BACKGROUND: Telaprevir and boceprevir are highly selective hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4A proteaseinhibitors in phase 3 development. Viral breakthrough during mono- and triple-therapies with PEG-interferon and ribavirin and relapse is associated with resistance. OBJECTIVES: Potential persistence of resistance mutations during long-term follow-up should be analyzed. STUDY DESIGN: Clonal sequence analysis of the NS3-protease gene was performed at long-term follow-up in HCV genotyp-1 infected patients who received telaprevir or boceprevir within phase-1b studies for comparison with resistant variants present directly after the end-of-treatment. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 4.2 years in 28 of 82 patients HCV-RNA was still detectable. Resistance variants were detected in two of 14 telaprevir- and in four of 14 boceprevir-treated patients. For telaprevir patients two low-level (V36M, V36A) and one high-level (A156T) mutation associated with resistance were detected at low frequencies (4-9% of the clones). In five boceprevir-treated patients four low level mutations (V36A, T54A/S, V55A) were observed at low frequencies (1-10%) while in one patient additionally a combined variant (T54S+R155K) was detected at 94%. Presence of resistant variants at long-term follow-up was not predictable by variants detected at the end-of-treatment. In one patient a V55A variant which was dominant already at baseline was still detectable at long-term follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: In the majority of patients after short-term treatment with telaprevir or boceprevir wild-type NS3-protease isolates are detectable by clonal sequencing at long-term follow-up. Detectable resistance mutations in single patients are not predictable by initial frequencies of variants.
BACKGROUND:Telaprevir and boceprevir are highly selective hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3/4A proteaseinhibitors in phase 3 development. Viral breakthrough during mono- and triple-therapies with PEG-interferon and ribavirin and relapse is associated with resistance. OBJECTIVES: Potential persistence of resistance mutations during long-term follow-up should be analyzed. STUDY DESIGN: Clonal sequence analysis of the NS3-protease gene was performed at long-term follow-up in HCV genotyp-1 infectedpatients who received telaprevir or boceprevir within phase-1b studies for comparison with resistant variants present directly after the end-of-treatment. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 4.2 years in 28 of 82 patientsHCV-RNA was still detectable. Resistance variants were detected in two of 14 telaprevir- and in four of 14 boceprevir-treated patients. For telaprevirpatients two low-level (V36M, V36A) and one high-level (A156T) mutation associated with resistance were detected at low frequencies (4-9% of the clones). In five boceprevir-treated patients four low level mutations (V36A, T54A/S, V55A) were observed at low frequencies (1-10%) while in one patient additionally a combined variant (T54S+R155K) was detected at 94%. Presence of resistant variants at long-term follow-up was not predictable by variants detected at the end-of-treatment. In one patient a V55A variant which was dominant already at baseline was still detectable at long-term follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: In the majority of patients after short-term treatment with telaprevir or boceprevir wild-type NS3-protease isolates are detectable by clonal sequencing at long-term follow-up. Detectable resistance mutations in single patients are not predictable by initial frequencies of variants.
Authors: Dominique Larrey; Ansgar W Lohse; Christian Trepo; Jean-Pierre Bronowicki; Keikawus Arastéh; Marc Bourlière; Jose Luis Calleja; Jerry O Stern; Gerhard Nehmiz; Nasri Abdallah; Kristi L Berger; Martin Marquis; Jürgen Steffgen; George Kukolj Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother Date: 2013-07-15 Impact factor: 5.191
Authors: Nadezhda T Doncheva; Francisco S Domingues; David R McGivern; Tetsuro Shimakami; Stefan Zeuzem; Thomas Lengauer; Christian M Lange; Mario Albrecht; Christoph Welsch Journal: J Mol Biol Date: 2019-04-30 Impact factor: 5.469
Authors: Hilde M van der Schaar; Pieter Leyssen; Hendrik J Thibaut; Armando de Palma; Lonneke van der Linden; Kjerstin H W Lanke; Céline Lacroix; Erik Verbeken; Katja Conrath; Angus M Macleod; Dale R Mitchell; Nicholas J Palmer; Hervé van de Poël; Martin Andrews; Johan Neyts; Frank J M van Kuppeveld Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother Date: 2013-07-29 Impact factor: 5.191