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                Below 
                  is a press release describing the meeting issued by the Forum 
                  for Collaborative HIV Research. Combination regimens of agents 
                  targeting different steps of the HCV lifecycle resemble antiretroviral 
                  therapy for HIV, and many HIV positive people are coinfected 
                  with hepatitis C, leading to increased collaboration among clinicians 
                  and advocates focusing on the 2 diseases.  
               
                 
                  Hepatitis 
                    Experts Create Roadmap for Accelerating the Development of 
                    Targeted Therapies for Hepatitis C Virus
 Washington, DC -- December 14, 2010 -- To improve the care 
                    for individuals infected with the hepatitis C virus, a major 
                    health problem and a leading cause of chronic liver disease 
                    around the world, nearly 200 international hepatitis experts 
                    have taken an important step in escalating the introduction 
                    of a new class of targeted therapies for HCV -- direct-acting 
                    antivirals (DAAs).
 
 December 6 at a major scientific meeting -- Advancing HCV 
                    Drug Development: A Collaborative Approach -- convened 
                    by the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research, researchers, 
                    hepatitis advocates, members of industry and representatives 
                    from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European 
                    Medicines Agency (EMA) created the roadmap for accelerating 
                    the development of DAAs, agreeing that this new class of drugs 
                    targeting specific hepatitis C virus proteins has the same 
                    potential to improve treatment outcomes for people with HCV 
                    as antiretroviral drugs changed the standard of care in HIV. 
                    Currently, two DAA compounds have advanced into phase 3 development 
                    in the United State and EU, and many more are in phase 2 trials 
                    and likely to advance to phase 3 research in the near future.
 
 "If there was ever a time when we can change the course 
                    of HCV, it is now," said Veronica Miller, PhD, Director 
                    of the Forum. "We are now where we were with HIV more 
                    than a decade ago and can apply many of the lessons learned 
                    from HIV drug development to significantly accelerate the 
                    progress in bringing new and better HCV therapies to market."
 
 DAAs directly attack the ability of the hepatitis C virus 
                    to replicate and can increase the cure rate in certain HCV 
                    patients to between 60 and 70 percent -- a major advance over 
                    the 40 percent success rate associated with the currently 
                    recommended treatment for chronic HCV infection, the combination 
                    of pegylated interferon and ribavirin. Although the first 
                    DAAs still require concomitant use with current HCV medications, 
                    these new compounds will shorten the length of time on pegylated 
                    interferon and ribavirin therapy, which hepatitis specialists 
                    noted is often difficult to tolerate and has significant adverse 
                    event profiles that limit treatment in many patients. According 
                    to the latest data, between 15 and 30 percent of HCV patients 
                    started on current HCV therapy are unable to complete the 
                    year of treatment now required because they cannot tolerate 
                    the side effects.
 
 Charting the future of HCV drug development, the meeting participants 
                    applied FDA's new guidance on conducting clinical trials on 
                    DAAs, which was issued in September 2010 in draft form and 
                    expected to be finalized in 2011. According to Jeffrey S. 
                    Murray, MD, MPH, Deputy Director of the Division of Antiviral 
                    Drug Products in FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, 
                    the draft guidance follows the same approach FDA uses in developing 
                    HIV and oncology drugs. For early clinical testing, FDA recognizes 
                    that most if not all DAAs for HCV will be used in combination 
                    with other approved drug and therefore, recommends studies 
                    examining the relationship between the new DAA agent and both 
                    pegylated interferon and ribavirin as well as testing the 
                    combination antiviral activity. FDA's draft guidance also 
                    calls for using the results from proof-in-concept trials (meaning 
                    a study in HCV infected patients that demonstrates initial 
                    activity as measured by reductions in the HCV viral load) 
                    to guide dose selection for subsequent Phase 2 trials in which 
                    DAAs are studied for longer durations as part of a combination 
                    regimen. FDA is further encouraging drug sponsors to design 
                    development plans for combinations of two or more DAAs.
 
 "The good news for the HCV community is that more drugs 
                    are coming," said Jur Strobos, MD, JD, FACEP, Deputy 
                    Director of the Forum. "The bad news is we don't know 
                    how to combine them and that is what we need to study."
 
 With FDA's guidance as the framework, the hepatitis experts 
                    also identified the major factors researchers must take into 
                    account when designing clinical trials for DAAs and other 
                    new HCV therapies. Among the major issues cited are the emergence 
                    of resistant virus and its potential management, and including 
                    in future DAA clinical trials those special populations with 
                    significant unmet needs in HCV therapy. These patients include 
                    individuals co-infected with HIV, liver transplant recipients, 
                    patients with decompensated cirrhosis, opioid users and those 
                    on opiate substitution therapy, and children. According to 
                    the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), between 
                    5 and 6 percent of infants born to HCV infected women contract 
                    the infection from their mothers and the majority of those 
                    infants will develop a chronic infection.
 
 Focusing on the special needs of pediatric patients, leaders 
                    from both FDA and EMA agreed that the time to start investigating 
                    DAAs in children is when sufficient safety data exist in adults. 
                    As explained by specialists in pediatric liver disease, children 
                    with HCV often tolerate drug therapy better than adults, which 
                    is why the ideal age to start children in pediatric trials 
                    for DAAs is when they are 3 years old. According to hepatitis 
                    experts, the beneficial impact of a "cure" for children, 
                    preferably before they start school, cannot be overestimated.
 
 Reducing Disparities in HCV Clinical Trials
 
 Because identifying potential differences among groups treated 
                    with a therapeutic regimen is an important goal of human studies, 
                    the HCV community singled out the under-representation of 
                    women, older people and different ethnic subgroups in clinical 
                    trials as the problem requiring immediate attention and change 
                    at a systemic level. Although there is a higher prevalence 
                    of HCV in men than women, women metabolize HCV drugs differently 
                    and are more affected by autoimmune diseases, which share 
                    similar symptoms with HCV. Women also are twice as likely 
                    as men to suffer from depression, which is a common side effect 
                    of treatment with HCV medications.
 
 Even more challenging for the HCV community is increasing 
                    the representation of older HCV-infected adults in HCV clinical 
                    trials, even though Baby Boomers constitute the majority of 
                    hepatitis C infections in the United States and are often 
                    less responsive than younger generations to antiviral treatment. 
                    Compounding the problem, older HCV patients are more difficult 
                    to treat, due to the increased prevalence of co-morbid conditions, 
                    such as diabetes, dyslipidemia, and other metabolic conditions 
                    that are correlated to chronic liver disease. Aging is also 
                    strongly associated with liver fibrosis progression, which 
                    means older HCV patients are likely to have advanced liver 
                    disease and a high risk for impending liver complications. 
                    But despite this reality, few studies have examined the age-specific 
                    factors of chronic HCV infection and the clinical management 
                    of the infection in this patient population.
 
 More than an issue of fairness, HCV experts associate better 
                    designed clinical research studies with the increased ability 
                    of scientists to catalog and understand the influence of genetic 
                    and non-genetic factors on individual and group responses 
                    to new treatments. Findings from the large amount of genetic 
                    data generated to date show that more than 90 percent of the 
                    observed genetic variations occur within, rather than between 
                    groups. This underscores the fact that gender and ethnicity 
                    have biomedical consequences when evaluating patients with 
                    more resistant virus and with more severe disease.
 
 Designing the Research Roadmap to Address a Growing Public 
                    Health Threat
 
 Accelerating the development of DAAs to improve HCV treatment 
                    outcomes is especially warranted now that the hepatitis C 
                    virus has become the most common chronic blood borne infection 
                    in the U.S. According to new government estimates, approximately 
                    4.1 million Americans are infected with HCV, of whom 60 to 
                    70 percent will develop chronic liver disease. Currently, 
                    almost half of all liver transplants in the U.S. are performed 
                    for end-stage hepatitis C. Moreover, because liver disease 
                    is one of the leading causes of death in the U.S., the CDC 
                    predicts that deaths from chronic liver disease attributed 
                    to hepatitis C will double or triple over the next 15 to 20 
                    years.
 
 To change these statistics, hepatitis specialists focused 
                    on ways to advance HCV drug development so DAAs and other 
                    new classes of drugs for HCV can reach the market quickly. 
                    Here, the experts reached agreement on a number of issues:
 
                
                  
                     
                      |  | Exposure 
                        to new single agents -- because HCV remains sensitive 
                        to ribavirin and pegylated interferon, longer initial 
                        studies may be recommended to evaluate single drugs and 
                        novel combinations of drugs. |   
                      |  | Composition 
                        of patients in early studies (phase 1 and 2a) -- early 
                        studies should be large enough so results with one type 
                        of virus or one group of patients can be easily discerned. 
                        Focusing on specific genetic sub-populations will also 
                        ensure that early studies do not produce confusing results. |   
                      |  | Drug 
                        resistance in HCV patients -- unlike HIV, drug resistance 
                        in HCV may not be as large a concern because HCV does 
                        not integrate into host DNA as HIV does. Thus, resistant 
                        strains are not archived and there is the potential that 
                        resistant patients can be retreated with different combinations 
                        regimens, as and when they become available. |   
                      |  | Baseline 
                        parameters -- there is the need to develop predictive 
                        algorithms based on baseline characteristics such as gender, 
                        body weight, HCV genotypes and subtypes |   
                      |  | Exclusion 
                        of former and current drug users in clinical trials -- 
                        exclusion is unnecessary and does not serve the field 
                        well. Over 60 percent of patients with HCV are infected 
                        through drug use, indicating the need to have quality 
                        data to guide treatment decisions in this patient population |  
  
                 
                  As 
                    a next step, the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research will 
                    publish the consensus of this scientific meeting to advance 
                    the research agenda. Once published, the report will be distributed 
                    widely to the Forum's many constituencies -- government, industry, 
                    patient advocates, healthcare providers, foundations, health 
                    insurers and academia -- with the goal of advancing research 
                    on HCV and driving public policy. 
 About the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research
 
 Now part of the University of California (UC), Berkeley School 
                    of Public Health and based in Washington, DC, the Forum was 
                    founded in 1997 as the outgrowth of a White House initiative 
                    which called for an ongoing collaboration among stakeholders 
                    to address emerging issues in HIV/AIDS and set the research 
                    strategy. Representing government, industry, patient advocates, 
                    healthcare providers, foundations and academia, the Forum 
                    is a public/private partnership that is guided by an Executive 
                    Committee that sets the research agenda. The Forum organizes 
                    roundtables and issues reports on a range of global HIV/AIDS 
                    issues, including treatment-related toxicities, immune-based 
                    therapies, health services research, co-infections, prevention, 
                    and the transference of research results into care. Forum 
                    recommendations have changed how clinical trials are conducted, 
                    accelerated the delivery of new classes of drugs, heightened 
                    awareness of TB/HIV co-infection, and helped to spur national 
                    momentum toward universal testing for HIV. For more information, 
                    see http://www.hivforum.org
  
               
                1/7/11 SourceForum 
                  for Collaborative HIV Research. Hepatitis Experts Create Roadmap 
                  for Accelerating the Development of Targeted Therapies for Hepatitis 
                  C Virus. Press release. December 14, 2010.
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