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– Obeticholic acid resulted in a significant reduction of a biomarker for liver fibrosis in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, according to a retrospective analysis of clinical trial data. In addition, patients taking obeticholic acid had a mean reduction in liver stiffness as measured by transient elastography.

Gideon Hirschfield, MD, PhD, presented the re-analysis of clinical trial data at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

POISE was a phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of obeticholic acid for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). The clinical trial’s primary composite endpoint was an alkaline phosphatase level less than 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, with at least a 15% reduction in alkaline phosphatase and normal serum bilirubin.

The cohort of POISE patients on obeticholic acid met this biochemical surrogate endpoint, resulting in approval of the farnesoid X receptor agonist for treatment of PBC as an add-on to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), or for patients who cannot tolerate UDCA.

However, transient elastography and the aspartate transaminase (AST) to platelet ratio index (APRI) have both been used to assess fibrosis in PBC, and have been found to predict clinical outcomes in PBC. These measures have the advantage of being noninvasive methods to measure the quality of liver tissue.

Dr. Hirschfield, a transplant hepatologist at the institute of immunology and immunotherapy at the University of Birmingham, England, and his coinvestigators reevaluated data from the POISE trial. They determined that APRI dropped significantly over 12 months of obeticholic acid treatment compared to placebo (P less than .01 for each of the two dosing arms of the POISE trial). Patients who switched to 5-10 mg of obeticholic acid daily from placebo during an open-label extension of POISE also had significant reductions in APRI scores (P less than .05); the reduction for placebo-switchers on a fixed 10-mg dose during the open-label study was not significant

Liver stiffness, as measured by transient elastography, was reduced for both arms of the POISE study at 12 months, but increased for those in the placebo arm. “Fewer patients receiving obeticholic acid 10 mg progressed” to a level associated with histological cirrhosis, “and patients receiving obeticholic acid showed an improvement in liver stiffness,” said Dr. Hirschfield.

Pruritis is a feature of PBC, and worsening pruritis can be a side effect of deoxycholic acid. However, the worsening is often transitory, so patients should be encouraged to try to stay the course, said Dr. Hirschfield. Managing patient expectations; sharing improved biomarkers; and considering the addition of a bile acid sequestrant or rifampicin, or reducing the obeticholic acid dose are all strategies to consider when caring for PBC patients, said Dr. Hirschfield.

Clinical trials to assess the safety and efficacy of obeticholic acid for individuals with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis are underway.

Dr. Hirschfield discussed his findings in a video interview.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
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– Obeticholic acid resulted in a significant reduction of a biomarker for liver fibrosis in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, according to a retrospective analysis of clinical trial data. In addition, patients taking obeticholic acid had a mean reduction in liver stiffness as measured by transient elastography.

Gideon Hirschfield, MD, PhD, presented the re-analysis of clinical trial data at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

POISE was a phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of obeticholic acid for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). The clinical trial’s primary composite endpoint was an alkaline phosphatase level less than 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, with at least a 15% reduction in alkaline phosphatase and normal serum bilirubin.

The cohort of POISE patients on obeticholic acid met this biochemical surrogate endpoint, resulting in approval of the farnesoid X receptor agonist for treatment of PBC as an add-on to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), or for patients who cannot tolerate UDCA.

However, transient elastography and the aspartate transaminase (AST) to platelet ratio index (APRI) have both been used to assess fibrosis in PBC, and have been found to predict clinical outcomes in PBC. These measures have the advantage of being noninvasive methods to measure the quality of liver tissue.

Dr. Hirschfield, a transplant hepatologist at the institute of immunology and immunotherapy at the University of Birmingham, England, and his coinvestigators reevaluated data from the POISE trial. They determined that APRI dropped significantly over 12 months of obeticholic acid treatment compared to placebo (P less than .01 for each of the two dosing arms of the POISE trial). Patients who switched to 5-10 mg of obeticholic acid daily from placebo during an open-label extension of POISE also had significant reductions in APRI scores (P less than .05); the reduction for placebo-switchers on a fixed 10-mg dose during the open-label study was not significant

Liver stiffness, as measured by transient elastography, was reduced for both arms of the POISE study at 12 months, but increased for those in the placebo arm. “Fewer patients receiving obeticholic acid 10 mg progressed” to a level associated with histological cirrhosis, “and patients receiving obeticholic acid showed an improvement in liver stiffness,” said Dr. Hirschfield.

Pruritis is a feature of PBC, and worsening pruritis can be a side effect of deoxycholic acid. However, the worsening is often transitory, so patients should be encouraged to try to stay the course, said Dr. Hirschfield. Managing patient expectations; sharing improved biomarkers; and considering the addition of a bile acid sequestrant or rifampicin, or reducing the obeticholic acid dose are all strategies to consider when caring for PBC patients, said Dr. Hirschfield.

Clinical trials to assess the safety and efficacy of obeticholic acid for individuals with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis are underway.

Dr. Hirschfield discussed his findings in a video interview.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

 

– Obeticholic acid resulted in a significant reduction of a biomarker for liver fibrosis in patients with primary biliary cholangitis, according to a retrospective analysis of clinical trial data. In addition, patients taking obeticholic acid had a mean reduction in liver stiffness as measured by transient elastography.

Gideon Hirschfield, MD, PhD, presented the re-analysis of clinical trial data at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

POISE was a phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of obeticholic acid for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). The clinical trial’s primary composite endpoint was an alkaline phosphatase level less than 1.67 times the upper limit of normal, with at least a 15% reduction in alkaline phosphatase and normal serum bilirubin.

The cohort of POISE patients on obeticholic acid met this biochemical surrogate endpoint, resulting in approval of the farnesoid X receptor agonist for treatment of PBC as an add-on to ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), or for patients who cannot tolerate UDCA.

However, transient elastography and the aspartate transaminase (AST) to platelet ratio index (APRI) have both been used to assess fibrosis in PBC, and have been found to predict clinical outcomes in PBC. These measures have the advantage of being noninvasive methods to measure the quality of liver tissue.

Dr. Hirschfield, a transplant hepatologist at the institute of immunology and immunotherapy at the University of Birmingham, England, and his coinvestigators reevaluated data from the POISE trial. They determined that APRI dropped significantly over 12 months of obeticholic acid treatment compared to placebo (P less than .01 for each of the two dosing arms of the POISE trial). Patients who switched to 5-10 mg of obeticholic acid daily from placebo during an open-label extension of POISE also had significant reductions in APRI scores (P less than .05); the reduction for placebo-switchers on a fixed 10-mg dose during the open-label study was not significant

Liver stiffness, as measured by transient elastography, was reduced for both arms of the POISE study at 12 months, but increased for those in the placebo arm. “Fewer patients receiving obeticholic acid 10 mg progressed” to a level associated with histological cirrhosis, “and patients receiving obeticholic acid showed an improvement in liver stiffness,” said Dr. Hirschfield.

Pruritis is a feature of PBC, and worsening pruritis can be a side effect of deoxycholic acid. However, the worsening is often transitory, so patients should be encouraged to try to stay the course, said Dr. Hirschfield. Managing patient expectations; sharing improved biomarkers; and considering the addition of a bile acid sequestrant or rifampicin, or reducing the obeticholic acid dose are all strategies to consider when caring for PBC patients, said Dr. Hirschfield.

Clinical trials to assess the safety and efficacy of obeticholic acid for individuals with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and steatohepatitis are underway.

Dr. Hirschfield discussed his findings in a video interview.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
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