JHEP Reports (Apr 2023)

Treating hepatitis D with bulevirtide – Real-world experience from 114 patients

  • Christopher Dietz-Fricke,
  • Frank Tacke,
  • Caroline Zöllner,
  • Münevver Demir,
  • Hartmut H. Schmidt,
  • Christoph Schramm,
  • Katharina Willuweit,
  • Christian M. Lange,
  • Sabine Weber,
  • Gerald Denk,
  • Christoph P. Berg,
  • Julia M. Grottenthaler,
  • Uta Merle,
  • Alexander Olkus,
  • Stefan Zeuzem,
  • Kathrin Sprinzl,
  • Thomas Berg,
  • Florian van Bömmel,
  • Johannes Wiegand,
  • Toni Herta,
  • Thomas Seufferlein,
  • Eugen Zizer,
  • Nektarios Dikopoulos,
  • Robert Thimme,
  • Christoph Neumann-Haefelin,
  • Peter R. Galle,
  • Martin Sprinzl,
  • Ansgar W. Lohse,
  • Julian Schulze zur Wiesch,
  • Jan Kempski,
  • Andreas Geier,
  • Florian P. Reiter,
  • Bernhard Schlevogt,
  • Juliana Gödiker,
  • Wolf Peter Hofmann,
  • Peter Buggisch,
  • Julia Kahlhöfer,
  • Kerstin Port,
  • Benjamin Maasoumy,
  • Markus Cornberg,
  • Heiner Wedemeyer,
  • Katja Deterding

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
p. 100686

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Bulevirtide is a first-in-class entry inhibitor of hepatitis B surface antigen. In July 2020, bulevirtide was conditionally approved for the treatment of hepatitis D, the most severe form of viral hepatitis, which frequently causes end-stage liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. Herein, we report the first data from a large multicenter real-world cohort of patients with hepatitis D treated with bulevirtide at a daily dose of 2 mg without additional interferon. Methods: In a joint effort with 16 hepatological centers, we collected anonymized retrospective data from patients treated with bulevirtide for chronic hepatitis D. Results: Our analysis is based on data from 114 patients, including 59 (52%) with cirrhosis, receiving a total of 4,289 weeks of bulevirtide treatment. A virologic response defined as an HDV RNA decline of at least 2 log or undetectable HDV RNA was observed in 87/114 (76%) cases with a mean time to virologic response of 23 weeks. In 11 cases, a virologic breakthrough (>1 log-increase in HDV RNA after virologic response) was observed. After 24 weeks of treatment, 19/33 patients (58%) had a virologic response, while three patients (9%) did not achieve a 1 log HDV RNA decline. No patient lost hepatitis B surface antigen. Alanine aminotransferase levels improved even in patients not achieving a virologic response, including five patients who had decompensated cirrhosis at the start of treatment. Treatment was well tolerated and there were no reports of drug-related serious adverse events. Conclusions: In conclusion, we confirm the safety and efficacy of bulevirtide monotherapy in a large real-world cohort of patients with hepatitis D treated in Germany. Future studies need to explore the long-term benefits and optimal duration of bulevirtide treatment. Impact and implications: Clinical trials proved the efficacy of bulevirtide for chronic hepatitis D and led to conditional approval by the European Medical Agency. Now it is of great interest to investigate the effects of bulevirtide treatment in a real-world setting. In this work, we included data from 114 patients with chronic hepatitis D who were treated with bulevirtide at 16 German centers. A virologic response was seen in 87/114 cases. After 24 weeks of treatment, only a small proportion of patients did not respond to treatment. At the same time, signs of liver inflammation improved. This observation was independent from changes in hepatitis D viral load. The treatment was generally well tolerated. In the future, it will be of interest to investigate the long-term effects of this new treatment.

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