CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Mechanism Of Action
Entecavir is an antiviral drug [see Microbiology].
Pharmacokinetics
The single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetics of
entecavir were evaluated in healthy subjects and subjects with chronic
hepatitis B virus infection.
Absorption
Following oral administration in healthy subjects,
entecavir peak plasma concentrations occurred between 0.5 and 1.5 hours.
Following multiple daily doses ranging from 0.1 to 1 mg, Cmax and area under
the concentration-time curve (AUC) at steady state increased in proportion to
dose. Steady state was achieved after 6 to 10 days of once-daily administration
with approximately 2-fold accumulation. For a 0.5 mg oral dose, Cmax at steady
state was 4.2 ng/mL and trough plasma concentration (Ctrough) was 0.3 ng/mL.
For a 1 mg oral dose, Cmax was 8.2 ng/mL and Ctrough was 0.5 ng/mL.
In healthy subjects, the bioavailability of the tablet
was 100% relative to the oral solution. The oral solution and tablet may be
used interchangeably.
Effects of Food on Oral Absorption
Oral administration of 0.5 mg of entecavir with a
standard high-fat meal (945 kcal, 54.6 g fat) or a light meal (379 kcal, 8.2 g
fat) resulted in a delay in absorption (1.0–1.5 hours fed vs. 0.75 hours
fasted), a decrease in Cmax of 44%–46%, and a decrease in AUC of 18%–20% [see
DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Distribution
Based on the pharmacokinetic profile of entecavir after
oral dosing, the estimated apparent volume of distribution is in excess of
total body water, suggesting that entecavir is extensively distributed into
tissues.
Binding of entecavir to human serum proteins in vitro was
approximately 13%.
Metabolism and Elimination
Following administration of 14C-entecavir in humans and
rats, no oxidative or acetylated metabolites were observed. Minor amounts of
phase II metabolites (glucuronide and sulfate conjugates) were observed.
Entecavir is not a substrate, inhibitor, or inducer of the cytochrome P450 (CYP450)
enzyme system. See DRUG INTERACTIONS, below.
After reaching peak concentration, entecavir plasma
concentrations decreased in a bi-exponential manner with a terminal elimination
half-life of approximately 128–149 hours. The observed drug accumulation index
is approximately 2-fold with once-daily dosing, suggesting an effective
accumulation half-life of approximately 24 hours.
Entecavir is predominantly eliminated by the kidney with
urinary recovery of unchanged drug at steady state ranging from 62% to 73% of
the administered dose. Renal clearance is independent of dose and ranges from
360 to 471 mL/min suggesting that entecavir undergoes both glomerular
filtration and net tubular secretion [see DRUG INTERACTIONS].
Special Populations
Gender: There are no significant gender
differences in entecavir pharmacokinetics.
Race: There are no significant racial differences
in entecavir pharmacokinetics.
Elderly: The effect of age on the pharmacokinetics
of entecavir was evaluated following administration of a single 1 mg oral dose
in healthy young and elderly volunteers. Entecavir AUC was 29.3% greater in
elderly subjects compared to young subjects. The disparity in exposure between
elderly and young subjects was most likely attributable to differences in renal
function. Dosage adjustment of BARACLUDE should be based on the renal function
of the patient, rather than age [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Pediatrics: The steady-state pharmacokinetics of
entecavir were evaluated in nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve and
lamivudine-experienced HBeAg-positive pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18
years of age with compensated liver disease. Results are shown in Table 6.
Entecavir exposure among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects was similar to the
exposure achieved in adults receiving once-daily doses of 0.5 mg. Entecavir
exposure among lamivudine-experienced subjects was similar to the exposure
achieved in adults receiving once-daily doses of 1 mg.
Table 6: Pharmacokinetic Parameters in Pediatric
Subjects
|
Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naivea
n=24 |
Lamivudine-Experiencedb
n=19 |
Cmax (ng/mL)(CV%) |
6.31(30) |
14.48(31) |
AUC(0-24) (ng•h/mL)(CV%) |
18.33(27) |
38.58(26) |
Cmin (ng/mL)(CV%) |
0.28(22) |
0.47(23) |
a Subjects received once-daily doses of 0.015
mg/kg up to a maximum of 0.5 mg.
b Subjects received once-daily doses of 0.030 mg/kg up to a maximum
of 1 mg. |
Renal impairment: The pharmacokinetics of
entecavir following a single 1 mg dose were studied in subjects (without
chronic hepatitis B virus infection) with selected degrees of renal impairment,
including subjects whose renal impairment was managed by hemodialysis or
continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Results are shown in Table 7 [see
DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Table 7: Pharmacokinetic Parameters in Subjects with
Selected Degrees of Renal Function
|
Renal Function Group |
Baseline Creatinine Clearance (mL/min) |
Severe Managed with Hemodialysisa
n=6 |
Severe Managed with CAPD
n=4 |
Unimpaired > 80
n=6 |
Mild > 50- ≤ 80
n=6 |
Moderate 30-50
n=6 |
Severe < 30
n=6 |
Cmax (ng/mL) (CV%) |
8.1 (30.7) |
10.4 (37.2) |
10.5 (22.7) |
15.3 (33.8) |
15.4 (56.4) |
16.6 (29.7) |
AUC(0–T) (ng•h/mL) (CV) |
27.9 (25.6) |
51.5 (22.8) |
69.5 (22.7) |
145.7 (31.5) |
233.9 (28.4) |
221.8 (11.6) |
CLR (mL/min) (SD) |
383.2 (101.8) |
197.9 (78.1) |
135.6 (31.6) |
40.3 (10.1) |
NA |
NA |
CLT/F (mL/min) (SD) |
588.1 (153.7) |
309.2 (62.6) |
226.3 (60.1) |
100.6 (29.1) |
50.6 (16.5) |
35.7 (19.6) |
a Dosed immediately following hemodialysis.
CLR = renal clearance; CLT/F = apparent oral clearance. |
Following a single 1 mg dose of entecavir administered 2
hours before the hemodialysis session, hemodialysis removed approximately 13%
of the entecavir dose over 4 hours. CAPD removed approximately 0.3% of the dose
over 7 days [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Hepatic impairment: The pharmacokinetics of
entecavir following a single 1 mg dose were studied in adult subjects (without
chronic hepatitis B virus infection) with moderate or severe hepatic impairment
(Child-Turcotte-Pugh Class B or C). The pharmacokinetics of entecavir were
similar between hepatically impaired and healthy control subjects; therefore,
no dosage adjustment of BARACLUDE is recommended for patients with hepatic
impairment. The pharmacokinetics of entecavir have not been studied in
pediatric subjects with hepatic impairment.
Post-liver transplant: Limited data are available
on the safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE in liver transplant recipients. In a
small pilot study of entecavir use in HBV-infected liver transplant recipients
on a stable dose of cyclosporine A (n=5) or tacrolimus (n=4), entecavir
exposure was approximately 2-fold the exposure in healthy subjects with normal
renal function. Altered renal function contributed to the increase in entecavir
exposure in these subjects. The potential for pharmacokinetic interactions
between entecavir and cyclosporine A or tacrolimus was not formally evaluated [see
Use in Specific Populations].
Drug Interactions
The metabolism of entecavir was evaluated in in vitro and
in vivo studies. Entecavir is not a substrate, inhibitor, or inducer of the
cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system. At concentrations up to approximately
10,000-fold higher than those obtained in humans, entecavir inhibited none of
the major human CYP450 enzymes 1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4, 2B6, and 2E1. At
concentrations up to approximately 340-fold higher than those observed in
humans, entecavir did not induce the human CYP450 enzymes 1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 3A4,
3A5, and 2B6. The pharmacokinetics of entecavir are unlikely to be affected by
coadministration with agents that are either metabolized by, inhibit, or induce
the CYP450 system. Likewise, the pharmacokinetics of known CYP substrates are
unlikely to be affected by coadministration of entecavir.
The steady-state pharmacokinetics of entecavir and
coadministered drug were not altered in interaction studies of entecavir with
lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate [see DRUG
INTERACTIONS].
Microbiology
Mechanism of Action
Entecavir, a guanosine nucleoside analogue with activity
against HBV reverse transcriptase (rt), is efficiently phosphorylated to the
active triphosphate form, which has an intracellular half-life of 15 hours. By
competing with the natural substrate deoxyguanosine triphosphate, entecavir
triphosphate functionally inhibits all three activities of the HBV reverse
transcriptase: (1) base priming, (2) reverse transcription of the negative
strand from the pregenomic messenger RNA, and (3) synthesis of the positive
strand of HBV DNA. Entecavir triphosphate is a weak inhibitor of cellular DNA
polymerases α, β, and δ and mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ
with Ki values ranging from 18 to > 160 μM.
Antiviral Activity
Entecavir inhibited HBV DNA synthesis (50% reduction, EC50)
at a concentration of 0.004 μM in human HepG2 cells transfected with
wild-type HBV. The median EC50 value for entecavir against lamivudine-resistant
HBV (rtL180M, rtM204V) was 0.026 μM (range 0.010–0.059 μM).
The coadministration of HIV nucleoside/nucleotide reverse
transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) with BARACLUDE is unlikely to reduce the
antiviral efficacy of BARACLUDE against HBV or of any of these agents against
HIV. In HBV combination assays in cell culture, abacavir, didanosine,
lamivudine, stavudine, tenofovir, or zidovudine were not antagonistic to the
anti-HBV activity of entecavir over a wide range of concentrations. In HIV
antiviral assays, entecavir was not antagonistic to the cell culture anti-HIV
activity of these six NRTIs or emtricitabine at concentrations greater than 100
times the Cmax of entecavir using the 1 mg dose.
Antiviral Activity Against HIV
A comprehensive analysis of the inhibitory activity of
entecavir against a panel of laboratory and clinical HIV type 1 (HIV-1)
isolates using a variety of cells and assay conditions yielded EC50 values
ranging from 0.026 to > 10 μM; the lower EC50 values were observed when
decreased levels of virus were used in the assay. In cell culture, entecavir
selected for an M184I substitution in HIV reverse transcriptase at micromolar
concentrations, confirming inhibitory pressure at high entecavir
concentrations. HIV variants containing the M184V substitution showed loss of
susceptibility to entecavir.
Resistance
In Cell Culture
In cell-based assays, 8- to 30-fold reductions in
entecavir phenotypic susceptibility were observed for lamivudine-resistant
strains. Further reductions ( > 70-fold) in entecavir phenotypic
susceptibility required the presence of amino acid substitutions rtM204I/V with
or without rtL180M along with additional substitutions at residues rtT184,
rtS202, or rtM250, or a combination of these substitutions with or without an
rtI169 substitution in the HBV reverse transcriptase.
Clinical Studies
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects: Genotypic
evaluations were performed on evaluable samples ( > 300 copies/mL serum HBV
DNA) from 562 subjects who were treated with BARACLUDE for up to 96 weeks in
nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve studies (AI463022, AI463027, and rollover study
AI463901). By Week 96, evidence of emerging amino acid substitution rtS202G
with rtM204V and rtL180M substitutions was detected in the HBV of 2 subjects
(2/562= < 1%), and 1 of them experienced virologic rebound ( ≥ 1 log10 increase
above nadir). In addition, emerging amino acid substitutions at rtM204I/V and
rtL180M, rtL80I, or rtV173L, which conferred decreased phenotypic
susceptibility to entecavir in the absence of rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250
changes, were detected in the HBV of 3 subjects (3/562= < 1%) who experienced
virologic rebound. For subjects who continued treatment beyond 48 weeks, 75%
(202/269) had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL at end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
HBeAg-positive (n=243) and -negative (n=39)
treatment-naïve subjects who failed to achieve the study-defined complete
response by 96 weeks were offered continued entecavir treatment in a rollover
study. Complete response for HBeAg-positive was < 0.7 MEq/mL (approximately 7
à 105 copies/mL) serum HBV DNA and HBeAg loss and, for
HBeAg-negative was < 0.7 MEq/mL HBV DNA and ALT normalization. Subjects
received 1 mg entecavir once daily for up to an additional 144 weeks. Of these
282 subjects, 141 HBeAg-positive and 8 HBeAg-negative subjects entered the
long-term follow-up rollover study and were evaluated for entecavir resistance.
Of the 149 subjects entering the rollover study, 88% (131/149), 92% (137/149),
and 92% (137/149) attained serum HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by Weeks 144, 192,
and 240 (including end of dosing), respectively. No novel entecavir
resistance-associated substitutions were identified in a comparison of the
genotypes of evaluable isolates with their respective baseline isolates. The
cumulative probability of developing rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 entecavir
resistance-associated substitutions (in the presence of rtM204V and rtL180M
substitutions) at Weeks 48, 96, 144, 192, and 240 was 0.2%, 0.5%, 1.2%, 1.2%,
and 1.2%, respectively.
Lamivudine-refractory subjects: Genotypic
evaluations were performed on evaluable samples from 190 subjects treated with
BARACLUDE for up to 96 weeks in studies of lamivudine-refractory HBV (AI463026,
AI463014, AI463015, and rollover study AI463901). By Week 96,
resistance-associated amino acid substitutions at rtS202, rtT184, or rtM250,
with or without rtI169 changes, in the presence of amino acid substitutions
rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M, rtL80V, or rtV173L/M emerged in the HBV from
22 subjects (22/190=12%), 16 of whom experienced virologic rebound ( ≥ 1
log10 increase above nadir) and 4 of whom were never suppressed < 300
copies/mL. The HBV from 4 of these subjects had entecavir resistance
substitutions at baseline and acquired further changes on entecavir treatment.
In addition to the 22 subjects, 3 subjects experienced virologic rebound with
the emergence of rtM204I/V and rtL180M, rtL80V, or rtV173L/M. For isolates from
subjects who experienced virologic rebound with the emergence of resistance
substitutions (n=19), the median fold-change in entecavir EC50 values from
reference was 19-fold at baseline and 106-fold at the time of virologic
rebound. For subjects who continued treatment beyond 48 weeks, 40% (31/77) had
HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL at end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
Lamivudine-refractory subjects (n=157) who failed to
achieve the study-defined complete response by Week 96 were offered continued
entecavir treatment. Subjects received 1 mg entecavir once daily for up to an
additional 144 weeks. Of these subjects, 80 subjects entered the long-term
follow-up study and were evaluated for entecavir resistance. By Weeks 144, 192,
and 240 (including end of dosing), 34% (27/80), 35% (28/80), and 36% (29/80),
respectively, attained HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL. The cumulative probability of
developing rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 entecavir resistance-associated
substitutions (in the presence of rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M
substitutions) at Weeks 48, 96, 144, 192, and 240 was 6.2%, 15%, 36.3%, 46.6%,
and 51.5%, respectively. The HBV of 6 subjects developed rtA181C/G/S/T amino
acid substitutions while receiving entecavir, and of these, 4 developed
entecavir resistance-associated substitutions at rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 and
1 had an rtT184S substitution at baseline. Of 7 subjects whose HBV had an
rtA181 substitution at baseline, 2 also had substitutions at rtT184, rtS202, or
rtM250 at baseline and another 2 developed them while on treatment with
entecavir.
Cross-resistance
Cross-resistance has been observed among HBV nucleoside
analogue inhibitors. In cell-based assays, entecavir had 8- to 30-fold less
inhibition of HBV DNA synthesis for HBV containing lamivudine and telbivudine
resistance substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M than for wild-type
HBV. Substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M, rtL80I/V, or rtV173L,
which are associated with lamivudine and telbivudine resistance, also confer
decreased phenotypic susceptibility to entecavir. The efficacy of entecavir
against HBV harboring adefovir resistance-associated substitutions has not been
established in clinical trials. HBV isolates from lamivudine-refractory
subjects failing entecavir therapy were susceptible in cell culture to adefovir
but remained resistant to lamivudine. Recombinant HBV genomes encoding adefovir
resistance-associated substitutions at either rtN236T or rtA181V had 0.3- and
1.1-fold shifts in susceptibility to entecavir in cell culture, respectively.
Clinical Studies
Outcomes In Adults
At 48 Weeks
The safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE in adults were
evaluated in three Phase 3 active-controlled trials. These studies included
1633 subjects 16 years of age or older with chronic hepatitis B virus infection
(serum HBsAg-positive for at least 6 months) accompanied by evidence of viral
replication (detectable serum HBV DNA, as measured by the bDNA hybridization or
PCR assay). Subjects had persistently elevated ALT levels at least 1.3 times
ULN and chronic inflammation on liver biopsy compatible with a diagnosis of
chronic viral hepatitis. The safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE were also
evaluated in a study of 191 HBV-infected subjects with decompensated liver
disease and in a study of 68 subjects co-infected with HBV and HIV.
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve Subjects with Compensated
Liver Disease
HBeAg-positive: Study AI463022 was a
multinational, randomized, double-blind study of BARACLUDE 0.5 mg once daily
versus lamivudine 100 mg once daily for a minimum of 52 weeks in 709 (of 715
randomized) nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects with chronic hepatitis B virus
infection, compensated liver disease, and detectable HBeAg. The mean age of
subjects was 35 years, 75% were male, 57% were Asian, 40% were Caucasian, and
13% had previously received interferon-α. At baseline, subjects had a mean
Knodell Necroinflammatory Score of 7.8, mean serum HBV DNA as measured by Roche
COBAS Amplicor® PCR assay was 9.66 log10 copies/mL, and mean serum ALT level
was 143 U/L. Paired, adequate liver biopsy samples were available for 89% of
subjects.
HBeAg-negative (anti-HBe-positive/HBV DNA-positive):
Study AI463027 was a multinational, randomized, double-blind study of BARACLUDE
0.5 mg once daily versus lamivudine 100 mg once daily for a minimum of 52 weeks
in 638 (of 648 randomized) nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects with
HBeAg-negative (HBeAb-positive) chronic hepatitis B virus infection and
compensated liver disease. The mean age of subjects was 44 years, 76% were
male, 39% were Asian, 58% were Caucasian, and 13% had previously received
interferon-α. At baseline, subjects had a mean Knodell Necroinflammatory
Score of 7.8, mean serum HBV DNA as measured by Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay
was 7.58 log10 copies/mL, and mean serum ALT level was 142 U/L. Paired,
adequate liver biopsy samples were available for 88% of subjects.
In Studies AI463022 and AI463027, BARACLUDE was superior
to lamivudine on the primary efficacy endpoint of Histologic Improvement,
defined as a 2-point or greater reduction in Knodell Necroinflammatory Score
with no worsening in Knodell Fibrosis Score at Week 48, and on the secondary
efficacy measures of reduction in viral load and ALT normalization. Histologic
Improvement and change in Ishak Fibrosis Score are shown in Table 8. Selected
virologic, biochemical, and serologic outcome measures are shown in Table 9.
Table 8: Histologic Improvement and Change in Ishak
Fibrosis Score at Week 48, Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïve Subjects in Studies
AI463022 and AI463027
|
Study AI463022 (HBeAg-Positive) |
Study AI463027 (HBeAg-Negative) |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg
n=314a |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=314a |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg
n=296a |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=287a |
Histologic Improvement (Knodell Scores) |
Improvementb |
72% |
62% |
70% |
61% |
No improvement |
21% |
24% |
19% |
26% |
Ishak Fibrosis Score |
Improvementc |
39% |
35% |
36% |
38% |
No change |
46% |
40% |
41% |
34% |
Worseningc |
8% |
10% |
12% |
15% |
Missing Week 48 biopsy |
7% |
14% |
10% |
13% |
aSubjects with evaluable baseline
histology(baseline Knodell Necroinflammatory Score ≥ 2).
b ≥ 2-pointdecrease in Knodell Necroinflammatory Score from baseline
with no worsening of the Knodell Fibrosis Score.
CFor IshakFibrosis Score, improvement = ≥ 1-point decrease from
baseline andworsening = ≥ 1-pointincreasefrom baseline. |
Table 9: Selected Virologic, Biochemical, and
Serologic Endpoints at Week 48, Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïve Subjects in Studies
AI463022 and AI463027
|
Study AI463022 (HBeAg-Positive) |
Study AI463027 (HBeAg-Negative) |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg
n=354 |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=355 |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg
n=325 |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=313 |
HBV DNAa |
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
67% |
36% |
90% |
72% |
Mean change from baseline (log10 copies/mL) |
-6.86 |
-5.39 |
-5.04 |
-4.53 |
ALT normalization ( < 1 x ULN) |
68% |
60% |
78% |
71% |
HBeAg seroconversion |
21% |
18% |
NA |
NA |
a Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay [lower limit
of quantification (LLOQ) = 300 copies/mL]. |
Histologic Improvement was independent of baseline levels
of HBV DNA or ALT.
Lamivudine-refractory Subjects with Compensated Liver
Disease
Study AI463026 was a multinational, randomized,
double-blind study of BARACLUDE in 286 (of 293 randomized) subjects with
lamivudine-refractory chronic hepatitis B virus infection and compensated liver
disease. Subjects receiving lamivudine at study entry either switched to
BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily (with neither a washout nor an overlap period) or
continued on lamivudine 100 mg for a minimum of 52 weeks. The mean age of
subjects was 39 years, 76% were male, 37% were Asian, 62% were Caucasian, and
52% had previously received interferon-α. The mean duration of prior
lamivudine therapy was 2.7 years, and 85% had lamivudine resistance
substitutions at baseline by an investigational line probe assay. At baseline,
subjects had a mean Knodell Necroinflammatory Score of 6.5, mean serum HBV DNA
as measured by Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay was 9.36 log10 copies/mL, and
mean serum ALT level was 128 U/L. Paired, adequate liver biopsy samples were
available for 87% of subjects.
BARACLUDE was superior to lamivudine on a primary
endpoint of Histologic Improvement (using the Knodell Score at Week 48). These
results and change in Ishak Fibrosis Score are shown in Table 10. Table 11
shows selected virologic, biochemical, and serologic endpoints.
Table 10: Histologic Improvement and Change in Ishak
Fibrosis Score at Week 48, Lamivudine-Refractory Subjects in Study AI463026
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg
n=124a |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=116a |
Histologic Improvement (Knodell Scores) |
Improvementb |
55% |
28% |
No improvement |
34% |
57% |
Ishak Fibrosis Score |
Improvementc |
34% |
16% |
No change |
44% |
42% |
Worseningc |
11% |
26% |
Missing Week 48 biopsy |
11% |
16% |
a Subjects with evaluable baseline histology
(baseline Knodell Necroinflammatory Score ≥ 2).
b ≥ 2-point decrease in Knodell Necroinflammatory Score from
baseline with no worsening of the Knodell Fibrosis Score.
c For Ishak Fibrosis Score, improvement = ≥ 1-point decrease
from baseline and worsening = ≥ 1-point increase from baseline. |
Table 11: Selected Virologic, Biochemical, and
Serologic Endpoints at Week 48, Lamivudine-Refractory Subjects in Study
AI463026
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg
n=141 |
Lamivudine 100 mg
n=145 |
HBV DNAa |
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
19% |
1% |
Mean change from baseline (log10 copies/mL) |
-5.11 |
-0.48 |
ALT normalization ( ≤ 1 x ULN) |
61% |
15% |
HBeAg seroconversion |
8% |
3% |
a Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay (LLOQ = 300
copies/mL). |
Histologic Improvement was independent of baseline levels
of HBV DNA or ALT.
Subjects with Decompensated Liver Disease
Study AI463048 was a randomized, open-label study of
BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily versus adefovir dipivoxil 10 mg once daily in 191 (of
195 randomized) adult subjects with HBeAg-positive or -negative chronic HBV
infection and evidence of hepatic decompensation, defined as a Child-Turcotte-Pugh
(CTP) score of 7 or higher. Subjects were either HBV-treatment-naïve or
previously treated, predominantly with lamivudine or interferon-α.
In Study AI463048, 100 subjects were randomized to
treatment with BARACLUDE and 91 subjects to treatment with adefovir dipivoxil.
Two subjects randomized to treatment with adefovir dipivoxil actually received
treatment with BARACLUDE for the duration of the study. The mean age of
subjects was 52 years, 74% were male, 54% were Asian, 33% were Caucasian, and
5% were Black/African American. At baseline, subjects had a mean serum HBV DNA
by PCR of 7.83 log10 copies/mL and mean ALT level of 100 U/L; 54% of subjects
were HBeAg-positive; 35% had genotypic evidence of lamivudine resistance. The
baseline mean CTP score was 8.6. Results for selected study endpoints at Week
48 are shown in Table 12.
Table 12: Selected Endpoints at Week 48, Subjects with
Decompensated Liver Disease, Study AI463048
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg
n=100a |
Adefovir Dipivoxil 10 mg
n=91a |
HBV DNAb |
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
57% |
20% |
Stable or improved CTP scorec |
61% |
67% |
HBsAg loss |
5% |
0 |
Normalization of ALT ( < 1 x ULN)d |
49/78 (63%) |
33/71 (46%) |
a Endpoints were analyzed using
intention-to-treat (ITT) method, treated subjects as randomized.
b Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay (LLOQ = 300 copies/mL).
c Defined as decrease or no change from baseline in CTP score.
d Denominator is subjects with abnormal values at baseline.
ULN=upper limit of normal. |
Subjects Co-infected with HIV and HBV
Study AI463038 was a randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled study of BARACLUDE versus placebo in 68 subjects co-infected
with HIV and HBV who experienced recurrence of HBV viremia while receiving a
lamivudine-containing highly active antiretroviral (HAART) regimen. Subjects
continued their lamivudine-containing HAART regimen (lamivudine dose 300
mg/day) and were assigned to add either BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily (51 subjects)
or placebo (17 subjects) for 24 weeks followed by an open-label phase for an
additional 24 weeks where all subjects received BARACLUDE. At baseline,
subjects had a mean serum HBV DNA level by PCR of 9.13 log10 copies/mL.
Ninety-nine percent of subjects were HBeAg-positive at baseline, with a mean
baseline ALT level of 71.5 U/L. Median HIV RNA level remained stable at
approximately 2 log10 copies/mL through 24 weeks of blinded therapy. Virologic
and biochemical endpoints at Week 24 are shown in Table 13. There are no data
in patients with HIV/HBV co-infection who have not received prior lamivudine
therapy. BARACLUDE has not been evaluated in HIV/HBV co-infected patients who
were not simultaneously receiving effective HIV treatment [see WARNINGS AND
PRECAUTIONS].
Table 13: Virologic and Biochemical Endpoints at Week
24, Study AI463038
|
BARACLUDE 1 mga
n=51 |
Placeboa
n=17 |
HBV DNAb |
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
6% |
0 |
Mean change from baseline (log10 copies/mL) |
-3.65 |
+0.11 |
ALT normalization ( < 1 x ULN) |
34%c |
8%c |
a All subjects also received a
lamivudine-containing HAART regimen.
b Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay (LLOQ = 300 copies/mL).
c Percentage of subjects with abnormal ALT ( > 1 Ã ULN) at baseline
who achieved ALT normalization (n=35 for BARACLUDE and n=12 for placebo). |
For subjects originally assigned to BARACLUDE, at the end
of the open-label phase (Week 48), 8% of subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL
by PCR, the mean change from baseline HBV DNA by PCR was -4.20 log10
copies/mL, and 37% of subjects with abnormal ALT at baseline had ALT
normalization ( ≤ 1 Ã ULN).
Beyond 48 Weeks
The optimal duration of therapy with BARACLUDE is
unknown. According to protocol-mandated criteria in the Phase 3 clinical
trials, subjects discontinued BARACLUDE or lamivudine treatment after 52 weeks
according to a definition of response based on HBV virologic suppression
( < 0.7 MEq/mL by bDNA assay) and loss of HBeAg (in HBeAg-positive subjects)
or ALT < 1.25 Ã ULN (in HBeAg-negative subjects) at Week 48. Subjects who
achieved virologic suppression but did not have serologic response
(HBeAg-positive) or did not achieve ALT < 1.25 Ã ULN (HBeAg-negative)
continued blinded dosing through 96 weeks or until the response criteria were
met. These protocol-specified subject management guidelines are not intended as
guidance for clinical practice.
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve Subjects
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-positive subjects
(Study AI463022), 243 (69%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 164 (46%)
lamivudine-treated subjects continued blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. Of
those continuing blinded treatment in Year 2, 180 (74%) BARACLUDE subjects and
60 (37%) lamivudine subjects achieved HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR at the
end of dosing (up to 96 weeks). 193 (79%) BARACLUDE subjects achieved ALT
≤ 1 Ã ULN compared to 112 (68%) lamivudine subjects, and HBeAg
seroconversion occurred in 26 (11%) BARACLUDE subjects and 20 (12%) lamivudine
subjects.
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-positive
subjects, 74 (21%) BARACLUDE subjects and 67 (19%) lamivudine subjects met the
definition of response at Week 48, discontinued study drugs, and were followed
off treatment for 24 weeks. Among BARACLUDE responders, 26 (35%) subjects had
HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 55 (74%) subjects had ALT ≤ 1 Ã ULN, and 56
(76%) subjects sustained HBeAg seroconversion at the end of follow-up. Among
lamivudine responders, 20 (30%) subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 41
(61%) subjects had ALT ≤ 1 Ã ULN, and 47 (70%) subjects sustained HBeAg
seroconversion at the end of follow-up.
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-negative subjects
(Study AI463027), 26 (8%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 28 (9%)
lamivudine-treated subjects continued blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. In
this small cohort continuing treatment in Year 2, 22 BARACLUDE and 16
lamivudine subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR, and 7 and 6 subjects,
respectively, had ALT ≤ 1 Ã ULN at the end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-negative
subjects, 275 (85%) BARACLUDE subjects and 245 (78%) lamivudine subjects met
the definition of response at Week 48, discontinued study drugs, and were
followed off treatment for 24 weeks. In this cohort, very few subjects in each
treatment arm had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR at the end of follow-up. At
the end of follow-up, 126 (46%) BARACLUDE subjects and 84 (34%) lamivudine
subjects had ALT ≤ 1 Ã ULN.
Lamivudine-refractory Subjects
Among lamivudine-refractory subjects (Study AI463026), 77
(55%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 3 (2%) lamivudine subjects continued
blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. In this cohort of BARACLUDE subjects, 31
(40%) subjects achieved HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 62 (81%) subjects had ALT
≤ 1 Ã ULN, and 8 (10%) subjects demonstrated HBeAg seroconversion at the
end of dosing.
Outcomes In Pediatric Subjects
The pharmacokinetics, safety and antiviral activity of
BARACLUDE in pediatric subjects were initially assessed in Study AI463028.
Twenty-four treatment-naïve and 19 lamivudine-experienced HBeAg-positive
pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years of age with compensated CHB and elevated
ALT were treated with BARACLUDE 0.015 mg/kg (up to 0.5 mg) or 0.03 mg/kg (up to
1 mg) once daily. Fifty-eight percent (14/24) of treatment-naïve subjects and
47% (9/19) of lamivudine-experienced subjects achieved HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL at
Week 48 and ALT normalized in 83% (20/24) of treatment-naïve and 95% (18/19) of
lamivudine-experienced subjects.
Safety and antiviral efficacy were confirmed in Study
AI463189, an ongoing study of BARACLUDE among 180
nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years
of age with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B infection, compensated liver
disease, and elevated ALT. Subjects were randomized 2:1 to receive blinded
treatment with BARACLUDE 0.015 mg/kg up to 0.5 mg/day (N=120) or placebo (N=60).
The randomization was stratified by age group (2 to 6 years; > 6 to 12 years;
and > 12 to < 18 years). Baseline demographics and HBV disease
characteristics were comparable between the 2 treatment arms and across age
cohorts. At study entry, the mean HBV DNA was 8.1 log10 IU/mL and mean ALT was
103 U/L. The primary efficacy endpoint was a composite of HBeAg seroconversion
and serum HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL at Week 48.assessed in the first 123 subjects
reaching 48 weeks of blinded treatment. Twenty-four percent (20/82) of subjects
in the BARACLUDE-treated group and 2% (1/41) of subjects in the placebo-treated
group met the primary endpoint. Forty-six percent (38/82) of BARACLUDE-treated
subjects and 2% (1/41) of placebo-treated subjects achieved HBV DNA < 50
IU/mL at Week 48. ALT normalization occurred in 67% (55/82) of
BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 22% (9/41) of placebo-treated subjects; 24%
(20/82) of BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 12% (5/41) of placebo-treated
subjects had HBeAg seroconversion.