Literature DB >> 25516102

In Vitro Assessment of Re-treatment Options for Patients with Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 1b Infection Resistant to Daclatasvir Plus Asunaprevir.

Jacques Friborg1, Nannan Zhou, Zhou Han, Xiaoyan Yang, Paul Falk, Patricia Mendez, Fiona McPhee.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Daclatasvir is a non-structural protein 5A (NS5A) inhibitor with activity against hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes 1-6 in vitro, and asunaprevir is a non-structural protein 3 (NS3) protease inhibitor with activity against genotypes 1, 4, 5, and 6. This study evaluates potential options for the re-treatment of HCV genotype 1b-infected patients who have failed combination therapy with daclatasvir plus asunaprevir.
METHODS: The antiviral activity of drug combination regimens in HCV subgenomic replicon cell lines representing genotype 1b (Con1 strain) wild-type or a variant with specific NS5A and NS3 amino acid substitutions conferring resistance to daclatasvir and asunaprevir were compared using replicon elimination assays. Drug concentrations representing multiple 50% effective concentrations (EC50) derived in vitro and trough plasma concentrations observed in a clinical setting were utilized.
RESULTS: At multiple EC50 values of each drug (3×, 10×, and 30× EC50), combinations of daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir, sofosbuvir plus ledipasvir, sofosbuvir plus simeprevir, and sofosbuvir plus either a next-generation NS3 or NS5A inhibitor demonstrated comparable activity in wild-type and daclatasvir/asunaprevir-resistant cell lines. At clinically relevant drug trough concentrations, combination regimens of daclatasvir plus asunaprevir plus beclabuvirribavirin), and daclatasvir plus asunaprevir plus beclabuvir plus sofosbuvir efficiently cleared daclatasvir + asunaprevir-resistant replicons from cells within 5 days of treatment.
CONCLUSION: Our in vitro results highlight a number of potential all-oral treatment options for patients who do not achieve a sustained virologic response following therapy with daclatasvir plus asunaprevir. These results require further evaluation in clinical studies.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 25516102      PMCID: PMC4363215          DOI: 10.1007/s40121-014-0052-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Dis Ther        ISSN: 2193-6382


Introduction

Current options for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection are evolving rapidly with the recent approval of several direct-acting antiviral (DAA) agents. Daclatasvir (DCV) is a non-structural protein 5A (NS5A) inhibitor with activity against HCV genotypes 1–6 in vitro [1]. Asunaprevir (ASV) is a non-structural protein 3 (NS3) protease inhibitor with activity against genotypes 1, 4, 5, and 6 [2]. The all-oral, interferon-free combination of DCV + ASV provided high rates of sustained virologic response and was well tolerated in genotype 1b-infected patients in global and Japanese Phase III studies [3, 4]. Among genotype 1b-infected patients who experience virologic escape with DCV + ASV, the most common resistance-associated variants (RAVs) detected together after HCV RNA rebound occur at NS5A positions L31 and Y93, and NS3 position D168. Here, we aim to evaluate potential re-treatment options for genotype 1b-infected patients who have previously failed combination therapy with DCV + ASV using the in vitro HCV replicon system.

Methods

HCV subgenomic replicon cell lines representing genotype 1b (Con1 strain) wild-type or a variant with specific NS5A and NS3 amino acid substitutions conferring resistance to DCV and ASV (NS5A-L31M-Y93H and NS3-D168V, respectively) were established as previously described [5]. Peginterferon alfa-2a (PEGASYS®) was purchased from Hoffman–La Roche, Inc. (Nutley, NJ, USA) and ribavirin (RBV) was purchased from Sigma–Aldrich Co. (St. Louis, MO, USA). Simeprevir (SMV; NS3 inhibitor), sofosbuvir (SOF; NS5B inhibitor), and ledipasvir (LDV; NS5A inhibitor) were synthesized at Bristol-Myers Squibb, and have been described previously [6-8]. DCV, ASV, beclabuvir (BCV; BMS-791325; NS5B thumb 1 inhibitor), BMS-1 (next-generation NS5A inhibitor), and BMS-2 (next-generation NS3 inhibitor) were also synthesized at Bristol-Myers Squibb. The antiviral activities of the individual compounds and combination regimens were assessed using phenotypic analyses (to determine 50% effective concentrations [EC50]) and replicon elimination assays, as described previously [9, 10]. The ability of drug combinations to clear replicons was evaluated using two different approaches. First, wild-type and DCV + ASV-resistant replicon cell lines with a neo-selectable marker were incubated without G418 for 1, 3, 7, 11 or 14 days with multiples of EC50 values for each drug (3×, 10×, and 30 × EC50) determined against wild-type replicon. Combination regimens of DCV + ASV, DCV + SOF, SOF + LDV, SOF + SMV, DCV + ASV + BCV and DCV + ASV + BCV + SOF were assessed initially using multiple EC50 values of each agent estimated against wild-type replicon. RBV was examined at 1 × EC50 concentration, tenfold below any observed cell toxicity. In another approach, replicon cell lines were incubated without G418 for 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 days with drug concentrations representing trough plasma concentrations (Ctrough) observed in a clinical setting. In both approaches, the drug regimen was removed at the end of the incubation period and the cell cultures were further maintained for 2 weeks in growth medium supplemented with G418 (0.5 mg/mL) to monitor replicon elimination. Surviving replicon colonies were fixed and stained with crystal violet as described previously [10].

Results

Phenotypic analyses indicated that DCV + ASV-resistant replicon cell lines conferred high levels of resistance to DCV, LDV, ASV and SMV, relative to the wild-type reference replicon (Table 1). In contrast, EC50 values for BCV, peginterferon alfa, RBV and SOF were similar in both cell lines. The next-generation NS5A (BMS-1) and NS3 (BMS-2) protease inhibitors demonstrated improved potency (39-fold and 6-fold reduction in anti-HCV activity, respectively, relative to wild type) in the DCV + ASV-resistant replicon when compared to the activities of DCV and ASV (24,500-fold and 201-fold reduction in anti-HCV activity, respectively). HCV replicon elimination results for days 3, 7 and 14 are shown in Fig. 1 (complete results for Days 1, 3, 7, 11 and 14 are provided in Supplementary Fig. 1). With 14 days of treatment, two-DAA regimens of DCV + ASV, DCV + SOF, SOF + LDV and SOF + SMV demonstrated comparable activity in eliminating wild-type replicons at 10 × EC50 values (Fig. 1a). The three-DAA regimen of DCV + ASV + BCV and the four-DAA regimen of DCV + ASV + BCV + SOF demonstrated increased efficacy with complete clearance of wild-type replicons observed with the four-DAA regimen by day 11 at 3 × EC50 values. Similar results were observed with SOF in combination with either the next-generation NS3 protease inhibitor or a next-generation NS5A inhibitor (Supplementary Fig. 1). As expected, DCV + ASV did not eliminate replicons harboring NS5A-L31M-Y93H and NS3-D168V, which confer reduced susceptibilities to both compounds (Fig. 1b). The elimination of replicons by DCV + SOF, SOF + LDV, SOF + SMV, and SOF + next-generation NS3 protease or NS5A inhibitor was comparable in wild-type and DCV + ASV-resistant cell lines. The combination of DCV + ASV + BCV showed reduced activity against DCV + ASV-resistant replicons compared with wild type. To further evaluate the use of these combination regimens, replicon elimination assays were performed at drug concentrations based on clinically relevant Ctrough concentrations (Table 1). Monotherapy at Ctrough concentrations demonstrated the high potency of the NS5A inhibitors, DCV and LDV, compared with the other agents tested (Fig. 2a). With EC50 values in the picomolar range that are well below the high plasma Ctrough concentrations obtained in clinical settings, treatment with these DAAs was sufficient in eliminating wild-type replicons within 7 days. Conversely, none of the NS5A inhibitors and NS3 protease inhibitors tested at Ctrough concentrations were able to eliminate DCV + ASV-resistant replicons (Fig. 2b). Moreover, SOF as a single agent exhibited low clearance activity in this assay. Although the Ctrough of SOF (1,100 nM) is higher than the EC50 (147 nM), it is below the estimated SOF EC90 (1,230 nM). Furthermore, the metabolism and efficiency of phosphorylation of SOF appear to be lower in hepatoma cell lines compared with primary hepatocytes. An analysis of the mechanism of activation of SOF and its analogs has demonstrated that some enzymes in these metabolic pathways, such as CES1, are expressed at significantly lower levels in Huh7 cells compared with primary hepatocytes [11]; thus, the anti-HCV activity of SOF in replicon-based assays may not correlate with its activity in vivo. Similar instances of low activity with nucleosides in hepatoma-derived Huh7 cells harboring replicons have been reported [12, 13]. However, SOF has a high barrier to resistance and has demonstrated efficacy in combination regimens. For wild-type replicons, all DAA combinations at Ctrough concentrations that included an NS5A inhibitor eliminated replicons with high efficiency (Fig. 2c). In comparison, elimination of wild-type replicons was less efficient with SOF + SMV and peginterferon alfa-based combinations (Fig. 2c and Supplementary Fig. 2). Complete elimination of DCV + ASV-resistant replicons occurred by day 7 with the three-DAA regimen (DCV + ASV + BCV) ± RBV or with the four-DAA regimen (DCV + ASV + BCV + SOF) (Fig. 2d). Replicon elimination profiles were comparable in wild-type and DCV + ASV-resistant cell lines following treatment with peginterferon alfa/RBV-based regimens combined with SOF or BCV, or the DAA-only combination of SOF with a next-generation NS3 protease inhibitor (Supplementary Fig. 2).
Table 1

Cell potency of compounds against genotype 1b wild-type (Con1) and DCV + ASV-resistant replicons and Ctrough concentration observed in clinical settings

AgentEC50 (±SD), nM*Ctrough, nM*
GT 1b (Con1) repliconGT 1b NS3-D168V, NS5A-L31M-Y93HFold change
Asunaprevir2.0 ± 0.4401 ± 10220140
Daclatasvir0.002 ± 0.00149 ± 924,500250
Beclabuvir3.4 ± 0.24.0 ± 0.71500
Ledipasvir0.002 ± 0.0004131 ± 4065,500120 [20]
Sofosbuvir147 ± 27102 ± 1211,100
Simeprevir1.9 ± 0.16,296 ± 2033,3132,200
Next-gen NS5A (BMS-1)0.010 ± 0.0020.354 ± 0.0539
Next-gen NS3 PI (BMS-2)0.7 ± 0.14.1 ± 0.66100
Ribavirin*8.1 ± 1.27.8 ± 5.712.5 [21]
Peginterferon alfa*1.2 ± 0.22.6 ± 0.6215 [22]

C trough plasma concentrations, EC 50% effective concentrations, GT genotype, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, PI protease inhibitor, SD standard deviation

* All EC50 and Ctrough concentrations are nM, except for ribavirin (µg/mL) and peginterferon alfa (ng/mL)

† BMS data on file

‡ Estimated value

Fig. 1

HCV replicon elimination assays using a wild-type GT1b and b DCV + ASV-resistant (NS3-D168V, NS5A-L31M-Y93H) replicon cell lines treated with indicated combination regimens at multiple EC50 values for each agent (determined in wild-type replicon). Data for Days 3, 7, and 14 are shown; complete data are shown in Supplementary Fig. 1. ASV asunaprevir, BCV beclabuvir, DCV daclatasvir, GT genotype, HCV hepatitis C virus, LDV ledipasvir, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, SMV simeprevir, SOF sofosbuvir

Fig. 2

HCV replicon elimination assays with single agents and combination regimens using concentrations representing Ctrough values observed in a clinical setting in wild-type GT-1b (a and c) and DCV + ASV-resistant (NS3-D168V, NS5A-L31M-Y93H) replicon cell lines (b and d). Alfa peginterferon alfa, ASV asunaprevir, BCV beclabuvir, C trough plasma concentrations, DCV daclatasvir, DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide, GT genotype, HCV hepatitis C virus, LDV ledipasvir, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, RBV ribavirin, SMV simeprevir, SOF sofosbuvir

Cell potency of compounds against genotype 1b wild-type (Con1) and DCV + ASV-resistant replicons and Ctrough concentration observed in clinical settings C trough plasma concentrations, EC 50% effective concentrations, GT genotype, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, PI protease inhibitor, SD standard deviation * All EC50 and Ctrough concentrations are nM, except for ribavirin (µg/mL) and peginterferon alfa (ng/mL) † BMS data on file ‡ Estimated value HCV replicon elimination assays using a wild-type GT1b and b DCV + ASV-resistant (NS3-D168V, NS5A-L31M-Y93H) replicon cell lines treated with indicated combination regimens at multiple EC50 values for each agent (determined in wild-type replicon). Data for Days 3, 7, and 14 are shown; complete data are shown in Supplementary Fig. 1. ASV asunaprevir, BCV beclabuvir, DCV daclatasvir, GT genotype, HCV hepatitis C virus, LDV ledipasvir, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, SMV simeprevir, SOF sofosbuvir HCV replicon elimination assays with single agents and combination regimens using concentrations representing Ctrough values observed in a clinical setting in wild-type GT-1b (a and c) and DCV + ASV-resistant (NS3-D168V, NS5A-L31M-Y93H) replicon cell lines (b and d). Alfa peginterferon alfa, ASV asunaprevir, BCV beclabuvir, C trough plasma concentrations, DCV daclatasvir, DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide, GT genotype, HCV hepatitis C virus, LDV ledipasvir, NS3 non-structural protein 3, NS5A non-structural protein 5A, RBV ribavirin, SMV simeprevir, SOF sofosbuvir

Discussion

In summary, these in vitro experiments demonstrate that there are a number of potential alternate all-oral DAA treatment options available for genotype 1b-infected patients who experience virologic escape during DCV + ASV therapy. These include the three-DAA regimen of DCV + ASV + BCV combined with RBV or SOF, or other SOF-based combinations. Furthermore, the results suggest that a peginterferon alfa/RBV-based regimen with agents targeting NS5B could also provide effective therapy for these patients. Results from this in vitro study will require further evaluation in clinical studies. The efficacy of re-treating patients who have failed prior boceprevir or telaprevir therapy with multiple DAAs (DCV + SOF, SOF + LDV) has already been demonstrated, with sustained virologic response rates of up to 99% achieved with 24 weeks of treatment [14, 15]. However, studies on the treatment of patients with resistance to multiple DAAs are more limited; existing data suggest that effective options are available, and that it may also be possible to re-treat patients with DAAs from the same drug class when combining with additional agents targeting complementary mechanisms of action [16-19].

Conclusion

Our in vitro results indicate that re-treatment with DAAs of the same class plus additional DAAs targeting different mechanisms of action resulted in clearance of replicons similar to wild-type replicons. This was observed when DCV + ASV-resistant replicons were treated with DCV + SOF, SOF + LDV and DCV + ASV + BCV + SOF. Re-treatment data in the clinic are currently minimal; however, patients have been successfully retreated with the same DAAs plus the addition of another agent. Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material. Supplementary material 1 (PDF 1466 kb) Supplementary material 2 (PDF 323 kb)
  19 in total

1.  Resistance analysis of the hepatitis C virus NS3 protease inhibitor asunaprevir.

Authors:  Fiona McPhee; Jacques Friborg; Steven Levine; Chaoqun Chen; Paul Falk; Fei Yu; Dennis Hernandez; Min S Lee; Susan Chaniewski; Amy K Sheaffer; Claudio Pasquinelli
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-04-16       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  High body mass index is an independent risk factor for nonresponse to antiviral treatment in chronic hepatitis C.

Authors:  Brian L Bressler; Maha Guindi; George Tomlinson; Jenny Heathcote
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 17.425

3.  Preclinical Profile and Characterization of the Hepatitis C Virus NS3 Protease Inhibitor Asunaprevir (BMS-650032).

Authors:  Fiona McPhee; Amy K Sheaffer; Jacques Friborg; Dennis Hernandez; Paul Falk; Guangzhi Zhai; Steven Levine; Susan Chaniewski; Fei Yu; Diana Barry; Chaoqun Chen; Min S Lee; Kathy Mosure; Li-Qiang Sun; Michael Sinz; Nicholas A Meanwell; Richard J Colonno; Jay Knipe; Paul Scola
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-08-06       Impact factor: 5.191

4.  Characterization of the metabolic activation of hepatitis C virus nucleoside inhibitor beta-D-2'-Deoxy-2'-fluoro-2'-C-methylcytidine (PSI-6130) and identification of a novel active 5'-triphosphate species.

Authors:  Han Ma; Wen-Rong Jiang; Nicole Robledo; Vincent Leveque; Samir Ali; Teresa Lara-Jaime; Mohammad Masjedizadeh; David B Smith; Nick Cammack; Klaus Klumpp; Julian Symons
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2007-08-13       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  All-oral daclatasvir plus asunaprevir for hepatitis C virus genotype 1b: a multinational, phase 3, multicohort study.

Authors:  Michael Manns; Stanislas Pol; Ira M Jacobson; Patrick Marcellin; Stuart C Gordon; Cheng-Yuan Peng; Ting-Tsung Chang; Gregory T Everson; Jeong Heo; Guido Gerken; Boris Yoffe; William J Towner; Marc Bourliere; Sophie Metivier; Chi-Jen Chu; William Sievert; Jean-Pierre Bronowicki; Dominique Thabut; Youn-Jae Lee; Jia-Horng Kao; Fiona McPhee; Justin Kopit; Patricia Mendez; Misti Linaberry; Eric Hughes; Stephanie Noviello
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2014-07-28       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Sofosbuvir and ledipasvir fixed-dose combination with and without ribavirin in treatment-naive and previously treated patients with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus infection (LONESTAR): an open-label, randomised, phase 2 trial.

Authors:  Eric Lawitz; Fred F Poordad; Phillip S Pang; Robert H Hyland; Xiao Ding; Hongmei Mo; William T Symonds; John G McHutchison; Fernando E Membreno
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2013-11-05       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Combinations of lambda interferon with direct-acting antiviral agents are highly efficient in suppressing hepatitis C virus replication.

Authors:  Jacques Friborg; Steven Levine; Chaoqun Chen; Amy K Sheaffer; Susan Chaniewski; Stacey Voss; Julie A Lemm; Fiona McPhee
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 5.191

8.  Discovery of ledipasvir (GS-5885): a potent, once-daily oral NS5A inhibitor for the treatment of hepatitis C virus infection.

Authors:  John O Link; James G Taylor; Lianhong Xu; Michael Mitchell; Hongyan Guo; Hongtao Liu; Darryl Kato; Thorsten Kirschberg; Jianyu Sun; Neil Squires; Jay Parrish; Terry Kellar; Zheng-Yu Yang; Chris Yang; Mike Matles; Yujin Wang; Kelly Wang; Guofeng Cheng; Yang Tian; Erik Mogalian; Elsa Mondou; Melanie Cornpropst; Jason Perry; Manoj C Desai
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2014-01-10       Impact factor: 7.446

9.  Daclatasvir plus sofosbuvir for previously treated or untreated chronic HCV infection.

Authors:  Mark S Sulkowski; David F Gardiner; Maribel Rodriguez-Torres; K Rajender Reddy; Tarek Hassanein; Ira Jacobson; Eric Lawitz; Anna S Lok; Federico Hinestrosa; Paul J Thuluvath; Howard Schwartz; David R Nelson; Gregory T Everson; Timothy Eley; Megan Wind-Rotolo; Shu-Pang Huang; Min Gao; Dennis Hernandez; Fiona McPhee; Diane Sherman; Robert Hindes; William Symonds; Claudio Pasquinelli; Dennis M Grasela
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 91.245

10.  Ledipasvir and sofosbuvir for previously treated HCV genotype 1 infection.

Authors:  Nezam Afdhal; K Rajender Reddy; David R Nelson; Eric Lawitz; Stuart C Gordon; Eugene Schiff; Ronald Nahass; Reem Ghalib; Norman Gitlin; Robert Herring; Jacob Lalezari; Ziad H Younes; Paul J Pockros; Adrian M Di Bisceglie; Sanjeev Arora; G Mani Subramanian; Yanni Zhu; Hadas Dvory-Sobol; Jenny C Yang; Phillip S Pang; William T Symonds; John G McHutchison; Andrew J Muir; Mark Sulkowski; Paul Kwo
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-04-11       Impact factor: 91.245

View more
  10 in total

1.  Efficacy and safety of ledipasvir/sofosbuvir with ribavirin in chronic hepatitis C patients who failed daclatasvir/asunaprevir therapy: pilot study.

Authors:  Yoshiiku Kawakami; Hidenori Ochi; Clair Nelson Hayes; Michio Imamura; Masataka Tsuge; Takashi Nakahara; Yoshio Katamura; Hiroshi Kohno; Hirotaka Kohno; Keiji Tsuji; Shintaro Takaki; Nami Mori; Yohji Honda; Keiko Arataki; Shoichi Takahashi; Shinsuke Kira; Toru Tamura; Kazunari Masuda; Toshio Nakamura; Masaya Kikkawa; Kazuaki Chayama
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2017-08-16       Impact factor: 7.527

2.  Emergence of hepatitis C virus NS5A L31V plus Y93H variant upon treatment failure of daclatasvir and asunaprevir is relatively resistant to ledipasvir and NS5B polymerase nucleotide inhibitor GS-558093 in human hepatocyte chimeric mice.

Authors:  Yugo Kai; Hayato Hikita; Tomohide Tatsumi; Tasuku Nakabori; Yoshinobu Saito; Naoki Morishita; Satoshi Tanaka; Takatoshi Nawa; Tsugiko Oze; Ryotaro Sakamori; Takayuki Yakushijin; Naoki Hiramatsu; Hiroshi Suemizu; Tetsuo Takehara
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2015-07-25       Impact factor: 7.527

3.  Retreatment Efficacy of Sofosbuvir/Ombitasvir/Paritaprevir/Ritonavir + Ribavirin for Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 4 Patients.

Authors:  Adel Abdel-Moneim; Alaa Aboud; Mohamed Abdel-Gabbar; Mohamed Zanaty; Mohamed Ramadan
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 3.199

4.  Quantifying antiviral activity optimizes drug combinations against hepatitis C virus infection.

Authors:  Yoshiki Koizumi; Hirofumi Ohashi; Syo Nakajima; Yasuhito Tanaka; Takaji Wakita; Alan S Perelson; Shingo Iwami; Koichi Watashi
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-02-07       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Retreatment with sofosbuvir, ledipasvir, and add-on ribavirin for patients who failed daclatasvir and asunaprevir combination therapy.

Authors:  Goki Suda; Koji Ogawa; Yoshiya Yamamoto; Masaki Katagiri; Ken Furuya; Kenichi Kumagai; Jun Konno; Megumi Kimura; Naoki Kawagishi; Masatsugu Ohara; Machiko Umemura; Jun Ito; Takaaki Izumi; Masato Nakai; Takuya Sho; Mitsuteru Natsuizaka; Kenichi Morikawa; Akihito Tsubota; Noritomo Shimada; Etsuko Iio; Yasuhito Tanaka; Naoya Sakamoto
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2017-03-18       Impact factor: 6.772

6.  Baseline quasispecies selection and novel mutations contribute to emerging resistance-associated substitutions in hepatitis C virus after direct-acting antiviral treatment.

Authors:  Yugo Kai; Hayato Hikita; Naoki Morishita; Kazuhiro Murai; Tasuku Nakabori; Sadaharu Iio; Hideki Hagiwara; Yasuharu Imai; Shinji Tamura; Syusaku Tsutsui; Masafumi Naito; Meiko Nishiuchi; Yasuteru Kondo; Takanobu Kato; Hiroshi Suemizu; Ryoko Yamada; Tsugiko Oze; Takayuki Yakushijin; Naoki Hiramatsu; Ryotaro Sakamori; Tomohide Tatsumi; Tetsuo Takehara
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-01-30       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  Combinations of two drugs among NS3/4A inhibitors, NS5B inhibitors and non-selective antiviral agents are effective for hepatitis C virus with NS5A-P32 deletion in humanized-liver mice.

Authors:  Akira Doi; Hayato Hikita; Yugo Kai; Yuki Tahata; Yoshinobu Saito; Tasuku Nakabori; Ryoko Yamada; Takahiro Kodama; Ryotaro Sakamori; Asako Murayama; Sayuri Nitta; Yasuhiro Asahina; Hiroshi Suemizu; Tomohide Tatsumi; Takanobu Kato; Tetsuo Takehara
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2019-01-25       Impact factor: 6.772

8.  High Sustained Virologic Response to Daclatasvir Plus Asunaprevir in Elderly and Cirrhotic Patients with Hepatitis C Virus Genotype 1b Without Baseline NS5A Polymorphisms.

Authors:  Fiona McPhee; Yoshiyuki Suzuki; Joji Toyota; Yoshiyasu Karino; Kasuaki Chayama; Yoshiiku Kawakami; Min Lung Yu; Sang Hoon Ahn; Hiroki Ishikawa; Rafia Bhore; Nannan Zhou; Dennis Hernandez; Patricia Mendez; Hiromitsu Kumada
Journal:  Adv Ther       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 3.845

9.  Case report: successful retreatment of hepatitis C genotype 1b infection with sofosbuvir + simeprevir in a patient with cirrhosis who had prior virologic relapse after treatment with daclatasvir and asunaprevir.

Authors:  Rifaat Safadi; Stephanie Noviello; Navdeep Boparai; Fiona McPhee
Journal:  Clin Case Rep       Date:  2016-06-01

Review 10.  Recent Advances in Antiviral Therapy for Chronic Hepatitis C.

Authors:  Akihiro Tamori; Masaru Enomoto; Norifumi Kawada
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2016-01-31       Impact factor: 4.711

  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.