| Literature DB >> 29916799 |
Yuji Teraoka1,2, Takuro Uchida1,2, Michio Imamura1,2, Nobuhiko Hiraga1,2, Mitsutaka Osawa1,2, Hiromi Kan1,2, Yuhei Saito1,2, Masataka Tsuge1,2,3, Hiromi Abe-Chayama1,2,4, C Nelson Hayes1,2, Grace Naswa Makokha1,2, Hiroshi Aikata1,2, Daiki Miki2,5, Hidenori Ochi2,5, Yuji Ishida2,6, Chise Tateno2,6, Kazuaki Chayama1,2,5.
Abstract
Combined daclatasvir (DCV)/asunaprevir (ASV) plus beclabuvir (BCV) treatment shows a high virological response for genotype 1b chronic hepatitis C patients. However, its efficacy for patients for whom previous direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy failed is not known. We analysed the efficacy of DCV/ASV/BCV treatment for HCV-infected mice and chronic hepatitis patients. Human hepatocyte chimaeric mice were injected with serum samples obtained from either a DAA-naïve patient or a DCV/ASV treatment failure and were then treated with DCV/ASV alone or in combination with BCV for 4 weeks. DCV/ASV treatment successfully eliminated the virus in DAA-naïve-patient HCV-infected mice. DCV/ASV treatment failure HCV-infected mice developed viral breakthrough during DCV/ASV treatment, with the emergence of NS5A-L31V/Y93H HCV resistance-associated variants (RAVs) being observed by direct sequencing. DCV/ASV/BCV treatment inhibited viral breakthrough in NS5A-L31V/Y93H-mutated HCV-infected mice, but HCV relapsed with the emergence of NS5B-P495S variants after the cessation of the treatment. The efficacy of the triple therapy was also analysed in HCV-infected patients; one DAA-naïve patient and four prior DAA treatment failures were treated with 12 weeks of DCV/ASV/BCV therapy. Sustained virological response was achieved in a DAA-naïve patient and one of the DCV/ASV treatment failures through DCV/ASV/BCV therapy; however, HCV relapse occurred in the other patients with prior DCV/ASV and/or sofosbuvir/ledipasvir treatment failures. DCV/ASV/BCV therapy seems to have limited efficacy for patients with NS5A RAVs for whom prior DAA treatment has failed.Entities:
Keywords: HCV; RAV; asunaprevir; beclabuvir; daclatasvir; human hepatocyte chimeric mouse; treatment failures
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29916799 DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 3.891