-4, tx naïve/expd, 12 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), once daily, 12 weeks in HCV genotype 4 treatment naïve subjects and interferon treament experienced subjects
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
F: HCV GT-1, tx naïve/expd 6 wks Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir/GS-9451
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885) and GS-9451 80mg, once daily, 6 weeks in HCV genotype 1 treatment naïve and treatment experienced subjects with advanced liver disease
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9451
G: HCV GT-1, tx naïve, 4 wks Sofosbuvir, Ledipasvir, GS-9451
Oral Treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885) with GS-9451 80mg, once daily, 4 weeks in HCV genotype 1 treatment naïve subjects with early stage liver disease
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9451
H: HCV GT-1, tx naïve, 4 wks Sofos/Ledip/GS-9451/GS-9669
Oral Treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885) with GS-9451 80mg, and GS-9669 250mg, once daily, 4 weeks in HCV genotype 1 treatment naïve subjects with early stage liver disease
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9669
GS-9451
D Retx: HCV GT-1, Re-Treatment, 12 wks Sofosbuvir, Ledipasvir
Oral treatment with Sofosbuvir 400mg (GS-7977) and Ledipasvir 90mg (GS-5885), once daily, 12 weeks in HCV genotype 1 subjects who failed HCV therapy in Arm B or Arm G or Arm H
Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
Interventions
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Sofosbuvir
Ledipasvir
GS-9669
GS-9451
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Female study participants with childbearing potential (as defined below) and all males must be willing to practice either:
* Abstinence from sexual intercourse or
* One or more forms of effective barrier contraception throughout dosing and for 30 days following the last dose. This cannot include hormonal contraception for female subjects.
Effective forms of barrier contraception include:
* a male condom with spermicide
* use by female sexual partner of a female condom with spermicide
Non-childbearing potential (i.e., physiologically incapable of becoming pregnant) includes any female who:
* Has had a hysterectomy or
* Has had a bilateral oophorectomy (ovariectomy) or
* Is post-menopausal (a demonstration of a total cessation of menses for greater than or equal to1 year)
* Has had a bilateral tubal ligation or fallopian tube inserts
3. Chronic HCV GT-1 or GT-4 infection as documented by greater than or equal to 1 measurement of serum HCV RNA greater than or equal to 2,000 international units per milliliter during screening and at least one of the following:
* A positive anti-HCV antibody, HCV RNA, or HCV genotype test result greater than or equal to 12 months prior to the baseline (day 0) visit together with current positive HCV RNA and anti-HCV antibody test results or
* Positive HCV RNA test and anti-HCV antibody test results together with a liver biopsy consistent with chronic HCV infection or a liver biopsy performed before enrollment with evidence of chronic hepatitis C infection disease, such as the presence of fibrosis.
4. Group A may include up to 20% of subjects with compensated cirrhosis.
Group B and C may only include subjects with absence of cirrhosis.
Group D, D-ReTx \& E may include subjects with compensated cirrhosis.
Group F may only include patients with advanced liver disease (historic Metavir or HAI Stage 3 or 4 or ISHAK Stage 4, 5 or 6 or cirrhosis as defined below)
Group G and H may only include those with absence of cirrhosis and HAI Stage 0-2 or FibroTest as below.
Cirrhosis is defined as any one of the following:
1. Any biopsy showing cirrhosis.
2. A FibroTest(r) score of greater than or equal to 0.75 AND an AST: platelet ratio (APRI) of \> 2 performed within 12 months of screening.
Liver imaging within 6 months of Day 0 to exclude hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is required in patients with cirrhosis.
Absence of cirrhosis is defined as one of the following:
1. A liver biopsy performed within 36 calendar months of screening showing absence of cirrhosis.
2. A FibroTest(r) score of \< 0.48 AND APRI of \< 1 performed within 6 months of screening. This would also qualify a subject for Group G and H as having Stage 0-2 disease in the absence of a liver biopsy.
In the absence of a definitive diagnosis of presence or absence of cirrhosis by the above criteria, a liver biopsy is required (for Groups B, C, G and H).
5. Ability to communicate effectively with the study investigator and other key personnel.
6. Willing to give written informed consent and comply with the study restrictions and requirements.
7. Opioid-dependent individuals must be participating in a supervised treatment program.
8. Subjects must have an external primary care doctor (outside of the CC and the NIH) for their medical management.
Exclusion Criteria
* Clinically-significant illness (other than HCV) or any other major medical disorder that may interfere with subject treatment, assessment or compliance with the protocol; subjects currently under evaluation for a potentially clinically-significant illness (other than HCV) are also excluded.
* Gastrointestinal disorder or post operative condition that could interfere with the absorption of the study drug.
* Poor venous access interfering with required study blood collection.
* Clinical hepatic decompensation (i.e., ascites, encephalopathy or variceal hemorrhage).
* Solid organ transplantation.
* Significant pulmonary disease, significant cardiac disease or porphyria.
* Unstable psychiatric disease (Subjects with psychiatric illness that is well-controlled on a stable treatment regimen or currently not requiring medication may be included).
* Any malignancy or its treatment that in the opinion of the PI may cause ongoing interference with host immunity; subjects under evaluation for malignancy are not eligible.
* Significant drug allergy (such as anaphylaxis or hepatotoxicity).
* Substance abuse, which in the opinion of the investigator is likely to interfere with medication adherence or study compliance.
* Lactose allergy, patients with lactose intolerance will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
2. Positive test results at screening for hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg), HBV DNA (if medically indicated) or anti-HIV antibody (unless previously treated on 13-I-0159).
3. Prior exposure to any direct-acting antivirals for HCV infection, except for patients who were previously treated studies 11-I-0258, 13-I-1059 or this study enrolling in Group D.
4. History of clinically significant chronic liver disease due to other etiology (e.g., hemochromatosis, autoimmune hepatitis, Wilson s disease, alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, alcoholic liver disease, \> moderate non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and toxin exposures).
5. Use of herbal/natural remedies for potential benefit to the liver within 21 Days of Day 0.
6. History of ascites, variceal hemorrhage, hepatic encephalopathy, or conditions consistent with decompensated liver disease.
7. Screening or baseline ECG with clinically significant ECG findings, or a personal/first degree relative history of Torsade de pointes.
8. Abnormal hematological and biochemical parameters at screening, including:
* Neutrophil count less than 750 cells per cubic millimeter.
* Hemoglobin level \< 9 g/dL. If Hgb \< 11g/dL in women and \< 12 g/dL in men other causes of anemia should be excluded as medically indicated.
* Platelet count less than or equal to 50,000 cells per cubic millimeter.
* Estimated glomerular filtration rate less than 50 milliliter/min/1.73m(2).
* ALT or AST level greater than or equal to 10 times upper limit of normal (ULN).
* Serum lipase level greater than or equal to 1.5 times upper limit of normal (ULN)at screening or during the screening period in a patient with symptoms consistent with pancreatitis.
* Total bilirubin level greater than or equal to 2.0 times upper limit of normal (ULN), except in subjects with Gilbert s syndrome.
* Albumin level less than or equal to 3.0 grams per deciliter in patients without cirrhosis, albumin less than or equal to 2.8 g/dL in cirrhotic patients.
9. Poorly controlled diabetes mellitus indicated by hemoglobin A1C greater than 9% at screening.
10. Donation or loss of blood of greater than 400 milliliter within 8 weeks prior to the first dose of the study drugs.
11. Known hypersensitivity to GS-5885, GS-7977, GS-9669, GS-9451 or formulation excipients.
12. Pregnant/Breastfeeding women.
13. Need for use of the following medications from 21 days prior to the start of study drugs through the end of treatment (unless otherwise specified):
* Hematologic stimulating agents (e.g. erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs); granulocyte colony stimulating factor (GCSF); thrombopoietin (TPO) mimetics).
* Chronic systemic immunosuppressants including, but not limited to, corticosteroids (prednisone equivalent of greater than 10 milligrams per day for greater than 2 weeks), azathioprine, or monoclonal antibodies (e.g., infliximab).
* Investigational agents or devices for any indication.
* Medications for disease conditions excluded from the protocol (e.g., active cancer, transplantation) are not listed under this Concomitant Medication section and are disallowed in the study.
* Concomitant use of certain medications or herbal/natural supplements per PI discretion expected to result in pharmacokinetic interactions resulting in increases or decreases in exposure of study drug(s).
14. Co-enrollment Guidelines: Co-enrollment in other clinical trials is restricted, other than enrollment in observational studies. Study staff should be notified of co-enrollment status, as it may require prior approval of the investigator.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
NIH
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Henry Masur, M.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Locations
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Unity Health Care, Inc./DC General
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Family Medical and Conseling Services
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Armstrong GL, Wasley A, Simard EP, McQuillan GM, Kuhnert WL, Alter MJ. The prevalence of hepatitis C virus infection in the United States, 1999 through 2002. Ann Intern Med. 2006 May 16;144(10):705-14. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-144-10-200605160-00004.
Serfaty L, Aumaitre H, Chazouilleres O, Bonnand AM, Rosmorduc O, Poupon RE, Poupon R. Determinants of outcome of compensated hepatitis C virus-related cirrhosis. Hepatology. 1998 May;27(5):1435-40. doi: 10.1002/hep.510270535.
Davis GL, Albright JE, Cook SF, Rosenberg DM. Projecting future complications of chronic hepatitis C in the United States. Liver Transpl. 2003 Apr;9(4):331-8. doi: 10.1053/jlts.2003.50073.
Townsend K, Petersen T, Gordon LA, Kohli A, Nelson A, Seamon C, Gross C, Tang L, Osinusi A, Polis MA, Masur H, Kottilil S. Effect of HIV co-infection on adherence to a 12-week regimen of hepatitis C virus therapy with ledipasvir and sofosbuvir. AIDS. 2016 Jan;30(2):261-6. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000903.
Petersen T, Townsend K, Gordon LA, Sidharthan S, Silk R, Nelson A, Gross C, Calderon M, Proschan M, Osinusi A, Polis MA, Masur H, Kottilil S, Kohli A. High adherence to all-oral directly acting antiviral HCV therapy among an inner-city patient population in a phase 2a study. Hepatol Int. 2016 Mar;10(2):310-9. doi: 10.1007/s12072-015-9680-7. Epub 2015 Nov 26.
Kohli A, Kattakuzhy S, Sidharthan S, Nelson A, McLaughlin M, Seamon C, Wilson E, Meissner EG, Sims Z, Silk R, Gross C, Akoth E, Tang L, Price A, Jolley TA, Emmanuel B, Proschan M, Teferi G, Chavez J, Abbott S, Osinusi A, Mo H, Polis MA, Masur H, Kottilil S. Four-Week Direct-Acting Antiviral Regimens in Noncirrhotic Patients With Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 1 Infection: An Open-Label, Nonrandomized Trial. Ann Intern Med. 2015 Dec 15;163(12):899-907. doi: 10.7326/M15-0642. Epub 2015 Nov 24.
Wilson EM, Kattakuzhy S, Sidharthan S, Sims Z, Tang L, McLaughlin M, Price A, Nelson A, Silk R, Gross C, Akoth E, Mo H, Subramanian GM, Pang PS, McHutchison JG, Osinusi A, Masur H, Kohli A, Kottilil S. Successful Retreatment of Chronic HCV Genotype-1 Infection With Ledipasvir and Sofosbuvir After Initial Short Course Therapy With Direct-Acting Antiviral Regimens. Clin Infect Dis. 2016 Feb 1;62(3):280-288. doi: 10.1093/cid/civ874. Epub 2015 Oct 31.
Kohli A, Kapoor R, Sims Z, Nelson A, Sidharthan S, Lam B, Silk R, Kotb C, Gross C, Teferi G, Sugarman K, Pang PS, Osinusi A, Polis MA, Rustgi V, Masur H, Kottilil S. Ledipasvir and sofosbuvir for hepatitis C genotype 4: a proof-of-concept, single-centre, open-label phase 2a cohort study. Lancet Infect Dis. 2015 Sep;15(9):1049-1054. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00157-7. Epub 2015 Jul 14.
Kohli A, Osinusi A, Sims Z, Nelson A, Meissner EG, Barrett LL, Bon D, Marti MM, Silk R, Kotb C, Gross C, Jolley TA, Sidharthan S, Petersen T, Townsend K, Egerson D, Kapoor R, Spurlin E, Sneller M, Proschan M, Herrmann E, Kwan R, Teferi G, Talwani R, Diaz G, Kleiner DE, Wood BJ, Chavez J, Abbott S, Symonds WT, Subramanian GM, Pang PS, McHutchison J, Polis MA, Fauci AS, Masur H, Kottilil S. Virological response after 6 week triple-drug regimens for hepatitis C: a proof-of-concept phase 2A cohort study. Lancet. 2015 Mar 21;385(9973):1107-13. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61228-9. Epub 2015 Jan 13.
Osinusi A, Kohli A, Marti MM, Nelson A, Zhang X, Meissner EG, Silk R, Townsend K, Pang PS, Subramanian GM, McHutchison JG, Fauci AS, Masur H, Kottilil S. Re-treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus genotype 1 infection after relapse: an open-label pilot study. Ann Intern Med. 2014 Nov 4;161(9):634-8. doi: 10.7326/M14-1211.
Other Identifiers
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13-I-0066
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
130066
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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