| Literature DB >> 21667042 |
J E Arends1, A I M Hoepelman, N M Nanlohy, F J P Höppener, K R Hirsch, J G Park, D van Baarle.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is characterized by increased rates of apoptotic hepatocytes and activated caspases have been shown in HCV-infected patients. GS-9450, a novel caspase-inhibitor has demonstrated hepatoprotective activity in fibrosis/apoptosis animal models. This study evaluated the effects of GS-9450 on peripheral T-cell apoptosis in chronic HCV-infected patients. As sub study of the GS-US-227-0102, a double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2a trial evaluating the safety and tolerability of GS-9450, apoptosis of peripheral CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells was measured using activated caspase-3, activated caspase-8 and CD95 (Fas). Blood samples were drawn at baseline, day 14 after therapy and at 5 weeks off-treatment follow-up in the first cohort of 10 mg. In contrast to the placebo-treated patients, GS-9450 caused a median of 46% decrease in ALT-values from baseline to day 14 in all treated patients (median of 118-64 U/l) rising again to a median of 140 U/l (19%) at 5 weeks off-treatment follow-up. In GS9450-treated patients, during treatment and follow-up, percentages of activated caspase-3+ and caspase-8 expression tended to decrease, in contrast to placebo-treated patients. Interestingly, compared to healthy controls, higher percentages of caspase-3 and caspase-8 positive CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells were demonstrated in HCV-infected patients at baseline. Decreased ALT-values were observed in all HCV-infected patients during treatment with low dose of the caspase-inhibitor GS-9450 accompanied by a lower expression of caspase-3 and -8 on peripheral T-cells. Furthermore, at baseline percentages of activated caspase-3, activated caspase-8 and CD95+ T-cells were higher in chronic HCV-infected patients compared to healthy controls.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21667042 PMCID: PMC3152720 DOI: 10.1007/s10495-011-0620-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Apoptosis ISSN: 1360-8185 Impact factor: 4.677
Characteristics of the patients treated with either GS-9450 or placebo
| Patient | Age (years) | Sex | HCV-RNA (IU/ml) | Genotype | ALAT (U/l) | Side-effects | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1001 | 49 | Male | 438,000 | 1b | 121 | Dizziness and nausea | 10 mg |
| 1002 | 56 | Female | 1,200,000 | 4a/4c/4d | 109 | Fatigue, somnolence and feeling hot | 10 mg |
| 1003 | 43 | Male | 39,000 | 4a/4c/4d | 178 | Hyperhidrosis, affect lability, flank pain and tooth infection | Placebo |
| 1004 | 51 | Female | 894,000 | 3a | 209 | Headache, palpitations, dry skin, flank pain and parosmia | 10 mg |
| 1005 | 40 | Male | 196,000 | 1a | 171 | Vomiting, affect lability, nausea, headache, sore throat, rhinitis and fatigue | 10 mg |
| 1006 | 40 | Male | 380,000 | 3a | 115 | Affect lability | 10 mg |
| 1007 | 54 | Male | 1,500 | 1a/1b | 65 | Headache and gastro-enteritis | 10 mg |
| 1008 | 56 | Male | 1,350,000 | 1a | 70 | Nausea, headache, fatigue and back pain | Placebo |
| Median (IQR) | 50 (51–56) | NA | 409,000 (78,250–1,124,000) | NA | 118 (80–176) | NA | NA |
NA not applicable
Fig. 1Longitudinal analysis of ALT and HCV-RNA during therapy. Changes (%) in plasma ALT (a) and change in HCV-RNA values (b) from baseline during the duration of the study. On the y-axis are the % change in ALT (U/l) and the ΔHCV-RNA (log10 IU/ml) depicted. On the x-axis the weeks of the study are shown. Patients treated with the caspase-inhibitor GS-9450 are represented by the solid black lines and black dots and those receiving placebo are represented by the black dotted lines and open squares
Fig. 2Flow cytometry analysis of caspase-3 and CD95 expression. a Representation of a scatter plot defining a patient’s CD4+ and CD8+ populations on the left. The middle and right plots represent expression of activated caspase-3 and CD95 in a healthy control’s CD8+ T-cells (x-axis). b Flow cytometry dot plot showing a longitudinal expression of activated caspase-3 and CD95 in a chronic HCV-infected patient treated with the caspase-inhibitor GS-9450. The upper row depicts the caspase-3 expression while the lower row shows the CD95 expression (y-axis). From left to right, the study weeks 0, 2 and 7 are depicted
Fig. 3Baseline expression of activated caspase-3 and CD95 in peripheral T-cells. Comparison of activated caspase-3 (a), caspase-8 (b) and CD95 (c) expression on peripheral T-cells between patients in the GS-9450 study at baseline and healthy controls (HC). On the y-axis the percentages of either activated caspase-3, caspase-8 or CD95 are depicted. The black dots represent CD4 T-cells and the black squares the CD8 T-cells. Of 1 patient FACS analysis of CD8+ T-cells failed resulting in 7 patients being evaluated. CD4+ T-cells of 2 HC were unavailable for caspase-8 analysis
Fig. 4Longitudinal analysis of activated caspase-3, caspase-8 and CD95 expression Longitudinal analysis of CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells expressing activated caspase-3 (a, b), caspase-8 (c, d) and CD95 (e, f) during therapy. On the y-axis percentages of either activated caspase-3, caspase-8 or CD95 are shown and on the x-axis the weeks of the study are depicted. The black solid lines represent the patients receiving GS-9450 and the black dotted lines represent those taking placebo. One patient’s CD8+ T-cells at baseline (see Fig. 3) and another patient’s CD8+ T-cells at week 7 were not available for analysis