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Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD , PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Page 1: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with

Immune control

Joseph Sung MD , PhDDepartment of Medicine and Therapeutics

Institute of Digestive DiseasesThe Chinese University of Hong Kong

Page 2: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Treatment Goals in CHB

Sustained remission

=

Maintained remission

=

Low viraemia

+

Low viraemia

+

ALT normalisation ALT normalisation

Immune control,

no antiviral drugs

Long term viral suppression

antiviral drugs

Page 3: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Ganem, D. et al. N Engl J Med 2004;350:1118-1129

Why is HBV so difficult to clear?

1. Clearanceof circulating

virus

2. Inhibit newvirus

production

3. Preventionof infectinguninfected

hepatocytes

4. Preventionof reinfecting

infectedhepatocytes

5. Eliminationof cccDNAfrom infectedcells

6. Elimination of extrahepatic reservior

Page 4: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Immune Response to HBV Infection

DCmaturation

NK CellActivation

Innate Response

Type 1 IFN production

B cellBlocking viral spreadwith Ab production

CTLDirect recognitionof infected cells

Th1

Th2T helper cellsExpansion of

Immune response

YY

Y

Y

Adaptive Response

Page 5: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Ganem, D. et al. N Engl J Med 2004;350:1118-1129

Cellular Immune Responses is important to HBV Clearance

1. HBsAg particles and virions recognized by APC2. Processed antigen recognized by CD4+ and CD8+ cells3. Virus specific CD8+ cells (with help from CD4+) recognize MHC class I chain on infected hepatocytes4. Direct lysis of infected hepatocytes or relatease of IFNand TNFa

Page 6: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

HBsAg Seroconversion: The ‘Ultimate’ Goal of Therapy in CHB

• HBsAg seroconversion1

– Represents an identical state to that achieved in patients who effectively control HBV following acute infection

– Reliable marker for the resolution of CHB, both HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative

• Constitutes the outcome closest to a ‘cure’ of CHB in clinical practice

– Stringent criterion, rarely achieved with current treatments within a short time frame

1. Ganem and Prince. NEJM 2004

Page 7: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Fattovich G et al. Am J Gastroenterol 1998

HBsAg Seroconversion: A Potent Marker of Sustained Remission

Retrospective study of 309 patients over mean follow-up of 5.7 years S

urv

ival

Pro

bab

ility

(%

)

WITH HBsAg seroconversion

WITHOUT HBsAg seroconversion

Proportion of patients surviving

Months

100

80

60

40

20

48 72 96 120 144 16824

P<0.001

Page 8: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Treatment Endpoint for HBeAg-positive

• During CHB infection, presence of HBeAg is associated with active and progressive liver disease

• HBeAg loss/seroconversion is the strongest indicator of lasting remission in HBeAg-positive CHB

Lok and McMahon. Hepatology 2004

Page 9: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

84

Niederau NEJM 1996

Proportion of patients surviving Proportion free of hepatic complications

Months Months

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

24 36 48 60 72 8412 24 36 48 60 7212

IFN-treated WITH HBeAg loss

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

IFN-treated WITHOUT HBeAg loss

P=0.004* P=0.018*

*According to the proportional hazards model

HBeAg Loss Following IFN Treatment Results in Increased Survival

Page 10: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

From CHB to Liver Cirrhosis:

Cirrhosis

Number %/year

1. Liaw YF et al. Hepatology 1988; 2. Liaw YF et al. 2005;3. Hsu et al. Hepatology 2002; 4. Chen et al. Gastroenterology 2002

HBeAg (+)1 509 3 35 2.4

(+) (+)2 134 6.8 3.5

(+) (-)2 74 6.8 1.5

HBeAg seroconversion3 269 8.6 21 0.9

HBsAg seroclearance4 189 5.3 0

Status

NumberF/U

(year)

Page 11: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

van Zonneveld. Hepatology 2004

Time from start of therapy (years)

4 6 8 10 12 142

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

0.2

0

HBeAg response *

No HBeAg response

Pro

port

ion

of p

atie

nts

w

ith H

BsA

g lo

ss

* Response defined as HBeAg loss within12 months of treatment

50%

HBsAg Response After HBeAg Clearance in HBeAg-positive CHB

Long-term outcome following IFN treatment

Page 12: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

NucleosideNucleosideanaloguesanalogues

TTHHTTSS

Immunostimulants

ImmunosuppressivesImmunosuppressivesNKCTL

+++ -

-

- Lamivudine

Prednisone

Levamisole, Thymosin

Treatment Options for Chronic HBV

AdevofirEntecavirLdT

InterferonInterferon

+

+

+-

pIFN

Page 13: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Approach to Sustained Remission Immune control

100%

0%

Direct viral suppressionImmuno-modulation

HB

V D

NA

Sustained phaseAssay limit

Suppress viral replication Clear infected hepatocyteInduction phase

NA

APC

CTL

NK

Lymphocyte

Th

B cell

PIFNIFN

About 14.5 years to deplete replication template with single NA

Page 14: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Mea

n H

BV

DN

A (

log

10 c

op

ies/

mL

)

* log10 reduction from baseline

HBV DNA Reduction On-treatment

HBeAg Seroconversion 24 Weeks Post-treatment

PEGASYS LAM

32%

P<0.01

2

4

6

8

10

12

0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48

-4.5*

PEGASYS

-5.8*

LAM

19%

0

10

20

30

40

50

Fried et al EASL 2005

PEGASYS vs LAM in HBeAg PositiveDespite a More Profound Viral Reduction with LAM, Sustained

HBeAg Response at Week 72 was Higher with PEGASYS

Page 15: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

-4.1*

-4.2*

Mea

n H

BV

DN

A (

log

10 c

op

ies/

mL

)

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 12 24 36 48

PEGASYS

LAM

HBV DNA Reduction On-treatment

Sustained Responses 24 Weeks Post-treatment

Lai et al APASL 2004 and Roche data on file

0

20

40

60

80

PEGASYS vs LAM in HBeAg NegativeDespite a More Rapid Viral Reduction with LAM, Sustained

Response at Week 72 was Higher with PEGASYS

PEGASYS LAM

59%

44%43%

29%

ALT normalisationHBV DNA <20,000 cp/mL

P<0.01

* log10 reduction from baseline

Page 16: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases
Page 17: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases
Page 18: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases
Page 19: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases
Page 20: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Antiviral Potency and HBeAg Seroconversion

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

HBV DNA change from baseline 1 year post treatment (log10)

HB

eA

g s

ero

co

nve

rsio

n

(%)

Adefovir(antiviral)

Lamivudine*(antiviral)

Entecavir(antiviral)

Pegasys* (antiviral + immun.)

* Study WV16240

Pegasys*+Lamivudine (antiviral + immun.)

Interferon (antiviral + immun.)

Page 21: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Favorable Outcome of HBV Treatment

Hoofnagle et al. Ann Intern Med 1981; Fattovich et al. Hepatology 1986; Di Bisceglie et al. Gastroenterology 1987; Niederau et al. NEJM 1996; Chu et al. Gastroenterology 2002; van Zonneveld et al. Hepatology 2004

HBeAg seroconversion

HBsAg loss/seroconversionPrevention of HCC Improved survival

HBeAg loss

Normal ALT, Reduced HBV DNA

Page 22: Treating HBV Infection: Sustained Remission with Immune control Joseph Sung MD, PhD Department of Medicine and Therapeutics Institute of Digestive Diseases

Developments in Therapeutic Approaches: Treatment Strategies

1st choice therapy

Finite therapy course with highest chance of sustained response (remission)eg peginterferon alfa-2a or IFN

Survival

Sustainedresponse

yes

no*2nd choice therapy

Maintenance therapyeg nucleoside/tide analogues

*or IFN contraindicated / not tolerated