Title: FDAs Antiviral Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting
1FDAs Antiviral DrugsAdvisory Committee Meeting
BARACLUDETM(entecavir / BMS 200475)
11 March 2005
2Introduction
3Global Impact of Hepatitis B
1540 develop cirrhosis, liver failureor
hepatocellular carcinoma
2 billion with past / present HBV infection
350400 million with chronic hepatitis B
World Population 6 billion
Worldwide 1 million / year die from
HBV-associated liver disease United States
Chronically infected 1.25 million 5000 /
year die
4Background
5Proposed Indication
- Entecavir is indicated for the treatment of
chronic hepatitis B infection in adults with
evidence of active liver inflammation - Usual dose0.5 mg tablet once daily
- Lamivudine-refractory1.0 mg tablet once daily
6BMS Presentation
- Introduction Elliott Sigal, MD, PhD
- Chief Scientific Officer President, Pharmace
utical Research Institute - Background Richard Colonno, PhD Vice
President, Infectious Diseases Drug Discovery - Nonclinical Safety Lois Lehman-McKeeman, PhD
- Distinguished Research Fellow, Discovery
Toxicology - Clinical Efficacy / Evren Atillasoy, MD
- Clinical Safety Director, US Medical Affairs
- Viral Resistance Richard Colonno, PhD Vice
President, Infectious Diseases Drug Discovery - Pharmacovigilance Donna Morgan Murray, PhDand
Summary Executive Director, Global Regulatory
Sciences
7Consultants Available to the Committee
- Adrian Di Bisceglie, MD
- Saint Louis University School of Medicine
- Samuel A. Bozzette, MD, PhD
- University of California, San Diego
- Jules L. Dienstag, MD
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- James Swenberg, DVM, PhD
- University of North Carolina
- LJ Wei, PhD
- Harvard University
- Gary M. Williams, MD, DABT
- New York Medical College
Hepatology Health Policy Hepatology Toxicology/
Pathology Biostatistics Toxicology/ Pathology
8Impact of Viral Replication on Disease
Progression Taiwan Cohort Study Results
- The incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
and liver cirrhosis is correlated with level of
viral replication - Persistent elevation of viral load over time has
the greatest impact on HCC risk - Viral load predicts risk of future HCC
independent of HBeAg status and serum ALT level - This risk increases with increasing viral load
EASL April 2005
9Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Significance of HBV Replication
HBV Replication (Measured by Serum HBV DNA)
Liver Inflammation
ALT Elevation
DiseaseProgression Liver Failure Liver
Cancer Transplant Death
Worsening histology Necroinflammation Fibrosis Cir
rhosis
10Liaw et al LVD Treatment PreventsDisease
Progression vs Placebo
Liaw et al. N Engl J Med 20043511521-31.
11Liaw et al Incidence of Disease Progression by
LVDR Substitutions
Number ()
Lamivudine Wild Type (N 221) LVDR (YMDD) (N
209) Placebo (N 214)
11 (5) 23 (11) 38 (18)
Adapted from Liaw et al. N Engl J Med
20043511521-31.
12Chronic HBV Improved Oral Antiviral Therapy
- Effective
- Safe and well tolerated
- Potent
- Has low rates of resistance
- Maintain future treatment options
- Does not select for LVD or ADV resistance
13Entecavir
- Cyclopentyl guanosine analog
- Potent Selective inhibitorof HBV replication
- No significant activity against HIV
- Poor substrate for humanpolymerases
- No inhibition of humanmitochondrial (gamma)
polymerase - Inhibits all 3 HBV polymerase functionsPriming,
DNA-dependent synthesis, Reverse transcription - Phosporylation Intracellular ETV-TP T ½ 15 hrs
14Comparative EC50 for HBV In Cell Culture
- WT ETV EC50 4 nM (gt 300-fold more potent)
15Woodchuck Model
- Predictive model of HBV antivirals in humans
- Efficacy
- Toxicity
- Progression to HCC
- ETV is a potent inhibitor of WHBV polymerase
- Long-term treatment (ETV 0.5 mg/kg) 14 or 36
months - Sustained virologic suppression up to 8 logsfor
1 to 3 years
WHBV Woodchuck Hepatitis B Virus
16Woodchuck Studies Survival
N 56
N 50
N 5
N 6
Animals Survivingto Age 4 ()
ControlUninfected
ControlInfected
ETV36 mo.
ETV14 mo.
Treatment
Combined p 0.0002
Historical control. Tennant, et al. Viral
Hepatitis and Liver Disease 1988 462-464 R.
Colonno, et al. Journal of Infectious Diseases,
20011841236-45
17Nonclinical Safety
Lois Lehman-McKeeman, PhD
18Rodent Carcinogenicity Studies Overview
- Lifetime studies in rats and mice to identify
hazard - Study Design
- 50-60 animals / sex / group
- Dose up to maximum-tolerated dose (MTD)
- Safety margin over human exposure
- Tumor Evaluation
- Standard histopathologic assessment
- Spontaneous tumors observed
19Rodent Carcinogenicity StudiesStatistical
Evaluation
- Compare tumor incidences in treated vs control
animals - Peto-Pike trend test
- Adjusts for time and cause of death
- Statistical significance based on incidence
- lt 0.005 for a common tumor
- lt 0.025 for a rare tumor
- Determine dose level that results in no
significant trend
FDA Guidance, 2001
20Rodent Carcinogenicity Results for ETV
- Tumors concluded to be relevant for the
evaluation of human safety after review with FDA
CAC - Tissues showing preneoplastic changes
- Mice lung adenomas and carcinomas
- Tissues not showing preneoplastic changes
- Male Mice liver carcinomas
- Female Mice Vascular tumors
- Male rats Gliomas
- Female rats Gliomas, liver adenomas,skin
fibromas
21Key Carcinogenicity Findings Mouse Lung
Dosage, mg/kg 0 0.004 0.04 0.4 4 Exposure 0.5 mg
(M, F) 0 2, 2 5, 2 24, 19 75, 70 Exposure 1 mg
(M, F) 0 1,1 3, 3 14, 11 42, 40 MALES Tumor
Incidence Lung Adenoma 7 13 19 28 33 Lung
Carcinoma 5 7 7 12 25 FEMALES Lung Adenoma
13 8 7 27 25 Lung Carcinoma 7 5 3 8 27
p lt 0.005
22Lung Tumors in Mice
- Preneoplastic effects observed in mouse lung
- Increased macrophages
- Proliferation of Type II pneumocytes
- Sustained proliferation of Type II pneumocytesis
causally-related to tumor development - Macrophages required
- ETV is chemotactic
- No preneoplastic changes observed in rats, dogs,
monkeys - Entecavir is not chemotactic for human monocytes
23Key Carcinogenicity Findings in Mice
Dosage, mg/kg 0 0.004 0.04 0.4 4 Exposure 0.5 mg
(M, F) 0 2, 2 5, 2 24, 19 75, 70 Exposure 1 mg
(M, F) 0 1,1 3, 3 14, 11 42, 40 MALES Tumor
Incidence Liver Carcinoma 1 2 5 3 13 FEMALES H
emangiomas 19 22 20 18 43
p lt 0.005
24High Dose Rodent TumorsPossible Mode of Action
- ETV-induces dNTP pool perturbations
- Imbalance alters fidelity of DNA replication and
repair - Increased tumor development
25Key Carcinogenicity Findings in Rats
Dosage, Males 0 0.003 0.02 0.2 1.4 Dosage,
Females 0 0.01 0.06 0.4 2.6 Exposure 0.5 mg (M,
F) 0 lt1, lt1 lt1, 1 8, 8 62, 43 Exposure 1 mg
(M, F) 0 lt1, lt1 lt1, lt1 5, 4 35, 24 MALES
Tumor Incidence Brain Glioma 0 2 2 3 7 FEMALES B
rain Glioma 0 0 2 0 5 Liver Adenoma 1
3 5 2 13 Skin Fibroma 0 0 2 3 5
p lt 0.005 p lt 0.025
26Human Risk Assessment
- Lifetime studies in rats and mice identify
carcinogenic hazard - Human cancer risk assessment
- Other relevant data
- Dose-response relationships
- Exposure multiples
- Assessment for ETV
- Mouse lung tumors may be species specific
- ETV-induced changes in dNTP pools may contribute
to non-linear dose response
27Clinical Efficacy
28Entecavir Clinical Program
- Broad experience
- Patterns of HBV disease
- Global
- NDA 1500 ETV-treated patients
- Comparison versus active control (LVD)
29Clinical Experience
Special Populations N 139
Phase 3 N 1633
Phase 2 N 757
901 Rollover ETV LVD ETV
049 5 YearPost-Treatment Observation
Safety Update
30Dose Response Mean Reduction in HBV DNA, log10
c/mL
LVD-Refractory Patients
Nucleoside-Naive Patients
Weeks
ETV 0.1(N 34)
ETV 0.01(N 52)
ETV 0.5(N 47)
ETV 0.1(N 47)
ETV 0.5(N 43)
LVD 100(N 40)
ETV 1.0(N 42)
LVD 100(N 45)
Studies 005 and 014
31Clinical Efficacy
- Naïve eAg (022)
- Naïve eAg- (027)
- LVD-refractory eAg (026)
32Phase III Study Design
ETV 0.5 mg (N 354)
Responders
LVD 100 mg (N 355)
Partial Responders
ETV 0.5 mg (N 325)
LVD 100 mg (N 313)
ETV 1.0 mg (N 141)
Non-Responders
LVD 100 mg (N 145)
Baseline (Liver Biopsy)
Week 48 (Liver Biopsy)
Week 52 (Patient Management Decision)
33Key Inclusion Criteria
- Liver biopsy
- Documented HBsAg for 24 weeks
- Compensated liver diseae
- ALT 1.3 - 10 x ULN
- HBV DNA by bDNA
- eAg 3 MEq/mL (3 x 106 c/mL)
- eAg- 0.7 MEq/mL (7 x 105 c/mL)
- HIV, HCV and HDV seronegative
- Creatinine 1.5 mg/dL
Studies 022, 027 and 026
34Baseline Patient Demographics
Naïve eAg- N 638
LVD-Ref eAg N 286
Naïve eAg N 709
Age, mean (years)
44
39
35
76
76
75
Male
62
58
40
White
37
39
57
Asian
Region
SA South AmericaNA North America
Studies 022, 027 and 026
35Baseline HBV Characteristics
Naïve eAg- N 638
LVD-Ref eAg N 286
Naïve eAg N 709
7.6
9.4
9.7
HBV DNA by PCR, mean (log10 copies/mL)
142
128
143
ALT, mean (U/L)
HBV subtype
Studies 022, 027 and 026
36Baseline Histology Scores
Studies 022, 027 and 026
37Patient Disposition
Number of Patients
(96)
(90)
(96)
(95)
(94)
(87)
a Percent based on treated patients
Studies 022, 027 and 026
38Liver Biopsy Assessment
- Single pathologist
(Zachary Goodman, MD - AFIP) - Blinded to treatment assignment
- Blinded to temporal sequenceof biopsy pairs
Studies 022, 027 and 026
39Primary Endpoint at Week 48
- Histologic Improvement at Week 48,relative to
baseline - 2-point reduction in Knodell necroinflammatorys
core with no worsening in Knodell fibrosis - Evaluable Baseline Histology Cohort
- Baseline Knodell necroinflammatory score 2
- 89 of treated patients
- Missing / inadequate Week 48 biopsy no
improvement
Studies 022, 027 and 026
40Primary Endpoint in Naïve Patients
Histologic Improvement
at Week 48
Naïve eAg-
Naïve eAg
Difference Estimate (95 CI)p-value
Studies 022 and 027
41Co-Primary Endpoints at Week 48in LVD-Refractory
Patients
Histologic Improvement
HBV DNA by bDNA (lt 0.7 MEq/mL) and ALT (lt 1.25 x
ULN)
Percent
Diff. Est. (97.5 CI) 27.3 (13.6, 40.9)
50.5 (40.4, 60.6)
p lt 0.0001
p lt 0.0001
Study 026
42Secondary Histology EndpointIshak Fibrosis
Improvement at Week 48
Naïve eAg
Naïve eAg-
LVD-Ref eAg
Improved
Percent
No change
44
42
34
41
40
46
Worsened
Improvement p 0.41 p
0.65 p lt 0.01
Studies 022, 027 and 026
43Non-Histology Secondary Endpoints at Week 48
- Virologic
- Mean HBV DNA reduction from baseline by PCR
- HBV DNA lt 400 copies/mL by PCR
- Biochemical
- Normalization of ALT ( 1 x ULN)
- Serologic
- HBe Seroconversion (eAg patients)
Studies 022, 027 and 026
44HBV DNA lt 400 copies/mL Through Week 48 Naïve
Studies
Naïve eAg
Naïve eAg-
ETV (N 354) LVD (N 355)
ETV (N 325) LVD (N 313)
91
73
69
Percent
38
p lt 0.0001
p lt 0.0001
Weeks
Studies 022 and 027
45HBV DNA lt 400 copies/mL Through Week 48
LVD-Refractory Study
ETV (N 141) LVD (N 145)
21
Percent
p lt 0.0001
1
Weeks
Study 026
46HBV DNA Mean Reduction at Week 48
Naïve eAg
Naïve eAg-
LVD-Ref eAg
log10 copies/mL
p lt 0.0001 p lt 0.0001
p lt 0.0001
Studies 022, 027 and 026
47ALT 1 x ULN at Week 48
Naïve eAg
Naïve eAg-
LVD-Ref eAg
Percent
p 0.02 p lt 0.05
p lt 0.0001
Studies 022, 027 and 026
48HBe Seroconversion at Week 48
Naïve eAg
LVD-Ref eAg
Percent
p 0.33 p
0.06
Studies 022 and 026
49Summary of Week 48 Efficacy
Naïve eAg Naïve eAg- LVD-Ref eAg
Histologic Improvement
HBV DNA lt 400 copies/mL
ALT 1 x ULN
HBe Seroconversion
LVD Better
ETV Better
ETV - LVD Difference Estimate and CI
Studies 022, 027 and 026
50Clinical Safety
51Populations in Safety Analysis
ETV 1.0 mg LVD
52Observation Time Weeks
Nucleoside-naïve
LVD-refractory
Safety Cohort
Safety Cohort therapy may be blinded or
open-label follow-up may include time on
alternate HBV therapies
Studies 022, 027, 014, 026 Safety Update
53Clinical Safety
- General
- Hepatic
- Malignant Neoplasms
54Overall Safety
Number of Patients ()
Studies 022, 027, 014, 026 Safety Update
55Adverse Events 10 On Treatment
Any adverse event 81 82 85 82 Headache 20 19
19 18 Upper respiratory tract infection 18
16 16 12 Nasopharyngitis 12 12 9 10
Cough 11 10 11 9 Abdominal Pain Upper 10
9 8 13 Fatigue 10 9 14 12 ALT
Increase 3 7 3 11
Studies 022, 027, 014 and 026 Safety Update
56Clinical Safety
- General
- Hepatic
- Malignant Neoplasms
57ALT Flares On- and Off-Treatment
Studies 022, 027, 014, 026 Safety Update
58Hepatic Events in Pivotal Studies
Number of Patients
Studies 022, 027, 014 and 026 Safety Update
59Clinical Safety
- General
- Hepatic
- Malignant Neoplasms
60Rates of Malignant Neoplasms
Comparable rates observed in ETV and LVD
Rate/1000 PY
Safety Cohort Safety Update
61Malignancy Diagnosis Excluding Skin Distribution
Over Time
Percent of Patients with Events
3 1497
2 899
6 1376
4 869
4 1179
2 801
1 945
0 454
N w/events
N at risk
Safety Cohort Safety Update
62Comparison of Rates of Malignant Neoplasmsin ETV
Clinical Studies vs. Other HBV Cohorts
Rates per 1000 Patient Years
ObservationalCohort Studies
Safety Cohort
Liver Cancer, including non-HCC
63Overall Clinical Safety Summary
- ETV and LVD have comparable safety profiles
- ETV safety profile does not vary by
- Dose 0.5 mg versus 1.0 mg
- Patient population naïve and refractory
- ETV and LVD have comparable incidencesof
malignancy
64Viral Resistance
65Early Markers of ETV Resistance
- In Vitro Studies
- LVDR (L180M M204V/I) virus displays 8 to 31
fold decreased susceptibility to ETV - ETV potency vs. LVDR HBV 50x gt ADV
- ADVR (A181V or N236T) viruses retain
susceptibility to ETV
- Phase II Studies
- Two patients with LVDR HBV exhibited rebound due
to resistance emergence following (gt76 wk) ETV
therapy - Key resistance substitutions emerging on ETV
treatment - Patient A (L180M M204V) ? I169T M250V
- Patient B (L180M M204V) ? T184G S202I ?
I169T - Both isolates growth impaired and susceptible to
ADV
66ETV Phenotypes
67Phase III Resistance Evaluation
- Genotype Nucleoside Naïve Patients Entry and Wk
48 - eAg pos (022) All ETV (n 339) patients
- eAg neg (027) Random ETV (n 211) patients
- Genotype LVD Refractory Patients Entry and Wk
48 - eAg pos (026) All ETV (n 134) and LVD (n
126) patients - Study 014 All ETV (1 mg) (n 37) and LVD (n
24) patients - Phenotype all emerging substitutions identified
during ETV therapy using recombinant clones - Genotype and population phenotype all subjects
experiencing virologic rebounds ( 1 log
increase from nadir by PCR), regardless of study
or therapy arm
68Resistance Profile Nucleoside Naïve Patients
Percent of Patients
- Potent HBV DNA suppression(88 below 103
copies/mL) - Viral genotyping (n 541)identified 76 emerging
changes, none appearing in gt0.6 - Emerging amino acid changes did not decrease ETV
susceptibility - 11 virologic rebounds on ETVvs. 88 on LVD
HBV DNA (Copies/mL)
81
57
Wk 0 48 0 48
ETV
LVD
n 676 655 665 621
Studies 022 and 027
69Virologic Rebounds Nucleoside Naïve Patients
- Rebounds on ETV therapy
- All patients experienced at least 3 log
reductions in HBV DNA levels, 7 ? 5 log - Fully susceptible at time of rebound - population
EC50 lt10 nM - No emerging genotypic changes impacting ETV
susceptibility
LVD 180 and/or 204 changes, ETV any
substitution impacting ETV susceptibility
Studies 022 and 027
70Summary of Viral Resistance Data (Week 48)
0
0
No rebounds due to resistance
No emerging ETVR or LVDR substitutions
Nucleoside Naïve (n 541)
71Resistance Profile LVD-Refractory Patients
Percent of Subjects
- Effective suppression ofHBV DNA levels
- All ETV (n 183) and LVD(n 190) patient
samples genotyped at study entryand Week 48 - Five virologic rebounds in ETV treated patients
by Week 48
11
10
10
10
9
10
8
10
7
10
HBV DNA (Copies/mL)
6
10
5
10
4
10
3
10
300-999
lt300
6
22
lt1
2
Wk 0 24 48 0 24 48
ETV
LVD
n 183 176 171 190 179 157
Studies 014 026
72Virologic Rebounds LVD Refractory Patients
Study 026 - ETV
1011
1010
109
1
108
2
107
HBV DNA (Copies/ml)
106
105
104
103
102
Treatment (Weeks)
- Two (1) ETV treated patients experienced
virologic rebound due to resistance by Week 48
73Genotypic Analysis LVD Refractory Patients
- ETVR changes (I169, T184, S202 M250) detected
in 12 ETV treated patients by Week 48 - Only detected when LVDR changes were present
- Emerging substitutions at 14 other residues
identified - None present in gt3 patients (1.6) or correlated
with decreased ETV susceptibility (EC50 2.4 45
nM)
74ETVR Substitutions Can Be SelectedDuring LVD
Treatment
- I169T and T184S emerged on LVD therapy(study
026) - ETVR changes detected in 22 (6) of LVD
refractory patients at baseline - Nine randomized to ETV arm, leading to2
virologic rebounds and only 2 patients
experiencing HBV DNA reductions lt103 copies/ml
LVD can select for a number of secondary
substitutions that can significantly reduce ETV
susceptibility and clinical efficacy
75Summary of Viral Resistance Data (Week 48)
0
0
No rebounds due to resistance
No emerging ETVR or LVDR substitutions
Nucleoside Naïve (n 541)
76Resistance Summary
- Potent and sustained suppression of viral
replication directly related to absence of
resistance emergence - Extensive analysis of nucleoside naïve patients
showed no evidence of resistance at Week 48 - Treatment of LVD-refractory patients with ETV
leads to 1 virologic failures due to resistance
by Week 48 - Substitutions correlating with ETVR identified at
residues 169, 184, 202 and 250 - LVDR substitutions are a prerequisite for
emergence of high level ETVR - LVD treatment can pre-select for ETVR
substitutions identified by Week 48
77Pharmacovigilance and Summary
78Proposed Pharmacovigilance Plan
- Monitor events of special interest malignancies
and hepatic events - Targeted questionnaires to physicians
- Periodic, cumulative assessments
- Ongoing long-term safety studies
- Large safety study
79Treatment and Long-term Safety Studies
Rollover StudiesETV Treatment
Randomized Studies
Observational Study
Responders
No ETV treatment
Phase II/III N 1945(eligible treated)
Study 901 N 940
Study 049 N 444
Responders
China Program N 876(eligible treated)
Study 050 N 255
5 Years
2nd Year
1st Year
As of Dec 2004
80Large Safety Study Objectives
- Rigorous analysis of events of interest
- Mortality
- Neoplasms
- Progression of liver disease
81Large Safety Study Design
- Patients will be
- Randomized 11
- ETV
- Another standard of care nucleosideor nucleotide
- Stratified as naïve or previously treated
- Followed for at least 5 years
- External, independent DSMB
82Large Safety Study Methods
- Location multinational
- Recruitment through patients physicians
- Sample size 12,500 (6,250 in each group)
- Reporting annually on all cause mortality,
malignancy and progression of liver disease
83Large Safety Study Challenges
- Patients will switch therapies
- Latency of events
- Rates of malignancy
- Follow-up
84Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Benefits of Entecavir
HBV Replication (Measured by Serum HBV DNA)
DiseaseProgression Liver Failure Liver
Cancer Transplant Death
85Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Benefits of Entecavir
HBV Replication (Measured by Serum HBV DNA)
Liver Inflammation
ALT Elevation
DiseaseProgression Liver Failure Liver
Cancer Transplant Death
Worsening histology Necroinflammation Fibrosis Cir
rhosis
Resistance
86Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Benefits of Entecavir
HBV Replication (Measured by Serum HBV DNA)
Liver Inflammation
ALT Elevation
DiseaseProgression Liver Failure Liver
Cancer Transplant Death
Worsening histology Necroinflammation Fibrosis Cir
rhosis
Resistance
87Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Benefits of Entecavir
HBV Replication (Measured by Serum HBV DNA)
Liver Inflammation
ALT Elevation
DiseaseProgression Liver Failure Liver
Cancer Transplant Death
Worsening histology Necroinflammation Fibrosis Cir
rhosis
Resistance
88Pathophysiologic Cascade of Chronic Hepatitis B
Infection Benefits of Entecavir