No Resistance to Tenofovir Alafenamide Detected through 96 Weeks of Treatment in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis B Infection.
Andrea L CathcartHenry Lik-Yuen ChanNeeru BhardwajYang LiuPatrick MarcellinCalvin Qian Pannull ShalimarMaria ButiStephanie CoxBandita ParhyEric ZhouRoss MartinSilvia ChangLanjia LinJohn F FlahertyKathryn M KitrinosAnuj GaggarNamiki IzumiYoung-Suk LimPublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2018)
Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) has shown equivalent efficacy and improved safety profiles for patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) compared to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF). However, limited data are available for its resistance profiles. In two clinical trials, 1,298 hepatitis E antigen-positive and -negative patients with CHB were randomized 2:1 and treated with TAF (n = 866) or TDF (n = 432). Baseline nucleos(t)ide analog resistance substitutions in HBV polymerase/reverse transcriptase (Pol/RT) were assessed using INNO-LiPA Multi-DR v2/v3. Resistance surveillance was conducted for patients with viremia (HBV DNA ≥ 69IU/ml) by HBV Pol/RT sequencing at week 96 or at discontinuation. In vitro phenotypic analysis was performed for patients with conserved site substitutions or virologic breakthrough while adherent to the study drug. At baseline, the majority of patients harbored virus with wild-type Pol/RT (89.2%), with 10.8% harboring resistance associated mutations. A similar percentage of patients in the TAF or TDF groups qualified for sequence analysis through week 96 (TAF, 11.1%; TDF, 10.9%). Of these, a small percentage of patients experienced virologic breakthrough (TAF, 2.8%; TDF, 3.2%) that was often associated with drug nonadherence (TAF, 30%; TDF, 50%). Across treatment groups, 132 patients qualified for sequence analysis through week 96, with nearly half having no sequence changes from baseline (43.2%). Most sequence changes occurred at polymorphic positions, and no isolates showed a reduction in susceptibility in vitro After 96 weeks, the proportion of patients achieving virus suppression (HBV DNA < 69 IU/ml) was similar across treatment groups, and no substitutions associated with resistance to TAF or TDF were detected. (These studies have been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifiers NCT01940471 and NCT01940341.).
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- hepatitis b virus
- ejection fraction
- clinical trial
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- randomized controlled trial
- patient reported outcomes
- machine learning
- antiretroviral therapy
- single molecule
- preterm birth
- amino acid
- phase ii
- replacement therapy
- placebo controlled
- drug induced
- case control