GLIMMER of hope for itch in primary biliary cholangitis

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Thu, 11/19/2020 - 13:38

 

Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Mixed outcomes in tenofovir trial for chronic hepatitis B

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Changed
Wed, 11/18/2020 - 16:36

About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Liver injury linked to COVID-19–related coagulopathy

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Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:55

 

There is a link between liver injury and a tendency toward excessive clotting in patients with COVID-19, and the organ’s own blood vessels could be responsible, new research shows.

Cells that line the liver’s blood vessels produce high levels of factor VIII, a coagulation factor, when they are exposed to interleukin-6, an inflammatory molecule associated with COVID-19.

These findings “center the liver in global coagulopathy of COVID-19 and define a mechanism for increased coagulation factor levels that may be treatment targets,” said investigator Matthew McConnell, MD, from the Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

The effect of IL-6 on the liver sinusoidal endothelial cells lining the liver blood vessels creates a prothrombotic environment that includes the release of factor VIII, said Dr. McConnell, who presented the results at the virtual annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

These associations offer insights into why COVID-19 patients with underlying liver disease can experience “devastating complications” related to improper blood vessel function in the organ, he added.

For their study, Dr. McConnell and colleagues analyzed data on ALT and hypercoagulability from 68 adults treated at the Yale–New Haven Hospital. The liver and coagulation tests were administered within 5 days of each other.

The team set the ALT cutoff for liver injury at three times the upper limit of normal. Patients with two or more parameters indicating excessive clotting were considered to have a hypercoagulable profile, which Dr. McConnell called “a signature clinical finding of COVID-19 infection.”

Patients with high levels of ALT also experienced elevations in clotting-related factors, such as fibrinogen levels and the activity of factor VIII and factor II. Furthermore, liver injury was significantly associated with hypercoagulability (P < .05).

Because COVID-19 is linked to the proinflammatory IL-6, the investigators examined how this cytokine and its receptor affect human liver sinusoidal cells. Cells exposed to IL-6 and its receptor pumped out factor VIII at levels that were significantly higher than in unexposed cells (P < .01). Exposed cells also produced significantly more von Willebrand factor (P < .05), another prothrombotic molecule, and showed increased expression of genes that induce the expression of factor VIII.

“As we learn more about COVID-19, we find that it is as much a coagulatory as a respiratory disease,” said Tien Dong, MD, PhD, from the University of California, Los Angeles, who was not involved in the study.

These findings are in line with a lot of other COVID-19-related research that suggests a link between hepatocyte injury and clotting disorders, he added.

One important factor is existing liver disease, said Dr. Dong. “If you have COVID-19 on top of that, you’re probably at risk of developing acute liver injury from the infection itself.”

That said, it’s still a good idea to check liver function in patients with COVID-19 and no known liver disease, he advised. Staying on top of these measures will keep the odds of long-term problems “a lot lower.”

There is utility in the findings beyond COVID-19, said Dr. McConnell. They provide “insights into complications of critical illness, in general, in the liver blood vessels” of patients with underlying liver disease.

Dr. McConnell and Dr. Dong have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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There is a link between liver injury and a tendency toward excessive clotting in patients with COVID-19, and the organ’s own blood vessels could be responsible, new research shows.

Cells that line the liver’s blood vessels produce high levels of factor VIII, a coagulation factor, when they are exposed to interleukin-6, an inflammatory molecule associated with COVID-19.

These findings “center the liver in global coagulopathy of COVID-19 and define a mechanism for increased coagulation factor levels that may be treatment targets,” said investigator Matthew McConnell, MD, from the Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

The effect of IL-6 on the liver sinusoidal endothelial cells lining the liver blood vessels creates a prothrombotic environment that includes the release of factor VIII, said Dr. McConnell, who presented the results at the virtual annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

These associations offer insights into why COVID-19 patients with underlying liver disease can experience “devastating complications” related to improper blood vessel function in the organ, he added.

For their study, Dr. McConnell and colleagues analyzed data on ALT and hypercoagulability from 68 adults treated at the Yale–New Haven Hospital. The liver and coagulation tests were administered within 5 days of each other.

The team set the ALT cutoff for liver injury at three times the upper limit of normal. Patients with two or more parameters indicating excessive clotting were considered to have a hypercoagulable profile, which Dr. McConnell called “a signature clinical finding of COVID-19 infection.”

Patients with high levels of ALT also experienced elevations in clotting-related factors, such as fibrinogen levels and the activity of factor VIII and factor II. Furthermore, liver injury was significantly associated with hypercoagulability (P < .05).

Because COVID-19 is linked to the proinflammatory IL-6, the investigators examined how this cytokine and its receptor affect human liver sinusoidal cells. Cells exposed to IL-6 and its receptor pumped out factor VIII at levels that were significantly higher than in unexposed cells (P < .01). Exposed cells also produced significantly more von Willebrand factor (P < .05), another prothrombotic molecule, and showed increased expression of genes that induce the expression of factor VIII.

“As we learn more about COVID-19, we find that it is as much a coagulatory as a respiratory disease,” said Tien Dong, MD, PhD, from the University of California, Los Angeles, who was not involved in the study.

These findings are in line with a lot of other COVID-19-related research that suggests a link between hepatocyte injury and clotting disorders, he added.

One important factor is existing liver disease, said Dr. Dong. “If you have COVID-19 on top of that, you’re probably at risk of developing acute liver injury from the infection itself.”

That said, it’s still a good idea to check liver function in patients with COVID-19 and no known liver disease, he advised. Staying on top of these measures will keep the odds of long-term problems “a lot lower.”

There is utility in the findings beyond COVID-19, said Dr. McConnell. They provide “insights into complications of critical illness, in general, in the liver blood vessels” of patients with underlying liver disease.

Dr. McConnell and Dr. Dong have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

 

There is a link between liver injury and a tendency toward excessive clotting in patients with COVID-19, and the organ’s own blood vessels could be responsible, new research shows.

Cells that line the liver’s blood vessels produce high levels of factor VIII, a coagulation factor, when they are exposed to interleukin-6, an inflammatory molecule associated with COVID-19.

These findings “center the liver in global coagulopathy of COVID-19 and define a mechanism for increased coagulation factor levels that may be treatment targets,” said investigator Matthew McConnell, MD, from the Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

The effect of IL-6 on the liver sinusoidal endothelial cells lining the liver blood vessels creates a prothrombotic environment that includes the release of factor VIII, said Dr. McConnell, who presented the results at the virtual annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

These associations offer insights into why COVID-19 patients with underlying liver disease can experience “devastating complications” related to improper blood vessel function in the organ, he added.

For their study, Dr. McConnell and colleagues analyzed data on ALT and hypercoagulability from 68 adults treated at the Yale–New Haven Hospital. The liver and coagulation tests were administered within 5 days of each other.

The team set the ALT cutoff for liver injury at three times the upper limit of normal. Patients with two or more parameters indicating excessive clotting were considered to have a hypercoagulable profile, which Dr. McConnell called “a signature clinical finding of COVID-19 infection.”

Patients with high levels of ALT also experienced elevations in clotting-related factors, such as fibrinogen levels and the activity of factor VIII and factor II. Furthermore, liver injury was significantly associated with hypercoagulability (P < .05).

Because COVID-19 is linked to the proinflammatory IL-6, the investigators examined how this cytokine and its receptor affect human liver sinusoidal cells. Cells exposed to IL-6 and its receptor pumped out factor VIII at levels that were significantly higher than in unexposed cells (P < .01). Exposed cells also produced significantly more von Willebrand factor (P < .05), another prothrombotic molecule, and showed increased expression of genes that induce the expression of factor VIII.

“As we learn more about COVID-19, we find that it is as much a coagulatory as a respiratory disease,” said Tien Dong, MD, PhD, from the University of California, Los Angeles, who was not involved in the study.

These findings are in line with a lot of other COVID-19-related research that suggests a link between hepatocyte injury and clotting disorders, he added.

One important factor is existing liver disease, said Dr. Dong. “If you have COVID-19 on top of that, you’re probably at risk of developing acute liver injury from the infection itself.”

That said, it’s still a good idea to check liver function in patients with COVID-19 and no known liver disease, he advised. Staying on top of these measures will keep the odds of long-term problems “a lot lower.”

There is utility in the findings beyond COVID-19, said Dr. McConnell. They provide “insights into complications of critical illness, in general, in the liver blood vessels” of patients with underlying liver disease.

Dr. McConnell and Dr. Dong have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Mixed outcomes in tenofovir trial for chronic hepatitis B

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Mon, 11/16/2020 - 12:46

About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

About one-third of patients with chronic hepatitis B maintained a profile consistent with inactive disease 1 year after withdrawal from treatment in the randomized HBRN trial, which compared tenofovir with and without pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN). The two treatment groups, however, had similarly low rates of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss, the trial’s primary end point.

The successful withdrawals could inform discussions with patients who are “very motivated to have a finite treatment course,” said investigator Norah Terrault, MD, from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. The results might “help patients in talking about expectations,” she said, because “there’s a one in three chance they won’t go back on treatment” if they meet specific metrics.

In HBRN, the metrics for withdrawal from treatment after 192 weeks included low levels of viral DNA (<1,000 IU/mL) for at least 24 weeks, no cirrhosis, negative week 144 test results for the hepatitis B envelope antigen (HBeAg), and week 180 conversion to anti-HBe positivity.

Of 102 patients who received tenofovir monotherapy for 192 weeks and who completed the trial, 51 met these criteria. After withdrawal from treatment, 30% still had DNA levels below 1,000 IU/mL and normal ALT at week 240, which is consistent with inactive chronic hepatitis B.

Of the 99 participants in the combination group – who received PEG-IFN for the first 24 of 192 weeks in addition to tenofovir – 60 met the withdrawal criteria at 192 weeks. At week 240, 39% of this withdrawal group still had DNA and ALT values consistent with inactive disease.

Rates of HBsAg loss, which signals functional cure, were low in the two groups, however. At week 240, fewer patients in the tenofovir monotherapy group tested negative for HBsAg than in the tenofovir plus PEG-IFN combination group, but the difference was not significant (4.5% vs. 5.7%).

The timing of HBsAg loss differed between the groups. In the combination group, the loss largely occurred before treatment withdrawal, likely because of the antiviral effects of interferon, Dr. Terrault said in an interview. In the monotherapy group, the loss occurred after 192 weeks, possibly reflecting the immunologic consequences of treatment withdrawal.

The timing of ALT flares also differed between groups. In the combination group, 58% of flares occurred during the 24-week PEG-IFN period. In the monotherapy group, 70% of flares occurred after tenofovir was stopped at 192 weeks.

The flare picture is a tricky one, said Dr. Terrault. The episodes might be a positive factor in HBsAg loss, but severe flares carry a risk for decompensation. Good predictors of the severity of flares are lacking, and “that is the hurdle” to finding a balance with these trade-offs.
 

‘Partially a failure and partially a success’

The findings are “partially a failure and partially a success,” said Robert Gish, MD, from Loma Linda (Calif.) University of Health, who was not involved in the study.

The low rates of HBsAg loss and the similarity between the two treatment groups represent the failure, he explained. The success is for the patients who were HBeAg-positive when the study began because they had high HBeAg loss rates in both the monotherapy and combination groups (41% vs. 61%; P = .06).

Loss of HBeAg was numerically higher in the combination group because of the interferon effect. That could be viewed as a “subjective benefit” of PEG-IFN, even though the difference wasn’t statistically significant, said Dr. Gish.

The low rates of HBsAg loss could relate to two features of the patient profile, he explained. At study entry, the participants had moderately high levels of quantitative HBsAg and were predominately of Asian ancestry, which are predisposing factors for limited HBsAg loss.

Previous studies have suggested that peak HBsAg loss could take 2-3 years to develop after treatment withdrawal in a trial population. In the HBRN trial, rates almost 1 year after withdrawal are similar to 1-year rates from other studies, Dr. Terrault said. How these results for HBsAg loss in the two treatment groups will look at the 3-year mark is not known.

The trial design standardized withdrawal protocol and the length of time patients were on treatment before withdrawal was attempted, which are strengths of this study, said Dr. Terrault. And “a triumph of this study is execution of a standard for nucleic acid treatment in a protocolized way, followed by withdrawal. That is something we are happy about.”

Dr. Terrault reported receiving institutional grant support from Roche/Genentech and Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gish reported receiving research support from Gilead Sciences and serving as a consultant and on advisory boards for several pharmaceutical companies.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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GLIMMER of hope for itch in primary biliary cholangitis

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Mon, 11/16/2020 - 12:37

Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Patients with primary biliary cholangitis experienced rapid improvements in itch and quality of life after treatment with linerixibat in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of the small-molecule drug.

Moderate to severe pruritus “affects patients’ quality of life and is a huge burden for them,” said investigator Cynthia Levy, MD, from the University of Miami Health System.

“Finally having a medication that controls those symptoms is really important,” she said in an interview.

With a twice-daily mid-range dose of the drug for 12 weeks, patients with moderate to severe itch reported significantly less itch and better social and emotional quality of life, Dr. Levy reported at the Liver Meeting, where she presented findings from the phase 2 GLIMMER trial.

After a single-blind 4-week placebo run-in period for patients with itch scores of at least 4 on a 10-point rating scale, those with itch scores of at least 3 were then randomly assigned to one of five treatment regimens – once-daily linerixibat at doses of 20 mg, 90 mg, or 180 mg, or twice-daily doses of 40 mg or 90 mg – or to placebo.

After 12 weeks of treatment, all 147 participants once again received placebo for 4 weeks.

During the trial, participants recorded itch levels twice daily. The worst of these daily scores was averaged every 7 days to determine the mean worst daily itch.

The primary study endpoint was the change in worst daily itch from baseline after 12 weeks of treatment. Participants whose self-rated itch improved by 2 points on the 10-point scale were considered to have had a response to the drug.

Participants also completed the PBC-40, an instrument to measure quality of life in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, answering questions about itch and social and emotional status.

Reductions in worst daily itch from baseline to 12 weeks were steepest in the 40-mg twice-daily group, at 2.86 points, and in the 90-mg twice-daily group, at 2.25 points. In the placebo group, the mean decrease was 1.73 points.

During the subsequent 4 weeks of placebo, after treatment ended, the itch relief faded in all groups.

Scores on the PBC-40 itch domain improved significantly in every group, including placebo. However, only those in the twice-daily 40-mg group saw significant improvements on the social (P = .0016) and emotional (P = .0025) domains.
 

‘Between incremental and revolutionary’

The results are on a “kind of continuum between incremental and revolutionary,” said Jonathan A. Dranoff, MD, from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, who was not involved in the study. “It doesn’t hit either extreme, but it’s the first new drug for this purpose in forever, which by itself is a good thing.”

The placebo effect suggests that “maybe the actual contribution of the noncognitive brain to pruritus is bigger than we thought, and that’s worth noting,” he added. Nevertheless, “the drug still appears to have effects that are statistically different from placebo.”

The placebo effect in itching studies is always high but tends to wane over time, said Dr. Levy. This trial had a 4-week placebo run-in period to allow that effect to fade somewhat, she explained.

About 10% of the study cohort experienced drug-related diarrhea, which was expected, and about 10% dropped out of the trial because of drug-related adverse events.

Linerixibat is an ileal sodium-dependent bile acid transporter inhibitor, so the gut has to deal with the excess bile acid fallout, but the diarrhea is likely manageable with antidiarrheals, said Dr. Levy.

It is unlikely that diarrhea will deter patients with severe itch from using an effective drug when other drugs have failed them. “These patients are consumed by itch most of the time,” said Dr. Dranoff. “I think for people who don’t regularly treat patients with primary biliary cholangitis, it’s one of the underappreciated aspects of the disease.”

The improvements in social and emotional quality of life seen with linerixibat are not only statistically significant, they are also clinically significant, said Dr. Levy. “We are really expecting this to impact the lives of our patients and are looking forward to phase 3.”

Dr. Levy disclosed support from GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Dranoff disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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