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Encouraging HCV Results Issued by Roche

The Editors at Hepatitis Central
November 7, 2007

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Delivering encouraging news, pharmaceutical giant Roche shares results of two of its leading HCV drugs. As the result of a Phase IIa trial that combined Pegasys and Copegus with R1626, the Hepatitis C virus was undetectable in 81 percent of the study’s participants. In collaboration with Pharmasset, a Phase I study of R7128 also demonstrated great promise against the virus.

Roche Issues Hepatitis Drug Data

www.thestreet.com
By Elizabeth Trotta
Staff Reporter
11/2/2007

Roche said Friday that in a phase IIa study a triple-drug combination for treatment of hepatitis C showed a robust virological response and subsequently will proceed to a phase IIb study.

Presenting results at the American Association of the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) meeting in Boston, the Swiss drugmaker said its investigational hepatitis C drug R1626 showed promising antiviral activity in the phase IIa trial when given with Pegasys (peginterferon alfa-2a) and Copegus. The aforementioned Roche drugs are used together to treat adults with chronic hepatitis C whose liver still works normally and who haven’t been previously treated with an interferon alpha.

After four weeks of treatment with the three-drug combination, the virus couldn’t be detected in 81% of patients with a mean decrease in viral load of 5.2 log10 from the baseline, and Roche said most adverse events were mild to moderate.

Also, no resistance to R1626 was identified following intensive testing for either two weeks of treatment with R1626 as monotherapy or in patients treated with R1626 for four weeks in combination with the standard of care.

The phase IIb study, called POLI 1, which will further investigate R1626 in combination with standard or lower dose of Pegasys and standard dose of Copegus, is now open and enrolling patients in eight countries, including the U.S.

Pharmasset (VRUS – Cramer’s Take – Stockpickr), which partners with Roche to develop chronic hepatitis C drug R7128, presented data Friday on a phase I 14-day monotherapy study of patients who failed to respond to standard therapy. Pharmassest said there was a 99% mean decrease in HCV with no serious adverse events. (Pharmasset divulged positive preliminary results for the study in September.) The companies are hoping those results will translate when the drug is used in combination with other therapies for a longer duration in a previously untreated population.

Gilead (GILD – Cramer’s Take – Stockpickr – Rating), Idenix, (IDIX – Cramer’s Take – Stockpickr – Rating) and ViroPharma (VPHM – Cramer’s Take – Stockpickr – Rating) are also developing candidates in a class of antivirals called polymerase inhibitors for hepatitis C virus.

Vertex (VRTX – Cramer’s Take – Stockpickr – Rating), which is presenting at AASLD as well, also dished hepatitis C data for its Telaprevir on Friday.

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