Dynamic hepatitis C virus genotypic and phenotypic changes in patients treated with the protease inhibitor telaprevir

被引:526
作者
Sarrazin, Christoph
Kieffer, Tara L.
Bartels, Doug
Hanzelka, Brian
Muh, Ute
Welker, Martin
Wincheringer, Dennis
Zhou, Yi
Chu, Hui-May
Lin, Chao
Weegink, Christine
Reesink, Henk
Zeuzem, Stefan
Kwong, Ann D.
机构
[1] Vertex Pharmaceut Inc, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Univ Saarland, Klin Innere Med 2, Homburg, Germany
[3] Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, NL-1105 AZ Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1053/j.gastro.2007.02.037
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Background & Aims: Telaprevir (VX-950), a hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3.4A protease inhibitor, has shown strong antiviral activity in phase 1 clinical studies. Because of high levels of HCV replication and the low fidelity of HCV polymerase, selection of resistant isolates during therapy may occur. Methods: A highly sensitive sequencing method was developed in which approximately 80 clones/sample were analyzed to identify mutations in the NS3 protease catalytic domain in HCV genotype-1-infected patients dosed with 450 mg every 8 hours, 750 mg every 8 hours, or 1250 mg every 12 hours of telaprevir for 14 days. Results: Mutations that confer low-level resistance (V36A/M, T54A, R155K/T, and A156S) and high-level resistance (A156V/T, 36+155, 36+156) to telaprevir were detected and correlated with telaprevir exposure and virologic response. Changes in the frequency of mutations after the end of dosing showed an inverse relationship between in vivo viral fitness and resistance. In the absence of telaprevir selective pressure the majority of resistant variants were replaced by wild-type virus within 3-7 months. Conclusions: Resistant HCV isolates are selected rapidly during therapy with the highly active protease inhibitor telaprevir. Combination therapy with pegylated interferon-alfa or other direct antiviral drugs seem mandatory to avoid developing resistance.
引用
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页码:1767 / 1777
页数:11
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