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Featured researches published by Wangang Xie.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014
Paul Y. Kwo; Parvez S. Mantry; Eoin Coakley; Helen S. Te; Hugo E. Vargas; Robert S. Brown; Fredric D. Gordon; Josh Levitsky; Norah A. Terrault; James R. Burton; Wangang Xie; Carolyn Setze; Prajakta S. Badri; Tami Pilot-Matias; Regis A. Vilchez; Xavier Forns
BACKGROUND Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the leading indication for liver transplantation worldwide, and interferon-containing regimens are associated with low response rates owing to treatment-limiting toxic effects in immunosuppressed liver-transplant recipients. We evaluated the interferon-free regimen of the NS5A inhibitor ombitasvir coformulated with the ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor ABT-450 (ABT-450/r), the nonnucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor dasabuvir, and ribavirin in liver-transplant recipients with recurrent HCV genotype 1 infection. METHODS We enrolled 34 liver-transplant recipients with no fibrosis or mild fibrosis, who received ombitasvir-ABT-450/r (at a once-daily dose of 25 mg of ombitasvir, 150 mg of ABT-450, and 100 mg of ritonavir), dasabuvir (250 mg twice daily), and ribavirin for 24 weeks. Selection of the initial ribavirin dose and subsequent dose modifications for anemia were at the investigators discretion. The primary efficacy end point was a sustained virologic response 12 weeks after the end of treatment. RESULTS Of the 34 study participants, 33 had a sustained virologic response at post-treatment weeks 12 and 24, for a rate of 97% (95% confidence interval, 85 to 100). The most common adverse events were fatigue, headache, and cough. Five patients (15%) required erythropoietin; no patient required blood transfusion. One patient discontinued the study drugs owing to adverse events after week 18 but had a sustained virologic response. Blood levels of calcineurin inhibitors were monitored, and dosages were modified to maintain therapeutic levels; no episode of graft rejection was observed during the study. CONCLUSIONS Treatment with the multitargeted regimen of ombitasvir-ABT-450/r and dasabuvir with ribavirin was associated with a low rate of serious adverse events and a high rate of sustained virologic response among liver-transplant recipients with recurrent HCV genotype 1 infection, a historically difficult-to-treat population. (Funded by AbbVie; CORAL-I ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01782495.).
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014
Kris V. Kowdley; Eric Lawitz; Fred Poordad; Daniel E. Cohen; David R. Nelson; Stefan Zeuzem; Gregory T. Everson; Paul Y. Kwo; Graham R. Foster; Mark S. Sulkowski; Wangang Xie; Tami Pilot-Matias; George Liossis; L. Larsen; Amit Khatri; T. Podsadecki; Barry Bernstein
BACKGROUND An interferon-free combination of the protease inhibitor ABT-450 with ritonavir (ABT-450/r), the nonnucleoside polymerase inhibitor ABT-333, and ribavirin showed efficacy against the hepatitis C virus (HCV) in a pilot study involving patients with HCV genotype 1 infection. The addition of another potent agent, the NS5A inhibitor ABT-267, may improve efficacy, especially in difficult-to-treat patients. This study was designed to evaluate multiple regimens of direct-acting antiviral agents and ribavirin in patients with HCV genotype 1 infection who had not received therapy previously or who had no response to prior therapy with pegylated interferon and ribavirin. METHODS In this phase 2b, open-label study with 14 treatment subgroups, 571 patients without cirrhosis who had not received treatment previously or who had not had a response to prior therapy were randomly assigned to a regimen of ABT-450/r, combined with ABT-267 or ABT-333 or both, for 8, 12, or 24 weeks and received at least one dose of therapy. All the subgroups but 1 also received ribavirin (dose determined according to body weight). The primary end point was sustained virologic response at 24 weeks after the end of treatment. The primary efficacy analysis compared rates between previously untreated patients who received three direct-acting antiviral agents and ribavirin for 8 weeks and those who received the same therapy for 12 weeks. RESULTS Among previously untreated patients who received three direct-acting antiviral agents (with the ABT-450/r dose administered as 150 mg of ABT-450 and 100 mg of ritonavir) plus ribavirin, the rate of sustained virologic response at 24 weeks after treatment was 88% among those who received the therapy for 8 weeks and 95% among those who received the therapy for 12 weeks (difference, -7 percentage points; 95% confidence interval, -19 to 5; P=0.24). The rates of sustained virologic response across all treatment subgroups ranged from 83 to 100%. The most frequent adverse events were fatigue, headache, nausea, and insomnia. Eight patients (1%) discontinued treatment owing to adverse events. CONCLUSIONS In this phase 2b study, all-oral regimens of antiviral agents and ribavirin were effective both in patients with HCV genotype 1 infection who had not received therapy previously and in those who had not had a response to prior therapy. (Funded by AbbVie; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01464827.).
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015
Preethi Krishnan; Jill Beyer; Neeta Mistry; Gennadiy Koev; Thomas Reisch; David A. Degoey; Warren M. Kati; Andrew Campbell; Laura A. Williams; Wangang Xie; Carolyn M. Setze; Akhteruzzaman Molla; Christine Collins; Tami Pilot-Matias
ABSTRACT Ombitasvir (ABT-267) is a hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS5A inhibitor with picomolar potency, pan-genotypic activity, and 50% effective concentrations (EC50s) of 0.82 to 19.3 pM against HCV genotypes 1 to 5 and 366 pM against genotype 6a. Ombitasvir retained these levels of potency against a panel of 69 genotype 1 to 6 chimeric replicons containing the NS5A gene derived from HCV-infected patients, despite the existence of natural sequence diversity within NS5A. In vitro resistance selection identified variants that conferred resistance to ombitasvir in the HCV NS5A gene at amino acid positions 28, 30, 31, 58, and 93 in genotypes 1 to 6. Ombitasvir was evaluated in vivo in a 3-day monotherapy study in 12 HCV genotype 1-infected patients at 5, 25, 50, or 200 mg dosed once daily. All patients in the study were HCV genotype 1a infected and were without preexisting resistant variants at baseline as determined by clonal sequencing. Decreases in HCV RNA up to 3.1 log10 IU/ml were observed. Resistance-associated variants at position 28, 30, or 93 in NS5A were detected in patient samples 48 hours after the first dose. Clonal sequencing analysis indicated that wild-type virus was largely suppressed by ombitasvir during 3-day monotherapy, and at doses higher than 5 mg, resistant variant M28V was also suppressed. Ombitasvir was well tolerated at all doses, and there were no serious or severe adverse events. These data support clinical development of ombitasvir in combination with inhibitors targeting HCV NS3/4A protease (ABT-450 with ritonavir) and HCV NS5B polymerase (ABT-333, dasabuvir) for the treatment of chronic HCV genotype 1 infection. (Study M12-116 is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT01181427.)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015
Preethi Krishnan; Rakesh Tripathi; Gretja Schnell; Thomas Reisch; Jill Beyer; Michelle Irvin; Wangang Xie; Lois Larsen; Daniel A. Cohen; Thomas Podsadecki; Tami Pilot-Matias; Christine Collins
ABSTRACT AVIATOR, a phase 2 clinical trial, evaluated ritonavir-boosted paritaprevir (a protease inhibitor), ombitasvir (an NS5A inhibitor), and dasabuvir (a nonnucleoside polymerase inhibitor) (the three-drug [3D] regimen) with or without ribavirin (RBV) for 8, 12, or 24 weeks in 406 HCV genotype 1 (GT1)-infected patients. The rate of sustained virologic response 24 weeks after treatment ranged from 88% to 100% across the arms of the 3D regimen with or without RBV; 20 GT1a-infected patients and 1 GT1b-infected patient experienced virologic failure (5.2%). Baseline resistance-conferring variants in NS3 were rare. M28V in GT1a and Y93H in GT1b were the most prevalent preexisting variants in NS5A, and C316N in GT1b and S556G in both GT1a and GT1b were the most prevalent variants in NS5B. Interestingly, all the GT1a sequences encoding M28V in NS5A were from the United States, while GT1b sequences encoding C316N and S556G in NS5B were predominant in the European Union. Variants preexisting at baseline had no significant impact on treatment outcome. The most prevalent treatment-emergent resistance-associated variants (RAVs) in GT1a were R155K and D168V in NS3, M28T and Q30R in NS5A, and S556G in NS5B. The single GT1b-infected patient experiencing virologic failure had no RAVs in any target. A paritaprevir-ritonavir dose of 150/100 mg was more efficacious in suppressing R155K in NS3 than a 100/100-mg dose. In patients who failed after receiving 12 or more weeks of treatment, RAVs were selected in all 3 targets, while most patients who relapsed after 8 weeks of treatment did so without any detectable RAVs. Results from this study guided the selection of the optimal treatment regimen, treatment duration, and paritaprevir dose for further development of the 3D regimen. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration number NCT01464827.)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017
Preethi Krishnan; Gretja Schnell; Rakesh Tripathi; Jill Beyer; Thomas Reisch; Tatyana Dekhtyar; Michelle Irvin; Wangang Xie; Bo Fu; Margaret Burroughs; Rebecca Redman; Kazuaki Chayama; Christine Collins; Tami Pilot-Matias
ABSTRACT Glecaprevir and pibrentasvir are hepatitis C virus (HCV) pangenotypic inhibitors targeting NS3/4A protease and NS5A, respectively. This once-daily, fixed-dose combination regimen demonstrated high sustained virologic response 12 weeks postdosing (SVR12) rates in CERTAIN-1 and CERTAIN-2 studies in Japanese HCV-infected patients, with a low virologic failure rate (1.2%). There were no virologic failures among direct-acting antiviral (DAA)-treatment-naive genotype 1a (GT1a) (n = 4)-, GT1b (n = 128)-, and GT2 (n = 97)-infected noncirrhotic patients treated for 8 weeks or among GT1b (n = 38)- or GT2 (n = 20)-infected patients with compensated cirrhosis treated for 12 weeks. Two of 33 DAA-experienced and 2 of 12 GT3-infected patients treated for 12 weeks experienced virologic failure. Pooled resistance analysis, grouped by HCV subtype, treatment duration, prior treatment experience, and cirrhosis status, was conducted. Among DAA-naive GT1b-infected patients, the baseline prevalence of NS3-D168E was 1.2%, that of NS5A-L31M was 3.6%, and that of NS5A-Y93H was 17.6%. Baseline polymorphisms in NS3 or NS5A were less prevalent in GT2, with the exception of the common L/M31 polymorphism in NS5A. Among DAA-experienced GT1b-infected patients (30/32 daclatasvir plus asunaprevir-experienced patients), the baseline prevalence of NS3-D168E/T/V was 48.4%, that of NS5A-L31F/I/M/V was 81.3%, that of the NS5A P32deletion was 6.3%, and that of NS5A-Y93H was 59.4%. Common baseline polymorphisms in NS3 and/or NS5A had no impact on treatment outcomes in GT1- and GT2-infected patients; the impact on GT3-infected patients could not be assessed due to the enrollment of patients infected with diverse subtypes and the limited number of patients. The glecaprevir-pibrentasvir combination regimen allows a simplified treatment option without the need for HCV subtyping or baseline resistance testing for DAA-naive GT1- or GT2-infected patients. (The CERTAIN-1 and CERTAIN-2 studies have been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under identifiers NCT02707952 and NCT02723084, respectively.)
Gastroenterology | 2014
David Bernstein; Jacob Lalezari; Yan Luo; Terry D. Box; Ziad Younes; Sinikka Green; Bai Raj Bhandari; Thomas Sepe; Curtis Cooper; Edward Tam; Naoky Tsai; Tarek Hassanein; Wangang Xie; Thomas Podsadecki
Background: The HCV-PRO is a validated disease-specific patient reported outcome (PRO) instrument. This analysis reports on HCV-infected patient response in a trial of oral DAA therapy and assesses psychometric properties of the French-translated HCV-PRO. Method: French Genotype 1 patients in the multinational AVIATOR trial of interferon-free DAA therapy responded to theHCV-PRO, SF-36v.2, and EQ-5D 5L+VAS. HCV-PROwas translated under Harmonization standards. Approved French-language SF-36 and EQ-5Dwere included for psychometric comparison. Analyses of response were performed at Baseline, week 8 (Wk8), End of Treatment (EOT), and 24 week follow-up (PTW24), and included change from baseline. Internal consistency/reliability of HCV-PRO items and total score were evaluated using Cronbachs alpha. Convergent validity was assessed through Pearsons correlation (0.5-0.9=moderate-strong) to SF-36 MCS/PCS and EQ-5D VAS. Discriminant validity was assessed by dichotomizing HCV-PRO score on EQ-5D Anxiety/Depression and Pain/Discomfort dimensions (none versus some). Results: Demographics (N=58): 48% female, 88% white, 45% ≥50 years of age, 45% Genotype 1a, 86% IL28B non-CC. Clinical response (SVR24) was 93.1%. All PRO scores were minimally changed during treatment (Wk8, EOT). Mean HCV-PRO score at PTW24 was improved (p<0.03) over baseline. Cronbachs alpha for HCV-PRO items and total scores were 0.44-0.95. HCV-PRO total score exhibited moderateto-high correlation with SF-36 MCS/PCS and EQ-5D VAS total scores (r=0.54-0.87). HCVPRO scores were lower in patients with anxiety/depression or pain/discomfort (p<0.01). Conclusion: The French-translated HCV-PRO is a valid, responsive, disease-specific instrument. HCV-PRO score changed minimally during oral DAA treatment and improved over baseline after therapy.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Gretja Schnell; Preethi Krishnan; Rakesh Tripathi; Jill Beyer; Thomas Reisch; Michelle Irvin; Tatyana Dekhtyar; Liangjun Lu; Teresa I. Ng; Wangang Xie; Tami Pilot-Matias; Christine R. Collins
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is genetically diverse and includes 7 genotypes and 67 confirmed subtypes, and the global distribution of each HCV genotype (GT) varies by geographic region. In this report, we utilized a large dataset of NS3/4A and NS5A sequences isolated from 2348 HCV GT1-6-infected patients treated with the regimen containing glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (GLE/PIB) to assess genetic diversity within HCV subtypes by geographic region using phylogenetic analyses, and evaluated the prevalence of baseline amino acid polymorphisms in NS3 and NS5A by region/country and phylogenetic cluster. Among 2348 NS3/4A and NS5A sequences, phylogenetic analysis identified 6 genotypes and 44 subtypes, including 3 GT1, 8 GT2, 3 GT3, 13 GT4, 1 GT5, and 16 GT6 subtypes. Phylogenetic analysis of HCV subtype 1a confirmed the presence of two clades, which differed by geographic region distribution and NS3 Q80K prevalence. We detected phylogenetic clustering by country in HCV subtypes 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, and 5a, suggesting that genetically distinct virus lineages are circulating in different countries. In addition, two clades were detected in HCV GT4a and GT6e, and NS5A amino acid polymorphisms were differentially distributed between the 2 clades in each subtype. The prevalence of NS3 and NS5A baseline polymorphisms varied substantially by genotype and subtype; therefore, we also determined the activity of GLE or PIB against replicons containing NS3/4A or NS5A from HCV GT1-6 clinical samples representing 6 genotypes and 21 subtypes overall. GLE and PIB retained activity against the majority of HCV replicons containing NS3/4A or NS5A from HCV GT1-6 clinical samples, with a median EC50 of 0.29 nM for GLE and 1.1 pM for PIB in a transient replicon assay. The data presented in this report expands the available data on HCV epidemiology, subtype diversity by geographic region, and NS3 and NS5A baseline polymorphism prevalence.
Journal of Gastroenterology | 2017
Tsunamasa Watanabe; Fumitaka Suzuki; Kenji Ikeda; Ken Sato; Hidenori Toyoda; Masanori Atsukawa; Akio Ido; Akinobu Takaki; Nobuyuki Enomoto; Koji Kato; Katia Alves; Margaret Burroughs; Rebecca Redman; David Pugatch; Tami Pilot-Matias; Preethi Krishnan; Rajneet K. Oberoi; Wangang Xie; Kazuaki Chayama
Hepatology | 2014
Parvez S. Mantry; Paul Y. Kwo; Eoin Coakley; Helen S. Te; Hugo E. Vargas; Robert S. Brown; Fredric D. Gordon; Josh Levitsky; Norah A. Terrault; James R. Burton; Wangang Xie; Carolyn Setze; Prajakta S. Badri; Regis A. Vilchez; Xavier Forns
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2015
Fred Poordad; Kosh Agarwal; Ziad Younes; Daniel A. Cohen; Wangang Xie; Thomas Podsadecki