Weibin Bao
Novartis
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Featured researches published by Weibin Bao.
Journal of Hepatology | 2009
Stefan Zeuzem; Edward Gane; Yun-Fan Liaw; S.G. Lim; Adrian DiBisceglie; Maria Buti; Anuchit Chutaputti; J. Rasenack; Jinlin Hou; Christopher O’Brien; Tuan T. Nguyen; Jidong Jia; Thierry Poynard; Bruce Belanger; Weibin Bao; Nikolai V. Naoumov
BACKGROUND/AIMS In the GLOBE trial, telbivudine treatment was identified as a significant, independent predictor of better outcomes at 2 years. We analyzed all telbivudine recipients in this trial to determine the predictors of optimal outcomes. METHODS The intent-to-treat population comprised 458 HBeAg-positive and 222 HBeAg-negative telbivudine-treated patients. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were employed to evaluate baseline and/or early on-treatment variables. RESULTS Baseline HBV DNA<9 log(10)copies/mL, or ALT levels > or = 2x above normal were strong pretreatment predictors for HBeAg-positive, but not for HBeAg-negative patients. However, non-detectable serum HBV DNA at treatment week 24 (TW24) was the strongest predictor for better outcomes for both groups. A combination of pretreatment characteristics plus TW24 response identified subgroups with the best outcomes: (1) HBeAg-positive patients with baseline HBV DNA<9 log(10)copies/mL, ALT > or = 2x above normal and non-detectable HBV DNA at TW24 achieved at 2 years: non-detectable HBV DNA in 89%, HBeAg seroconversion in 52%, telbivudine resistance in 1.8%; and (2) HBeAg-negative patients with baseline HBV DNA<7 log(10)copies/mL and non-detectable serum HBV DNA at TW24 achieved at 2 years: non-detectable HBV DNA in 91%, telbivudine resistance in 2.3%. CONCLUSION During telbivudine treatment, non-detectable serum HBV DNA at treatment week 24 is the strongest predictor for optimal outcomes at 2 years.
Hepatology | 2010
Karsten Wursthorn; Mechthild Jung; Antonio Riva; Zachary D. Goodman; P. Lopez; Weibin Bao; Michael P. Manns; Heiner Wedemeyer; Nikolai V. Naoumov
The impact of prolonged direct antiviral therapy on hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) levels in patients with chronic hepatitis B is poorly understood. We quantitatively assessed serum HBsAg levels during 3 years of telbivudine treatment, as well as their relationship with virologic and biochemical characteristics in 162 hepatitis B e antigen–positive patients who maintained undetectable serum hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA long‐term. Telbivudine treatment progressively reduced serum HBsAg levels (mean ± SD) from baseline (3.8 ± 0.6 log10 IU/mL) to treatment week 24 (3.4 ± 0.7 log10 IU/mL), treatment year 1 (3.3 ± 0.8 log10 IU/mL), and treatment year 3 (3.0 ± 1.4 log10 IU/mL) (P <0.0001). In this patient population, HBsAg loss was observed in nine (6%) of 162 patients through year 3. During the first year of treatment, three patterns of HBsAg decline were observed: rapid (≥1 log10 IU/mL) in 32 patients, slow (0‐1 log10 IU/mL) in 74 patients, and steady levels in 56 patients. These findings were associated with different likelihoods of HBsAg loss during long‐term telbivudine therapy. Eight of 32 patients with rapid HBsAg decline versus none of 56 patients with steady HBsAg levels achieved HBsAg loss at year 3 (P = 0.0024). HBV genotype was a significant determinant for HBsAg kinetics, with the fastest decline in genotype A patients. In patients with subsequent HBsAg loss, viral antigens were already undetectable in liver biopsy samples after 1 year of treatment. This was associated with markedly enhanced antiviral T cell reactivity. Conclusion: In patients who have effective suppression of viral replication during telbivudine treatment, a rapid decline in serum HBsAg levels during the first year may identify those with a greater likelihood of achieving HBsAg clearance. (HEPATOLOGY 2010
Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2012
H. L.-Y. Chan; Young-Mao Chen; Edward Gane; Shiv Kumar Sarin; D. J. Suh; Teerha Piratvisuth; B. Prabhakar; S. G. Hwang; G. Choudhuri; R. Safadi; T. Tanwandee; Anuchit Chutaputti; C. Yurdaydin; Weibin Bao; Claudio Avila; Aldo Trylesinski
Summary. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis owing to chronic hepatitis B viral (HBV) infection have a high morbidity/mortality rate, and the treatment remains a challenge. We studied the safety and efficacy of telbivudine and lamivudine in such patients. This noninferiority, double‐blind trial randomized 232 treatment‐naive patients with decompensated HBV (1:1) in 80 academic hospitals to receive once‐daily telbivudine 600 mg or lamivudine 100 mg for 104 weeks. Primary composite endpoint was proportion of patients with HBV DNA <10 000 copies/mL, normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and Child‐Turcotte‐Pugh score improvement/stabilization at week 52. Response rates using a post hoc modified endpoint (HBV DNA <300 copies/mL [57 IU/mL] and ALT normalization) in intent‐to‐treat analysis (missing = failure) were 56.3%vs 38.0% after 76 weeks (P = 0.018) and 45.6%vs 32.9% after 104 weeks (P = 0.093) for telbivudine vs lamivudine. Telbivudine treatment was an independent predictive factor for HBV DNA <300 copies/mL and ALT normalization (P = 0.037). Response rates with protocol‐defined composite endpoint in intent‐to‐treat analysis (M = F) were 56.2 vs 54.0% (noninferiority not achieved) and 39.1%vs 36.4% (noninferiority achieved) in telbivudine and lamivudine groups at 52 and 104 weeks. Telbivudine treatment was associated with a significant improvement in glomerular filtration rate compared to lamivudine treatment and was also associated with a trend for improvement in survival (87%vs 79%). No cases of lactic acidosis were reported. Telbivudine compared to lamivudine was associated with a higher rate of patients with both viral suppression and ALT normalization, a trend towards a higher rate of survival and significant improvement in glomerular filtration.
Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2013
Yuming Wang; Satawat Thongsawat; Edward Gane; Yun-Fan Liaw; Jidong Jia; Jinlin Hou; Henry Lik-Yuen Chan; George V. Papatheodoridis; M. Wan; Junqi Niu; Weibin Bao; Aldo Trylesinski; Nikolai V. Naoumov
In the phase‐III GLOBE/015 studies, telbivudine demonstrated superior efficacy vs lamivudine during 2‐year treatment in HBeAg‐positive and HBeAg‐negative chronic hepatitis B (CHB). After completion, 847 patients had an option to continue telbivudine treatment for further 2 years. A total of 596 (70%) of telbivudine‐treated patients, who were serum HBV DNA positive or negative and without genotypic resistance to telbivudine at the end of the GLOBE/015 trials, were enrolled into a further 2‐year extension study. A group of 502 patients completed 4 years of continuous telbivudine treatment and were included in the telbivudine per‐protocol population. Amongst 293 HBeAg‐positive patients, 76.2% had undetectable serum HBV DNA and 86.0% had normal serum ALT at the end of 4 years. Notably, the cumulative rate of HBeAg seroconversion was 53.2%. Amongst 209 HBeAg‐negative patients, 86.4% had undetectable HBV DNA and 89.6% had normal serum ALT. In patients who had discontinued telbivudine treatment due to HBeAg seroconversion, the HBeAg response was durable in 82% of patients (median 111 weeks of off‐treatment follow‐up). The cumulative 4‐year resistance rate was 10.6% for HBeAg‐positive and 10.0% for HBeAg‐negative patients. Most adverse events were mild or moderate in severity and transient. Renal function measured by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) increased by 14.9 mL/min/1.73 m2 (16.6%) from baseline to 4 years (P < 0.0001). In conclusion, in HBeAg‐positive and HBeAg‐negative CHB patients without resistance after 2 years, two additional years of telbivudine treatment continued to provide effective viral suppression with a favourable safety profile. Moreover, telbivudine achieved 53% of HBeAg seroconversion in HBeAg‐positive patients.
Liver International | 2011
Edward Gane; Yuming Wang; Yun-Fan Liaw; JinLin Hou; Satawat Thongsawat; M. Wan; Young Myoung Moon; Jidong Jia; You C. Chao; Junqi Niu; Nancy Leung; Didier Samuel; Chao Wei Hsu; Weibin Bao; P. Lopez; Claudio Avila
Background: In the GLOBE trial, telbivudine demonstrated superior efficacy to lamivudine at 2 years in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB).
Journal of Hepatology | 2015
Patrick Marcellin; Karsten Wursthorn; Heiner Wedemeyer; Wan Long Chuang; George K. K. Lau; Claudio Avila; Cheng Yuan Peng; Edward Gane; Seng Gee Lim; Hugo Fainboim; Graham R. Foster; Rifaat Safadi; Mario Rizzetto; Michael P. Manns; Weibin Bao; Aldo Trylesinski; Nikolai V. Naoumov
BACKGROUND & AIMS This study investigated the antiviral efficacy and safety of telbivudine in combination with pegylated interferon (PegIFN) alpha-2a in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients. METHODS This was a randomized, open-label, multicentre study, in treatment-naïve patients with HBeAg-positive CHB, comparing the efficacy and safety of telbivudine in combination with PegIFN alpha-2a with telbivudine monotherapy and PegIFN alpha-2a monotherapy. The study was terminated early due to increased rates of peripheral neuropathy in the combination-therapy group. RESULTS Of the 159 patients randomized (from 300 planned) 50 were assigned to combination therapy, 55 to telbivudine, 54 to PegIFN, and 110 (18, 49, and 43, respectively) reached week 24. Peripheral neuropathy occurred in 7/50, 1/54, and 0/54 patients in the three groups of safety populations, respectively. No relationship between the occurrence of peripheral neuropathy and other variables (e.g., pharmacokinetic data, treatment efficacy, ALT levels, creatine kinase elevations) were observed. At week 24, undetectable HBV DNA (<300 copies/ml) was achieved by 71% (12/17), 35% (17/48), and 7% (3/42) of patients, with available data receiving combination therapy, telbivudine monotherapy and PegIFN monotherapy, respectively (p = 0.022 for combination therapy vs. telbivudine; p<0.0001 for combination therapy vs. PegIFN). CONCLUSIONS Combination therapy carried an increased risk of peripheral neuropathy. Despite the rapid and profound reductions in HBV DNA levels, combination therapy with telbivudine and PegIFN should not be used.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010
Dong Jin Suh; Soon Ho Um; Eva Herrmann; Ju-Hyun Kim; Young Sok Lee; Heon Ju Lee; Myung Seok Lee; Youn-Jae Lee; Weibin Bao; P. Lopez; Han Chu Lee; Claudio Avila; Stefan Zeuzem
ABSTRACT We characterized the early viral kinetic profiles of telbivudine and entecavir and the effects of these potent nucleoside analogs on hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA and alanine aminotransferase levels in adults with hepatitis B e antigen-positive compensated chronic hepatitis B. Forty-four patients were enrolled in this open-label, parallel-group, multicenter study and randomized to receive telbivudine or entecavir for 12 weeks. Reductions in hepatitis B virus DNA and alanine aminotransferase levels from baseline to weeks 2, 4, 8, and 12 were assessed. Viral kinetic parameters, including viral clearance per day, loss of infected cells per day, and efficiency of inhibition of viral production, were estimated by using a biphasic mathematical model. Statistical analyses were limited to descriptive analyses. The 2 treatment groups achieved similar reductions in HBV DNA and alanine aminotransferase levels. Mean reductions in levels of hepatitis B virus DNA at week 12 were 6.6 ± 1.6 and 6.5 ± 1.5 log10 copies/ml for the telbivudine- and entecavir-treated patients, respectively. There were no significant differences between groups in values for mean viral clearance per day, mean loss of infected cells per day, or efficiency of blocking viral production. The safety profiles for both medications were favorable. During the first 12 weeks of treatment, telbivudine and entecavir demonstrated similar antiviral potencies, resulting in a rapid and profound suppression of serum hepatitis B virus DNA and reduction of alanine aminotransferase levels. No differences in the effects of these 2 agents on early viral kinetics were observed. Both medications were well tolerated.
Journal of Hepatology | 2013
Jean-Michel Pawlotsky; D. Chen; Y. Tang; Weibin Bao; J. Ke; J. Yu; K. Lin; B. Wiedmann; Kelly A. Wong; C.T. Jones; Claudio Avila; Nikolai V. Naoumov; B. Li
the ribavirin-sparing arm were excluded because of their high virological failure rates. Separate logistic regression models were obtained for FDV and BI207127 for plasma concentrations obtained during different time windows in the first month of therapy. Results: Patients with GT1b (any IL28B genotype) had flat or shallow relationships between trough concentrations of FDV and BI207127 and predicted SVR12. The predicted SVR12 was high throughout the concentration ranges examined. For both drugs there was a significantly greater effect of trough concentration on SVR12 in GT1a-CC patients compared with GT1b patients; GT1a-CC patients had predicted SVR12 >70% only at higher concentrations. Conclusions: GT1b-infected patients carrying any IL28B genotype are predicted to achieve high SVR rates across broad plasma concentration ranges of FDV and BI207127 given in combination. The results suggest that the daily doses tested in SOUND-C2 give adequate plasma concentrations in GT1b-infected patients. GT1aCC patients are predicted to require higher levels of FDV and BI207127. Further investigations of plasma concentration-response relationships in various patient subgroups, factors contributing to low plasma levels, and potential confounders, should be performed. Phase III trials of FDV 120mg QD plus BI207127 600mg BID plus RBV for 16 or 24 weeks are ongoing in GT1b-infected patients.
Gastroenterology | 2013
Sergio Kaiser; Philippe Gallay; Michael Bobardt; Federico Bolognani; Nicole Hartmann; Martin Letzkus; Rashad Rasul; Weibin Bao; Frank Staedtler; Keith J. Johnson; Pierre Moulin; Claudio Avila; Nikolai V. Naoumov; Nanguneri Nirmala; Bin Li
BACKGROUND: VITAL-1 study assessed safety, tolerability and antiviral activity of the cyclophilin inhibitor alisporivir (ALV) as monotherapy or combination with ribavirin (RBV) compared to IFN/RBV and ALV/IFN in treatment-naive GT2/3 HCV patients. We describe genotypic and phenotypic changes in patients from this study who experienced a viral breakthrough (VB). METHODS: VITAL-1 study patients on IFN-free regimens that did not achieve RVR (, 25 U/ml) at week 4 were administered IFN/RBV/600 mg QD ALV starting at week 6 (IFN-add-on). VB defined as an increase of HCV RNA .1 log10 above nadir. The HCV NS5A gene was analyzed by population sequencing. The entire NS5A region isolated at baseline and at VB was cloned into a JFH1subgenomic shuttle vector for phenotypic analyses. Selected mutations were engineered into a wild type replicon and their impact on replication fitness and susceptibility to ALV and direct acting antiviral drugs were determined. RESULTS: The VB rate with IFN-free or IFN-add-on regimens was 2.7% (7/ 260). Low ALV drug level (Cmin , 20% of group mean; , 100 ng/mL) was observed (5/ 7 VB patients). Genotypic analysis of the NS5A gene revealed amino acid changes in these patients at the time of VB compared to baseline. Replicons bearing NS5A from patients at breakthrough conferred 1.2-16.9-fold shift over baseline EC50 values; 5/7 had impaired replication fitness. No cross-resistance to other classes of HCV inhibitors was observed. Most frequently identified mutations were D320E (D316E in G2), R347W and A349V in Domain II of NS5A, which by themselves decreased ALV susceptibility by 5-, 4, and 8-fold, respectively, in vitro when engineered into wild-type replicon. Combination of multiple mutations decreased susceptibility further, but generally at the cost of replication fitness. CONCLUSION: In treatment-naive G2/3 patients with viral breakthrough, mutations in NS5A domain II were selected, which individually conferred ≤ 8-fold reduced susceptibility to ALV in vitro. The combination of multiple mutations was required to further reduce susceptibility which is consistent with the high barrier to resistance for host-targeting ALV. Observed genotypic changes did not confer cross-resistance to other classes of HCV inhibitors, supporting the use of ALV in future drug combination therapies.
Gastroenterology | 2013
Jean-Michel Pawlotsky; Darlene Chen; Yanhua Tang; Weibin Bao; June Ke; Jing Yu; Kai Lin; Brigitte Weidmann; Kelly A. Wong; Christopher T. Jones; Claudio Avila; Nikolai V. Naoumov; Bin Li
BACKGROUND: VITAL-1 study assessed safety, tolerability and antiviral activity of the cyclophilin inhibitor alisporivir (ALV) as monotherapy or combination with ribavirin (RBV) compared to IFN/RBV and ALV/IFN in treatment-naive GT2/3 HCV patients. We describe genotypic and phenotypic changes in patients from this study who experienced a viral breakthrough (VB). METHODS: VITAL-1 study patients on IFN-free regimens that did not achieve RVR (, 25 U/ml) at week 4 were administered IFN/RBV/600 mg QD ALV starting at week 6 (IFN-add-on). VB defined as an increase of HCV RNA .1 log10 above nadir. The HCV NS5A gene was analyzed by population sequencing. The entire NS5A region isolated at baseline and at VB was cloned into a JFH1subgenomic shuttle vector for phenotypic analyses. Selected mutations were engineered into a wild type replicon and their impact on replication fitness and susceptibility to ALV and direct acting antiviral drugs were determined. RESULTS: The VB rate with IFN-free or IFN-add-on regimens was 2.7% (7/ 260). Low ALV drug level (Cmin , 20% of group mean; , 100 ng/mL) was observed (5/ 7 VB patients). Genotypic analysis of the NS5A gene revealed amino acid changes in these patients at the time of VB compared to baseline. Replicons bearing NS5A from patients at breakthrough conferred 1.2-16.9-fold shift over baseline EC50 values; 5/7 had impaired replication fitness. No cross-resistance to other classes of HCV inhibitors was observed. Most frequently identified mutations were D320E (D316E in G2), R347W and A349V in Domain II of NS5A, which by themselves decreased ALV susceptibility by 5-, 4, and 8-fold, respectively, in vitro when engineered into wild-type replicon. Combination of multiple mutations decreased susceptibility further, but generally at the cost of replication fitness. CONCLUSION: In treatment-naive G2/3 patients with viral breakthrough, mutations in NS5A domain II were selected, which individually conferred ≤ 8-fold reduced susceptibility to ALV in vitro. The combination of multiple mutations was required to further reduce susceptibility which is consistent with the high barrier to resistance for host-targeting ALV. Observed genotypic changes did not confer cross-resistance to other classes of HCV inhibitors, supporting the use of ALV in future drug combination therapies.