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MILAN — Seladelpar, an investigational selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta agonist, achieves both biochemical and clinically meaningful improvements in pruritus and liver injury in patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), both with and without compensated liver cirrhosis, according to two interim analyses of the ASSURE long-term extension study.

The first analysis of 337 patients with PBC, with and without cirrhosis, showed that treatment with seladelpar had a durable effect up to 2 years on cholestasis and markers of liver injury, as well as a sustained reduction in pruritus, Palak Trivedi, MD, associate professor at the National Institute for Health Research Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, England, reported in a poster presented at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The 2-year analysis also showed that seladelpar, a first-in-class, orally active agent, was safe and well tolerated in this patient population, he added.

These “results are consistent with the pivotal phase 3 RESPONSE study,” Dr. Trivedi noted. The RESPONSE study showed that seladelpar significantly improved liver biomarkers of disease activity and symptoms of pruritus at 12 months in patients with PBC who had an inadequate response or intolerance to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), the standard of care, and had no history of hepatic decompensation. Patients with cirrhosis were allowed to enroll.

A total of 158 patients from the RESPONSE trial, both from the placebo and from the active treatment arm, were rolled over into the ASSURE trial. Another subset of 179 patients were drawn from prior seladelpar placebo-controlled studies (referred to as “legacy studies”), including the ENHANCE study. All participants in the current analysis received 10 mg of seladelpar, once daily, for up to 155 weeks.

Of the participants from the legacy studies, 99 completed 24 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 164 completed 12 months of treatment. In the 24-month treatment group, 70% met the composite response endpoint, which included alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels below 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, a decrease in ALP levels of at least 15%, and total bilirubin levels at or below the upper limit of normal, according to a press release of the study findings. In addition, 42% of these participants achieved ALP normalization at 24 months, a marker of liver disease progression. In the 12-month treatment group, 73% achieved the clinically meaningful composite response endpoint, with 42% experiencing ALP normalization.

For patients rolled over from RESPONSE, 102 received 18 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 29 received 24 months of treatment. A total of 62% of patients in the 18-month group achieved the composite endpoint, and 33% achieved ALP normalization, while 72% of the 24-month group reached the composite endpoint, and 17% had ALP normalization.

Of patients who had received a placebo in the RESPONSE trial and went on to receive treatment with seladelpar, 75% achieved the composite endpoint, 27% had ALP normalization at 6 months, and 94% achieved the composite endpoint and 50% reached ALP normalization at 12 months.

Key secondary endpoints included ALP normalization and changes in liver enzymes (ALP, total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyl transferase [GGT], alanine transaminase [ALT], and aspartate aminotransferase [AST]).
 

 

 

Pruritus Relief Important for Quality of Life

Among study participants who reported a four or more at baseline on the numerical rating scale (NRS) for pruritus, legacy patients at 12 months and 24 months of treatment reported a mean reduction of 3.8 and 3.1, respectively. Participants from RESPONSE also reported a mean reduction of 3.8.

This level of reduction in NRS is “considered clinically significant” and takes patients from a level of moderate to severe itching down to mild, said Carrie Frenette, MD, executive director, Global Medical Affairs, Liver Diseases, Gilead Sciences, Foster City, California, and a former hepatologist of 20 years with a special interest in liver transplantation.

This “is a huge benefit in quality of life for these patients,” Dr. Frenette said in an interview.

Dr. Frenette also noted that UDCA, the current first-line treatment for PBC, is inadequate in up to 40% of patients, and second-line treatments, notably obeticholic acid, can cause itching.

Dr. Eleonora De Martin, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital in France
European Society for Organ Transplantation
Dr. Eleonora De Martin

Eleonora De Martin, MD, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital, Paris, France, who comoderated the session, pointed out that PBC is a complex disease.

“We need both disease control and symptom control, and they’re not always compatible,” she said. “Sometimes you can control the disease but not the symptoms, and symptomatic control is so important,” especially with pruritus.
 

Patients With PBC and Cirrhosis

A separate analysis from ASSURE looked at a subset of 17 patients with PBC and cirrhosis who completed 24 months of treatment. The findings were presented by Stuart Gordon, MD, professor of medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, and hepatologist at Henry Ford Hospital, both in Detroit.

In this analysis, the mean patient age was 60.8 years, 91.4% were female, 88.6% were Child-Pugh A, and 22.9% had portal hypertension, while the mean baseline liver stiffness by FibroScan was 19.9 kPa.

Baseline biochemical measures were mean ALP of 245.4 U/L, mean total bilirubin of 0.995 mg/dL, mean GGT of 216.1 U/L, and mean ALT of 36.6 U/L.

A total of 11 participants (65%) met the composite endpoint at 24 months, with ALP normalization in 4 patients (24%). The overall mean percent change from baseline in ALP was approximately −30% and in total bilirubin was around −14%. Other changes in biochemical markers included reductions from baseline in GGT and ALT of approximately −30% and −10%, respectively. No change was observed in AST.

While 80% of patients with cirrhosis “had an adverse event of some form,” there were no treatment-related serious adverse events.

“It’s interesting to see results in these patients who have advanced disease and are cirrhotic because it might stabilize disease or even provide improvement,” Dr. De Martin commented. “However, the numbers in the study are very small, so it’s hard to draw firm conclusions yet, but it is a first step in showing that this drug is safe.”

Seladelpar is an “important step forward in PBC because we’ve been stuck with ursodeoxycholic acid for so many years,” Dr. De Martin added. “We’ve seen in liver disease with other etiologies that sometimes just one drug can make a difference, and you can change the natural history of the disease.”

Dr. Frenette is an employee and stockholder of Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gordon declared grants and support from AbbVie, Arbutus, CymaBay, Cour Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Ipsen, and Mirum Pharmaceuticals; and advisory board activity from CymaBay, GSK, and Ipsen Pharmaceuticals. Dr. De Martin had no disclosures of relevance to seladelpar but has received speaker fees from other companies, including GSK, Ipsen, and Astellas. Dr. Trivedi reports institutional funding support from National Institute for Health Research Birmingham (UK); lecture fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, and Dr. Falk Pharma; advisory board/consulting fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Chemomab Therapeutics, CymaBay, Dr. Falk Pharma, Gilead Sciences, Perspectum, and Pliant Therapeutics; and grant support from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Core (Guts UK), EASL, Gilead Sciences, GSK, LifeArc, NIHR, Mirum Pharma, PSC Support, The Wellcome Trust, The Medical Research Foundation (UK), and Regeneron.

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

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MILAN — Seladelpar, an investigational selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta agonist, achieves both biochemical and clinically meaningful improvements in pruritus and liver injury in patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), both with and without compensated liver cirrhosis, according to two interim analyses of the ASSURE long-term extension study.

The first analysis of 337 patients with PBC, with and without cirrhosis, showed that treatment with seladelpar had a durable effect up to 2 years on cholestasis and markers of liver injury, as well as a sustained reduction in pruritus, Palak Trivedi, MD, associate professor at the National Institute for Health Research Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, England, reported in a poster presented at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The 2-year analysis also showed that seladelpar, a first-in-class, orally active agent, was safe and well tolerated in this patient population, he added.

These “results are consistent with the pivotal phase 3 RESPONSE study,” Dr. Trivedi noted. The RESPONSE study showed that seladelpar significantly improved liver biomarkers of disease activity and symptoms of pruritus at 12 months in patients with PBC who had an inadequate response or intolerance to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), the standard of care, and had no history of hepatic decompensation. Patients with cirrhosis were allowed to enroll.

A total of 158 patients from the RESPONSE trial, both from the placebo and from the active treatment arm, were rolled over into the ASSURE trial. Another subset of 179 patients were drawn from prior seladelpar placebo-controlled studies (referred to as “legacy studies”), including the ENHANCE study. All participants in the current analysis received 10 mg of seladelpar, once daily, for up to 155 weeks.

Of the participants from the legacy studies, 99 completed 24 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 164 completed 12 months of treatment. In the 24-month treatment group, 70% met the composite response endpoint, which included alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels below 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, a decrease in ALP levels of at least 15%, and total bilirubin levels at or below the upper limit of normal, according to a press release of the study findings. In addition, 42% of these participants achieved ALP normalization at 24 months, a marker of liver disease progression. In the 12-month treatment group, 73% achieved the clinically meaningful composite response endpoint, with 42% experiencing ALP normalization.

For patients rolled over from RESPONSE, 102 received 18 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 29 received 24 months of treatment. A total of 62% of patients in the 18-month group achieved the composite endpoint, and 33% achieved ALP normalization, while 72% of the 24-month group reached the composite endpoint, and 17% had ALP normalization.

Of patients who had received a placebo in the RESPONSE trial and went on to receive treatment with seladelpar, 75% achieved the composite endpoint, 27% had ALP normalization at 6 months, and 94% achieved the composite endpoint and 50% reached ALP normalization at 12 months.

Key secondary endpoints included ALP normalization and changes in liver enzymes (ALP, total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyl transferase [GGT], alanine transaminase [ALT], and aspartate aminotransferase [AST]).
 

 

 

Pruritus Relief Important for Quality of Life

Among study participants who reported a four or more at baseline on the numerical rating scale (NRS) for pruritus, legacy patients at 12 months and 24 months of treatment reported a mean reduction of 3.8 and 3.1, respectively. Participants from RESPONSE also reported a mean reduction of 3.8.

This level of reduction in NRS is “considered clinically significant” and takes patients from a level of moderate to severe itching down to mild, said Carrie Frenette, MD, executive director, Global Medical Affairs, Liver Diseases, Gilead Sciences, Foster City, California, and a former hepatologist of 20 years with a special interest in liver transplantation.

This “is a huge benefit in quality of life for these patients,” Dr. Frenette said in an interview.

Dr. Frenette also noted that UDCA, the current first-line treatment for PBC, is inadequate in up to 40% of patients, and second-line treatments, notably obeticholic acid, can cause itching.

Dr. Eleonora De Martin, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital in France
European Society for Organ Transplantation
Dr. Eleonora De Martin

Eleonora De Martin, MD, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital, Paris, France, who comoderated the session, pointed out that PBC is a complex disease.

“We need both disease control and symptom control, and they’re not always compatible,” she said. “Sometimes you can control the disease but not the symptoms, and symptomatic control is so important,” especially with pruritus.
 

Patients With PBC and Cirrhosis

A separate analysis from ASSURE looked at a subset of 17 patients with PBC and cirrhosis who completed 24 months of treatment. The findings were presented by Stuart Gordon, MD, professor of medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, and hepatologist at Henry Ford Hospital, both in Detroit.

In this analysis, the mean patient age was 60.8 years, 91.4% were female, 88.6% were Child-Pugh A, and 22.9% had portal hypertension, while the mean baseline liver stiffness by FibroScan was 19.9 kPa.

Baseline biochemical measures were mean ALP of 245.4 U/L, mean total bilirubin of 0.995 mg/dL, mean GGT of 216.1 U/L, and mean ALT of 36.6 U/L.

A total of 11 participants (65%) met the composite endpoint at 24 months, with ALP normalization in 4 patients (24%). The overall mean percent change from baseline in ALP was approximately −30% and in total bilirubin was around −14%. Other changes in biochemical markers included reductions from baseline in GGT and ALT of approximately −30% and −10%, respectively. No change was observed in AST.

While 80% of patients with cirrhosis “had an adverse event of some form,” there were no treatment-related serious adverse events.

“It’s interesting to see results in these patients who have advanced disease and are cirrhotic because it might stabilize disease or even provide improvement,” Dr. De Martin commented. “However, the numbers in the study are very small, so it’s hard to draw firm conclusions yet, but it is a first step in showing that this drug is safe.”

Seladelpar is an “important step forward in PBC because we’ve been stuck with ursodeoxycholic acid for so many years,” Dr. De Martin added. “We’ve seen in liver disease with other etiologies that sometimes just one drug can make a difference, and you can change the natural history of the disease.”

Dr. Frenette is an employee and stockholder of Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gordon declared grants and support from AbbVie, Arbutus, CymaBay, Cour Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Ipsen, and Mirum Pharmaceuticals; and advisory board activity from CymaBay, GSK, and Ipsen Pharmaceuticals. Dr. De Martin had no disclosures of relevance to seladelpar but has received speaker fees from other companies, including GSK, Ipsen, and Astellas. Dr. Trivedi reports institutional funding support from National Institute for Health Research Birmingham (UK); lecture fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, and Dr. Falk Pharma; advisory board/consulting fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Chemomab Therapeutics, CymaBay, Dr. Falk Pharma, Gilead Sciences, Perspectum, and Pliant Therapeutics; and grant support from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Core (Guts UK), EASL, Gilead Sciences, GSK, LifeArc, NIHR, Mirum Pharma, PSC Support, The Wellcome Trust, The Medical Research Foundation (UK), and Regeneron.

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

MILAN — Seladelpar, an investigational selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta agonist, achieves both biochemical and clinically meaningful improvements in pruritus and liver injury in patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), both with and without compensated liver cirrhosis, according to two interim analyses of the ASSURE long-term extension study.

The first analysis of 337 patients with PBC, with and without cirrhosis, showed that treatment with seladelpar had a durable effect up to 2 years on cholestasis and markers of liver injury, as well as a sustained reduction in pruritus, Palak Trivedi, MD, associate professor at the National Institute for Health Research Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, England, reported in a poster presented at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The 2-year analysis also showed that seladelpar, a first-in-class, orally active agent, was safe and well tolerated in this patient population, he added.

These “results are consistent with the pivotal phase 3 RESPONSE study,” Dr. Trivedi noted. The RESPONSE study showed that seladelpar significantly improved liver biomarkers of disease activity and symptoms of pruritus at 12 months in patients with PBC who had an inadequate response or intolerance to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), the standard of care, and had no history of hepatic decompensation. Patients with cirrhosis were allowed to enroll.

A total of 158 patients from the RESPONSE trial, both from the placebo and from the active treatment arm, were rolled over into the ASSURE trial. Another subset of 179 patients were drawn from prior seladelpar placebo-controlled studies (referred to as “legacy studies”), including the ENHANCE study. All participants in the current analysis received 10 mg of seladelpar, once daily, for up to 155 weeks.

Of the participants from the legacy studies, 99 completed 24 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 164 completed 12 months of treatment. In the 24-month treatment group, 70% met the composite response endpoint, which included alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels below 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, a decrease in ALP levels of at least 15%, and total bilirubin levels at or below the upper limit of normal, according to a press release of the study findings. In addition, 42% of these participants achieved ALP normalization at 24 months, a marker of liver disease progression. In the 12-month treatment group, 73% achieved the clinically meaningful composite response endpoint, with 42% experiencing ALP normalization.

For patients rolled over from RESPONSE, 102 received 18 months of treatment with seladelpar, and 29 received 24 months of treatment. A total of 62% of patients in the 18-month group achieved the composite endpoint, and 33% achieved ALP normalization, while 72% of the 24-month group reached the composite endpoint, and 17% had ALP normalization.

Of patients who had received a placebo in the RESPONSE trial and went on to receive treatment with seladelpar, 75% achieved the composite endpoint, 27% had ALP normalization at 6 months, and 94% achieved the composite endpoint and 50% reached ALP normalization at 12 months.

Key secondary endpoints included ALP normalization and changes in liver enzymes (ALP, total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyl transferase [GGT], alanine transaminase [ALT], and aspartate aminotransferase [AST]).
 

 

 

Pruritus Relief Important for Quality of Life

Among study participants who reported a four or more at baseline on the numerical rating scale (NRS) for pruritus, legacy patients at 12 months and 24 months of treatment reported a mean reduction of 3.8 and 3.1, respectively. Participants from RESPONSE also reported a mean reduction of 3.8.

This level of reduction in NRS is “considered clinically significant” and takes patients from a level of moderate to severe itching down to mild, said Carrie Frenette, MD, executive director, Global Medical Affairs, Liver Diseases, Gilead Sciences, Foster City, California, and a former hepatologist of 20 years with a special interest in liver transplantation.

This “is a huge benefit in quality of life for these patients,” Dr. Frenette said in an interview.

Dr. Frenette also noted that UDCA, the current first-line treatment for PBC, is inadequate in up to 40% of patients, and second-line treatments, notably obeticholic acid, can cause itching.

Dr. Eleonora De Martin, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital in France
European Society for Organ Transplantation
Dr. Eleonora De Martin

Eleonora De Martin, MD, transplant hepatologist at Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Paul Brousse Hospital, Paris, France, who comoderated the session, pointed out that PBC is a complex disease.

“We need both disease control and symptom control, and they’re not always compatible,” she said. “Sometimes you can control the disease but not the symptoms, and symptomatic control is so important,” especially with pruritus.
 

Patients With PBC and Cirrhosis

A separate analysis from ASSURE looked at a subset of 17 patients with PBC and cirrhosis who completed 24 months of treatment. The findings were presented by Stuart Gordon, MD, professor of medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, and hepatologist at Henry Ford Hospital, both in Detroit.

In this analysis, the mean patient age was 60.8 years, 91.4% were female, 88.6% were Child-Pugh A, and 22.9% had portal hypertension, while the mean baseline liver stiffness by FibroScan was 19.9 kPa.

Baseline biochemical measures were mean ALP of 245.4 U/L, mean total bilirubin of 0.995 mg/dL, mean GGT of 216.1 U/L, and mean ALT of 36.6 U/L.

A total of 11 participants (65%) met the composite endpoint at 24 months, with ALP normalization in 4 patients (24%). The overall mean percent change from baseline in ALP was approximately −30% and in total bilirubin was around −14%. Other changes in biochemical markers included reductions from baseline in GGT and ALT of approximately −30% and −10%, respectively. No change was observed in AST.

While 80% of patients with cirrhosis “had an adverse event of some form,” there were no treatment-related serious adverse events.

“It’s interesting to see results in these patients who have advanced disease and are cirrhotic because it might stabilize disease or even provide improvement,” Dr. De Martin commented. “However, the numbers in the study are very small, so it’s hard to draw firm conclusions yet, but it is a first step in showing that this drug is safe.”

Seladelpar is an “important step forward in PBC because we’ve been stuck with ursodeoxycholic acid for so many years,” Dr. De Martin added. “We’ve seen in liver disease with other etiologies that sometimes just one drug can make a difference, and you can change the natural history of the disease.”

Dr. Frenette is an employee and stockholder of Gilead Sciences. Dr. Gordon declared grants and support from AbbVie, Arbutus, CymaBay, Cour Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Ipsen, and Mirum Pharmaceuticals; and advisory board activity from CymaBay, GSK, and Ipsen Pharmaceuticals. Dr. De Martin had no disclosures of relevance to seladelpar but has received speaker fees from other companies, including GSK, Ipsen, and Astellas. Dr. Trivedi reports institutional funding support from National Institute for Health Research Birmingham (UK); lecture fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, and Dr. Falk Pharma; advisory board/consulting fees from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Chemomab Therapeutics, CymaBay, Dr. Falk Pharma, Gilead Sciences, Perspectum, and Pliant Therapeutics; and grant support from Advanz Pharma/Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Albireo/Ipsen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Core (Guts UK), EASL, Gilead Sciences, GSK, LifeArc, NIHR, Mirum Pharma, PSC Support, The Wellcome Trust, The Medical Research Foundation (UK), and Regeneron.

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

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