Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Pill burden and HCV Direct Acting Antivirals....

While Victrelis and Incivek are major game changing drugs in the treatment of Hepatitis C, it’s critical to remember that adherence to the entire regimen, not just the protease inhibitor, is essential to achieving and SVR and avoiding resistance.

NEW YORK, NY — This past Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first of a new generation of chronic hepatitis C drugs, known as protease inhibitors. The drug, VICTRELIS® (boceprevir), from Merck & Co., has been shown to increase the rate of sustained viral response and shorten treatment times when used in combination with the current standard of care, ribavirin and pegylated alpha interferon, in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. Vertex Pharmaceuticals is seeking approval to market a similar drug, INCIVEK® (telaprevir).

The addition of protease inhibitors to the current standard of care puts a new and significantly greater treatment burden on the patient. Under most treatment regimens, pegylated alpha-interferon is injected once a week, and ribavirin is taken twice a day, for a total of five or six pills when prescribed in generic form. VICTRELIS is taken three times a day, for a total of 12 pills. INCIVEK is also taken three times a day, for a total of 6 pills. A treatment cycle lasting 48 weeks could mean that the patient is responsible for taking over 5,700 pills on schedule for the entire regimen. If the patient does not adhere to the prescribed regimen, the risk of treatment failure or relapse is increased (Reddy KR, Shiffman ML, Morgan TR, et al. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2007;5:124-129). Furthermore, because of the direct antiviral mechanism of protease inhibitors, missed doses of a protease inhibitor could lead to viral resistance (Weiss, et al. Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2009; 30:14-27).

Kadmon Pharmaceuticals' proprietary RIBASPHERE® RIBAPAK® (ribavirin, USP) is the only ribavirin available in a daily, two-pill compliance package designed to enhance therapy adherence. With RIBASPHERE RIBAPAK, the patient takes only two pills each day -- one in the morning and one at night -- reducing the total ribavirin pill burden by up to 66 percent over a 48 week course of treatment. RIBASPHERE RIBAPAK packaging is clearly marked for seven days of AM and PM dosing, and the completion of a compliance pack reminds the patient to administer their accompanying weekly interferon therapy. Kadmon is also offering patients a daily therapy diary to help keep track of their treatment schedule.

"Maintaining treatment adherence under the burden of a triple therapy combination will require significantly greater vigilance from the patient," said Bruce R. Bacon, M.D., professor of internal medicine at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine, and a clinical investigator for VICTRELIS. "With only one chance at success with this therapeutic approach, RIBASPHERE RIBAPAK represents an invaluable insurance policy for a treatment combination which could transform the enormous public health risks of hepatitis C."

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