Jürgen Steffgen
Boehringer Ingelheim
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jürgen Steffgen.
Journal of Hepatology | 2012
Dominique Larrey; Ansgar W. Lohse; Victor de Ledinghen; Christian Trepo; T. Gerlach; Jean-Pierre Zarski; Albert Tran; Philippe Mathurin; Robert Thimme; Keikawus Arastéh; Christian Trautwein; Andreas Cerny; N. Dikopoulos; Marcus Schuchmann; Markus H. Heim; Guido Gerken; Jerry O. Stern; Katherine Wu; Nasri Abdallah; Birgit Girlich; Joseph Scherer; Frank Berger; Martin Marquis; George Kukolj; W. Böcher; Jürgen Steffgen
BACKGROUND & AIMS BI 207127 is a potent non-nucleoside hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS5B polymerase inhibitor in vitro. METHODS In this double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 57 HCV genotype (GT)-1 patients (n=27 treatment-naïve [TN]; n=30 treatment-experienced [TE]) with compensated liver disease were randomised for 28-day treatment with 400, 600, or 800 mg BI 207127 three times daily (TID) or placebo (only TN) in combination with peginterferon alfa 2a and ribavirin (PegIFN/RBV). Plasma HCV RNA was measured by Roche COBAS TaqMan assay. RESULTS HCV RNA decreased in a dose-dependent manner with little difference between 600 mg (TN 5.6 log(10), TE 4.2 log(10)) and 800 mg (TN 5.4 log(10), TE 4.5 log(10)). Rapid virological response (RVR; HCV RNA <15 IU/ml) at day 28 occurred in 11/19 TN and 4/30 TE patients treated with BI 207127. GT-1b patients had stronger reductions in HCV RNA than GT-1a (RVR: TN 64% vs. 43%; TE 33% vs. 5%). There were no breakthroughs (HCV RNA rebound >1 log(10) from nadir) in the TN groups, whereas 3/30 TE patients experienced breakthrough due to P495-mutations. Gastrointestinal adverse events (AEs) and rash were the major AEs and most frequent at higher doses. One and four patients discontinued due to AEs in the 600 and 800 mg groups, respectively. Overall, tolerability was good and better at 600 mg than 800 mg. CONCLUSIONS BI 207127 in combination with PegIFN/RBV demonstrated strong antiviral activity with a favourable safety and tolerability profile. The best benefit/risk ratio was observed at 600 mg.
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2018
Christian Schwabe; Bernd Rosenstock; Thi Doan; Paul Hamilton; P. Rod Dunbar; Anastasia G. Eleftheraki; David Joseph; James Hilbert; Corinna Schoelch; Steven John Padula; Jürgen Steffgen
BI 655064 is a humanized antagonistic anti‐cluster of differentiation (CD) 40 monoclonal antibody that selectively blocks the CD40‐CD40L interaction. The CD40‐CD40L pathway is a promising treatment target for autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and lupus nephritis. The safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of repeated once‐weekly BI 655064 subcutaneous dosing over 4 weeks were evaluated in a multiple‐dose study in healthy subjects. Subjects (N = 40) were randomized 4:1 to four sequential BI 655064 dose groups (80, 120, 180, 240 mg) or to placebo. Safety and tolerability, plasma exposure, CD40 receptor occupancy, and CD40L‐induced CD54 upregulation were assessed over 64 and 78 days for the 80‐ to 180‐mg and 240‐mg dose groups, respectively. BI 655064 exposure increased in a supraproportional manner, due to target‐mediated drug clearance, for doses between 80 mg and 120 mg, but was near proportional for doses greater than 120 mg. Terminal half‐life ranged between 6 and 8 days. Dose‐dependent accumulation of BI 655064 supports the use of a loading dose in future clinical studies. Following 4 weeks of dosing, >90% CD40 receptor occupancy and inhibition of CD54 upregulation were observed at all dose levels, lasting for 17 days after the last dose. BI 655064 was generally well tolerated. There were no serious adverse events and the frequency and intensity of adverse events were similar for BI 655064 and placebo; no dose relationship or relevant signs of an acute immune reaction were observed. These findings support further investigation of BI 655064 as a potential treatment for autoimmune diseases.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2006
Stefan Schreiber; Brian G. Feagan; Geert D’Haens; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Karel Geboes; Mikhail Yurcov; Vasily Isakov; Oleg Golovenko; Charles N. Bernstein; Diether Ludwig; Trevor Winter; Ulrich Meier; Chan Yong; Jürgen Steffgen
Antiviral Therapy | 2009
Erhardt A; Deterding K; Yves Benhamou; Reiser M; Forns X; Stanislas Pol; Jose Luis Calleja; Ross S; Spangenberg Hc; Garcia-Samaniego J; Fuchs M; Enríquez J; Wiegand J; Jerry O. Stern; Wu K; George Kukolj; Martin Marquis; Pierre L. Beaulieu; Gerhard Nehmiz; Jürgen Steffgen
Journal of Hepatology | 2007
Dominique Larrey; Yves Benhamou; Ansgar W. Lohse; Christian Trepo; C. Moelleken; Jean-Pierre Bronowicki; Keikawus Arastéh; Marc Bourlière; Markus H. Heim; J. Enríquez; A. Erhardt; J.-P. Zarski; R. Wiest; T. Gerlach; H. Wedemeyer; T. Berg; Jerry O. Stern; K. Wu; Nasri Abdallah; G. Nehmiz; Wulf O. Boecher; Jürgen Steffgen
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2003
Jürgen Steffgen; Katrin Kampfer; Clemens Grupp; Christoph Langenberg; Gerhard A. Müller; R. Willi Grunewald
Journal of Hepatology | 2010
Dominique Larrey; Ansgar W. Lohse; V. de Ledinghen; Christian Trepo; T. Gerlach; J.-P. Zarski; A. Tran; Philippe Mathurin; Robert Thimme; Keikawus Arastéh; Christian Trautwein; Andreas Cerny; N. Dikopoulos; Marcus Schuchmann; Markus H. Heim; Guido Gerken; Jerry O. Stern; K. Wu; Nasri Abdallah; Birgit Girlich; S. Josepf; B. Wulf; Frank Berger; Jürgen Steffgen
European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2018
Fredrik N. Albach; Frank Wagner; Andreas Hüser; Julia Igel; David Joseph; James Hilbert; Corinna Schoelch; Steven John Padula; Jürgen Steffgen
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2016
Kathi Goldstein; Jürgen Steffgen; James Mapes; Astrid Jaehnige; Sabine Pestel; Sabine Blaschke