通用中文 | 恩替卡韦片 | 通用外文 | Entecavir Tablets |
品牌中文 | 品牌外文 | Entavir | |
其他名称 | Baraclude 博路定 | ||
公司 | Cipla(Cipla) | 产地 | 印度(India) |
含量 | 1mg | 包装 | 10片/盒 |
剂型给药 | 片剂 口服 | 储存 | 室温 |
适用范围 | 慢性肝炎 乙型肝炎 肝炎 乙肝 肝病 病毒性肝炎 |
通用中文 | 恩替卡韦片 |
通用外文 | Entecavir Tablets |
品牌中文 | |
品牌外文 | Entavir |
其他名称 | Baraclude 博路定 |
公司 | Cipla(Cipla) |
产地 | 印度(India) |
含量 | 1mg |
包装 | 10片/盒 |
剂型给药 | 片剂 口服 |
储存 | 室温 |
适用范围 | 慢性肝炎 乙型肝炎 肝炎 乙肝 肝病 病毒性肝炎 |
以下资料仅供参考
药品使用说明书
:博路定
本品主要成分为:恩替卡韦,其化学名称为2-氨基-9-[(1S,3R,4S)-4-羟基-3-羟甲基-2-亚甲基环戊基]-1,9-二氢-6H-嘌呤-6-酮-水合物。
【博路定适应症】
本品适用于病毒复制活跃,血清丙氨酸氨基转移酶ALT持续升高或肝脏组织学显示有活动性病变的慢性成人乙肝的治疗。
【博路定规格】
0.5mg 1mg
【博路定用法用量】
患者应在有经验的医生指导下服用本品。
推荐剂量:成人和16岁以上青年口服本品,每天一次,每次0.5mg。拉米夫定治疗时病毒血症或出现拉米夫定耐药突变的患者为每天一次,每次1.0mg(0.5mg 两片)。
本品应空腹服用(餐前或餐后至少2小时)。
肾功能不全
在肾功能不全的患者中,恩替卡韦的表现口服清除率随肌酐清除率的降低而降低(参见药代动力学:特殊人群)。肌酐清除率<50ml/分钟的患者(包括接受血液透析或CAPD治疗的患者)应调整用药剂量。见表7。
表7: 肾功能不全患者恩替卡韦推荐剂量
肌酐清除率(mL/min) 通常剂量(0.5mg) 拉米夫定治疗失效(1.0mg)
≥50 每日一次,每次0.5mg 每日一次,每次1.0mg
30到<50 每日一次,每次0.25mg 每日一次,每次0.5mg
10到<30 每日一次,每次0.15mg 每日一次,每次0.3mg
血液透析*或CAPD 每日一次,每次0.15mg 每日一次,每次0.3mg
*血液透析后用药
肝功能不全
肝功能不全患者无需调整用药剂量。
治疗的时间
关于本品的最佳治疗时间,以及长期的治疗结果的关系,如肝硬化、肝癌,目前尚未明了。
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对不良反应的评价基于4项全球的临床试验:AI463014,AI463022,AI463026,AI463027以及3项在中国进行的临床试验(AI463012,AI463023,AI463056)。在这7项研究中,共有2596位慢性乙肝患者入选。在与拉米夫定对照的研究中,恩替卡韦与拉米夫定的不良反应和实验室检查异常情况相似。
在国外进行的研究中,本品最常见的不良反应有:头痛、疲劳、眩晕、恶心。拉米夫定治疗的患者普遍出现的不良反应有:头痛、疲劳、眩晕。在这4项研究中,分别有1%的恩替卡韦治疗的患者和4%拉米夫定治疗的患者由于不良反应和实验室检测指标异常而退出研究。
国外临床不良反应
表9比较了在4项临床研究中恩替卡韦和拉米夫定的不同。其中选择了中等强度的不良反应和治疗过程中发生的至少有可能与用药相关的临床不良反应作为比较的指标。
表9: 四项拉米夫定对照的试验中,中等强度(2至4级)的临床不良反应a
身体系统/ 初治病人b 拉米夫定治疗失效病人c
不良反应 恩替卡韦 拉米夫定 恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
0.5mg 100mg 1.0mg 100mg
n=679 n=668 n=183 n=190
肠胃
腹泻 <1% 0 1% 0
消化不良 <1% <1% 1% 0
恶心 <1% <1% <1% 2%
呕吐 <1% <1% <1% 0
全身
疲劳 1% 1% 3% 3%
身体系统
头痛 2% 2% 4% 4%
头晕 <1% <1% 0 1%
嗜睡 <1% <1% 0 0
精神病学
失眠 <1% <1% 0 <1%
a 包括可能、很可能、相关或不清楚是否与治疗方法相关的不良事件。
b AI463022和AI463027研究。
c 包括AI463026和AI463014,AI463014研究是一个多国家的、随机双盲的II期研究,该研究在使用拉米夫定治疗后复发病毒血症的患者中进行,这些患者或改为每日一次服用三种不同剂量的恩替卡韦(0.1,0.5和1.0mg),或继续每日一次服用100mg拉米夫定,持续52周。
国外实验室检测指标异常
表10列出了4项临床试验中使用恩替卡韦和拉米夫定治疗后,实验室检查异常的发生频率。
表10: 四项以拉米夫定对照的试验中的实验室检查异常a
初治病人b 拉米夫定治疗失效病人c
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定 恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
0.5mg 100mg 1.0mg 100mg
测试 n=679 n=668 n=183 n=190
ALT 2% 4% 2% 11%
>10*ULN且>2*基线值
ATL 11% 16% 12% 24%
>5*ULN
AST 5% 8% 5% 17%
>5*ULN
白蛋白 <1% <1% 0 2%
<2.5g/dl
淀粉酶 2% 2% 3% 3%
>2*ULN
脂酶 2% 2% 3% 3%
>2*ULN
肌肝 0 0 0 0
>3*ULN
肌肝增高 1% 1% 2% 1%
≥0.5mg/dl
高血糖症,空腹血糖 2% 1% 2% 1%
>250mg/dl
糖尿d 4% 3% 4% 6%
血尿d 9% 10% 9% 6%
血小板 <1% <1% <1% <1%
<50000/mm3
a在治疗期间,除白蛋白(<2.5g/dl)以外所有指标较基线值变差达3级或4级,肌肝增高≥0.5mg/dl,ALT>10ULN和>2倍基线水平
b AI463022和AI463027研究。
C包括AI463026和AI463014,AI463014研究是一个多国家的、随机双盲的II期研究,该研究在使用拉米夫定治疗后复发病毒血症的患者中进行,这些患者或改为每日一次服用三种不同剂量的恩替卡韦(0.1,0.5和1.0mg),或继续每日一次服用100mg拉米夫定,持续52周。
d 3级=3 大量(也是尿糖500,1000,>1000);4级=4 ,5 ,显著的,严重的(也是 ,4 :很多)
在这些研究中,使用恩替卡韦的患者在治疗过程中发生ALT增高至10倍的正常值上限和基线值的2倍时,通常继续用药一段时间,ALT可恢复正常;在此之前或同时伴随有病毒载量2个对数值的下降。故在用药期间,需定期检测肝功能。
在中国进行的临床试验中,本品最常见的不良反应有:ALT升高、疲劳、眩晕、恶心、腹痛、腹部不适、上腹痛、肝区不适、肌痛、失眠和风疹。这些不良反应多为轻到中度。在与拉米夫定对照的试验中,本品不良事件的发生率与拉米夫定相当。
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【博路定禁忌】
对恩替卡韦或制剂中任何成分过敏者禁用。
【博路定警告】
1.停止治疗后的病情加重:
当慢性乙肝病人停止抗乙肝治疗后,包括恩替卡韦在内,已经发现有重度急性肝炎发作的报道。对那些停止抗乙肝治疗的病人的肝功能情况应从临床和实验室检查等方面严密监察,并且至少随访数月。如必要,可重新恢复抗乙肝病毒的治疗。
在Ⅲ期临床试验中,有一组病人在第52周达到方案所规定的应答后,被允许停药。肝炎急性发作或ALT暴发被定义为:ALT大于10倍的正常值上限和大于2倍的基线水平。如表8所示:核柑类药物初治病人在停药后发生ALT暴发的比例。由于拉米夫定失效病人的达到停药标准面停药的比例较小,故其在停药后发生ATL暴发的比例尚未确定。如果本品在未达到停药标准而予停药时,则发生停药后ALT暴发的概率增加。
2.核苷类药物在单独或与其他抗逆转录病毒药物联合使用时,已经有乳酸性酸中毒和重度的脂肪性肝肿大,包括死亡病例的报道。
表8:在AI463022和AI463027研究中,核苷类药物初治病人在停药后随访期发生的急性肝炎发作
ALT增高大于10倍正常值上限和大于2倍基线水平急性的病人
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
核苷类药物初治病人 25/431(6%) 38/392(10%)
HBeAg阳性a 2/134(1%) 9/129(7%)
HBeAg阴性b 23/297(8%) 29/263(11%)
a使用本品病人发生停药后ALT暴发的中位时间是23周;而使用拉米夫定则中位时间是12周。
b使用本品病人发生停药后ALT暴发的中位时间是24周;而使用拉米夫定则中位时间是9周。
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【博路定注意事项】
患者应在医生的指导下服用恩替卡韦,并告知医生任何新出现的症状及合并用药情况。应告知患者如果停药有时会出现肝脏病情加重,所以应在医生的指导下改变治疗方法。
使用恩替卡韦治疗并不能降低经性接触或污染血源传播HBV的危险性。因此,需要采取适当的防护措施。
【博路定孕妇及哺乳期妇女用药】
恩替卡韦对妊娠妇女影响的研究尚不充分。只有当对胎儿潜在的风险利益作出充分的权衡后,方可使用本品。
目前尚无资料提示本品能影响HBV的母婴传播,因此,应采取适当的干预措施以防止新生儿感染HBV。
恩替卡韦可从大鼠乳汁分泌。但人乳中是否有分泌仍不清楚,所以不推荐服用本品的母亲哺乳。
【博路定儿童用药】
16岁以下儿童患者使用本品的安全性和有效性数据尚未建立。
【博路定老年患者用药】
由于没有足够的65岁及以上的老年患者参加本品的临床研究,尚不清楚老年患者与年轻患者对本品的反应有何不同。其他的临床试验报告也未发现老年患者与年轻患者之间的不同。恩替卡韦主要由肾脏排泄,在肾功能损伤的患者中,可能发生毒性反应的危险性更高。因为老年患者多数肾功能有所下降,因此应注意药物剂量的选择,并且监测肾功能。
【博路定药物相互作用】
体内和体外试验评价了恩替卡韦的代谢情况。恩替卡韦不是细胞色素P4(CYP450)酶系统的底物、抑制剂或诱导剂。在浓度达到人体内浓度约10000倍时,恩替卡韦不抑制任何主要的人CYP450酶:1A2、2C9、2C19、2D6、3A4、2B6和2E1。在浓度达到人体内浓度约340倍时,恩替卡韦不诱导人VYP450酶:1A2、2C9、2C19、3A4、3A5和2B6。同时服用通过抑制或诱导CYP450系统而代谢的药物对恩替卡韦的药代动力学没有影响。而且,同时服用恩替卡韦对已知的CYP底物的药代动力学也没有影响。
研究恩替卡韦与拉米夫定,阿德福韦和特诺福韦的相互作用时,发现恩替卡韦和与其相互作用药物的稳态药代动力学均没有改变。
由于恩替卡韦主要通过肾脏清除,服用降低肾功能或竞争性通过主动肾小球分泌的药物的同时,服用恩替卡韦可能增加这两个药物的血药浓度。同时服用恩替卡韦与拉米夫定、阿德福韦、特诺福韦不会引起明显的药物相互作用。同时服用恩替卡韦与其他通过肾脏清除或已知影响肾功能的药物的相互作用尚未研究。患者在同时服用恩替卡韦与此类药物时要密切监测不良反应的发生。
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【博路定药物过量】
目前尚无使用本品过量的相关报道。在健康人群中单次给药达40毫克或连续14天多次给药20mg/天后,未观察到不良事件发生的增多。如果发生药物过量,须监测患者的毒性指标,必要时进行支持疗法。
单次给药1.0mg恩替卡韦后,4个小时的血液透析可清除约13%的恩替卡韦。
【博路定临床研究】
国内的临床试验
核苷类药物初治患者(肝功能代偿)
AI463023是一项随机双盲的研究,在519名核苷类似物初治慢性乙肝患者中,比较了服用0.5mg/天恩替卡韦和100mg天拉米夫定48周的疗效。患者的平均年龄为30岁(16-64岁),79%为男性,15%的患者曾接受α-干扰素治疗。治疗前,患者平均血清HBV DNA基线水平为8.56log10拷贝/mL(PCR法),平均血清ALT基线水平为197U/L,且有86%的患者为HbeAg阳性。恩替卡韦在主要疗效终点(在第48周b DNA法检验HBV DNA﹤0.7Meq/mL,ALT﹤1.25×ULN)优于拉米夫定。生化、病毒学和血清学结果见表1。
表1:核苷类似药物初治患者试验第48周的生化、病毒学和血清学结果(AI463023)
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定 差值
0.5mg 100mg 恩替卡韦-拉米夫定
(95%可信区间)P值
n=258 n=261 总数n=519
综合疗效终点a 90% 67% 23.1(16.3,29.9)b
P<0.0001
ALT复常(≤1×ULN) 90% 78% 10.3(4.6,16.0)b
P=0.0005
HBV DNA
HBV DNA相对于基数线值的平均改变 -5.90 -4.33 -1.50(-1.77,-1.2) b
(log10拷贝/ml)(PCR法)
HBV DNA<400拷贝/ml(PCR法) 78% 44% 34.6(27.0,42.2) b
HBV DNA<0.7MEq/ml(bDNA法) 95% 72% 22.8(16.7,28.9) b
HBeAg d 消失 18% 20% -1.7(-9.0,-5.6)
P=0.56
HBeAg d 血清转换 15% 18% -3.0(-9.8,-3.8)
a综合疗效终点:在第48周时,bDNA法检测HBV DNA<0.7MEq/ml,并且血清ALT<1.25×ULN。
b差值按基线HBeAg状态分层分析。
c差值基于基线HBV DNA水平(PCR法)与HBeAg状态校正后的线形回归模型。
d在基线HBeAg阳性的受试者。
拉米夫定治疗失效的患者(肝功能代偿)
AI463056是一项随机双盲的研究,在133名拉米夫定治疗失效的HbeAg阳性和阴性的慢性乙肝患者中,比较了服用1.0mg/天恩替卡韦与安慰剂12周的疗效。在双盲给药阶段,患者被随机分组(4:1)服用恩替卡韦1.0mg或安慰剂。治疗12周后,所有的受试者继续为期36周的开放期治疗,在开放期内,受试者服用1.0mg/天恩替卡韦。患者的平均年龄为35岁(16-66岁),75%为男性,其中16%的患者曾接受过α-干扰素治疗。治疗前,患者平均血清HBV-DNA基线水平为8.82log10拷贝/ml(PCR法),平均血清ALT基线水平为89U/L,而且有89%的患者为HbeAg阳性。恩替卡韦在主要疗效终点(第12周HBV-DNA水平较基线的平均变化值,PCR法)优于安慰剂。生化、病毒学和血清学结果见表2。
表2: 拉夫夫定治疗失效患者试验第12周的生化、病毒和血清学结果(AI463056)
恩替卡韦1.0mg 安慰剂 差值
N=105 N=28 恩替卡韦-安慰剂
(95%可信区间)P值
HBV DNA
HBV DNA较基线值的平均变化值 -4.31 -0.17 -4.04(-4.54,-3.54) a
(log10拷贝/ml)(PCR法) P<0.0001
HBV DNA<0.7MEq/ml 71% 11% 60.4(39.9,81.0)
(bDNA法) P<0.0001
ALT复常(≤1×ULN)c 68% 7% 61.3(32.7,89.8)
P<0.0001
a差值基于基线HBV DNA水平(PCR法)校正后的线形回归模型。
b HBV DNA<0.7MEq/ml的患者。
c在基线ALT>1×ULN的患者。
服用本品1.0mg/天,持续48周(12周的双盲给药加上36周的开放期给药),能够非常有效地降低拉米夫定治疗失效患者HBV-DNA水平。基线时ALT水平异常的患者经治疗后,85%患者ALT水平复常。在双盲阶段服用安慰剂的患者转为恩替卡韦开放给药(1.0mg/天,36周),疗效相同。
国外临床试验
在五大洲进行的3个设立阳性对照的Ⅲ期试验中评价了恩替卡韦的安全性和有效性。这些研究包含1633名16岁或以上的慢性乙肝病毒感染(持续6个月血清乙肝病毒表面抗原呈阳性)同时检测到病毒复制(用bDNA杂交或PCR方法检测到血清HBV-DNA)的患者。受试者的入选标准为:持续增加的高于正常水平上限(ULN)1.3倍的ALT水平,和肝活组织检查提示有慢性病毒性肝炎。在68名合并感染HBV和HIV患者的研究中也评介了恩替卡韦的安全性和有效性。
核苷类药物初治患者(肝功能代偿)
HBeAg阳性:AI463022号研究是一个多国家的、随机双盲的研究。研究在709名患者(715名随机)中进行,他们均为核苷类药物初试的慢性乙肝病毒感染且HBeAg阳性患者,分别采用每日一次服用0.5mg恩替卡韦和100mg拉米夫定进行治疗,持续52周。患者的平均年龄为35岁(16-78岁),75%患者为男性,57%为亚洲人,40%为欧洲人,13%曾接受α-干扰素的治疗。基线时,患者的平均Knodell炎性坏死评分为7.8分,平均血清HBV DNA水平为9.66log10拷贝/ml(Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR),平均血清ALT水平为143U/L。病人成对的且足够的肝活检组织标本达89%。
HbeAgb阴性(抗Hbe阳性/HBV DNA阳性):AI463027研究是一个多国家的、随机双盲的研究。研究在638名患者(648名随机)中进行,他们均为核苷类药物初治的HBeAg阴性(HbeAb阳性)的慢性乙肝病毒感染患者(被认为有前核心或核心启动子的变异),分别采用每日一次服用0.5mg恩替拉韦和100mg拉米夫定进行治疗,持续52周。患者的平均年龄为44岁(18-77岁),76%患者为男性,39%为亚洲人,58%为欧洲人,13%曾接受α-干扰素的治疗。基线时,患者的平均Knodell炎性坏死评分为7.8分,平均血清HBV DNA水平为7.58log10拷贝/ml(Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR法),平均血清ALT水平为141.7U/L。别人成对的且足够的肝活检组织标本达88%。
AI463022和AI463027研究主要疗效评价终点:组织学改善(表现为第48周时Knodell炎性坏死评分降低大于2分而Knodell纤维化评分没有恶化)方面,恩替卡韦要明显优于拉米夫定。在次要疗效评价终点,即HBV DNA的下降幅度和ALT复常率等方面,恩替卡韦也明显优于拉米夫定。表3显示了评价组织学改善的Ishak纤维话评分。表4显示了生化、病毒学和血清学检测结果。
表3: 48周时核苷类药物初治患者的组织学改善和Ishak纤维化评分变化AI463022和AI463027
AI463022(HBeAg阳性) AI463027(HBeAg阴性)
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定 恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
0.5mg 100mg 0.5mg 100mg
n=314a n=314a n=296a n=287a
组织学改善(Knodell评分)
改善b 72%* 62% 70%* 61%
无改善 21% 24% 19% 26%
Ishak纤维评分
改善 39% 35% 36% 28%
无变化 46% 40% 41% 34%
恶化 8% 10% 12% 15%
第48周组织检查缺失 7% 14% 10% 13%
a实验开始时即有可供评价的组织学检查样本的患者(Knldell炎性坏死评分基线值≥2)。
B Knldell炎性坏死评分相对基线值减少不少于2分,同时Knldell纤维化评分无恶化。
C对Ishak纤维化评分来说,改善=相对基线值减少不少于1分,恶化=相对基线值增长不少于1分。
表4:48周时核苷类药物初治患者的生化、病毒学、和血清终点AI463022T和AI463027
AI463022(HBeAg阳性) AI463027(HBeAg阴性)
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定 恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
0.5mg 100mg 0.5mg 100mg
n=354 n=355 n=325 n=313
HBV DNAa
达到不可测水平的比例 67% 36% 90% 72%
(﹤300拷贝/ml)
HBV DNA值较较基线 -6.68 -5.39 -5.04 -4.53
值的平均改变
(log10拷贝/mL,PCR)
ALT复常 78% 70% 86% 81%
(≤1×ULN)
HBeAg血清转换 21% 18% N/A N/A
a检测方法:Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR法(最低检测限300拷贝/mL)
*p<0.05
组织学改善不依赖于HBV DNA基线值或ALT水平.
拉米夫定治疗失效的患者:AI463026研究是一个多国家的、随机双盲的研究。研究286名(随机化的人数为294名)患者中研究了恩替卡韦疗效,这些患者均为拉米夫定治疗失效的慢性乙肝病毒感染患者。曾接受拉米夫定治疗的患者在研究开始时,或改为第日一次服用1.0mg恩替卡韦(没有洗脱或重叠时间),或继续每日一次服用100mg拉米夫定,持续52周。患者的平均年龄为39岁(16-74岁),76%患者为男性,37%为亚洲人,62%为欧洲人。在基线的时候,有85%患者体内是拉米夫定耐药株,患者的平Knodell炎性坏死评分为6.5分,平均血清HBV DNA水平为9.36log10拷贝/ml(Roche Amplicor PCR),平均血清ALT水平为128U/L。病人成对的且足够的肝活检组织标本达87%。
AI463026研究主要疗效终点:组织学改善(第48周时采用Knodell评分进行评价)方面,恩替卡韦要优于拉米夫定。表5显示了这些Ishak纤维化评分的结果和改变。表6显示了AI463026研究生化、病毒学和血清学改变。
表5:拉米夫定治疗失效患者48周时Ishak纤维化评分中组织学改善和变化以及复合终点AI463026
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
1.0mg 100mg
n=124a n=116a
组织学改善(Knodell评分)
改善b 55% 28%
无改善 34% 57%
Ishak纤维化评分c
改善c 34% 16%
无变化 44% 42%
恶化c 11% 26%
第48周活组织检查缺失 10% 15%
a实验开始时即有可供评价的组织学检查样本的患者(Knodell炎性坏死基线值评分≥2)。
b Knodell炎性坏死评分相对基线值减少不少于2分且Knodell纤维化评分无恶化。
C对Ishak纤维化评分来说,改善=相对基线值减少不少于1分,恶化=相对基线值增加不少于1分。
*P<0.01。
表6:拉米夫定治疗失效患者48周时生化、病毒学和血清学终点AI463026
恩替卡韦 拉米夫定
1.0mg 100mg
n=141 n=145
HBV DVAa
达到不可测水平的比例 19%* 1%
(<300拷贝/ml=
HBV DNA 值较基线值的平均改变 -5.11 -0.48
(log10拷贝/ml,PCR)
ALT复常(≤1*ULN) 61%* 15%
HBeAg血清转换 8% 3%
a检测方法:Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR法(最低检测限300拷贝/ml)
*P<0.05
组织学改善不依赖于HBV DNA基线值或ALT水平。
试验后随访
恩替卡韦最佳的治疗时间目前尚不知道,按照3期临床方案设计的标准,病人在治疗52周后,如果在48周时达到以下应答标准:乙肝病毒被抑制(bDNA法<0.7Meq/ml=,e抗原消失(e抗原阳性的病人),ALT复常(<1.25*ULN,e抗原阴性的病人=则病人将停用本口或拉米夫定。
21%的e抗原阳性的初治病人达到了停药标准,其中81%的病人在24周的随访期中维持应答。85%的e抗原阴性的初治病人达到了停药标准,其中48%的病人在24周的随访期中维持应答。在拉米夫定失效的病人中,极少有病人达到停药标准。这种方案所规定的病人治疗方法不能用作临床实践指南。
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药理作用
微生物学
作用机制
本品为鸟嘌呤核苷类似物,对乙肝病毒(HBV)多聚酶具有抑制作用。它能够通过磷酸化成为具有活性的三磷酸盐,三磷酸盐在细胞内的半衰期为15小时。通过与HBV多聚酶的天然底物三磷酸脱氧鸟嘌呤核苷竞争,恩替卡韦三磷酸盐能抑制病毒多聚酶(逆转录酶)的所有三种活性:(1)HBV多聚酶的启动;(2)前基因组mRNA逆转录负链的形成;(3)HBV DNA正链的合成。恩替卡韦三磷酸盐对HBV DNA多聚酶的抑制常数(Ki)为0.0012μM。恩替卡韦三磷酸盐对细胞的α、β、δDNA多聚酶和线粒体γDNA多聚酶抑制作用较弱,Ki值为18至于160μM。
抗病毒活性
在转染了野生型乙肝病毒的人类HepG2细胞中,恩替卡韦抑50%病毒DNA合成所需浓度(EC50)为0.004μM。恩替韦对拉米夫定耐药病毒株(rtL180M,rtM204V)的EC50 的中位值是0.26μM(范围0.01至0.059μM),而恩替卡韦对在细胞培养液中生长的1型人类免疫缺陷(HIV)无临床相关活性(EC50 >10μM)。
每天或每周一次使用本品能降低北美土拨鼠的长期研究表明,每周口服0.5mg/kg恩替卡韦(相当于人体1.0mg的剂量)能将其中的3只土拨鼠的病毒DNA保持在不可测水平(病毒DNA水平<200拷贝/ml,PCR法)长达3年之久。在任何使用该药治疗长达3年的动物中,未发现HBV多聚酶发生耐药相关性的变化。
耐药性
体外研究
在细胞试验中发现,拉米夫定耐药的病毒株对恩替卡韦怕显型敏感性降低8至30倍。如果乙肝病毒多聚酶本来就存在对拉米夫定耐药的氨基酸置换(rtL180M和/或rtLM204V/I),再加上rtT184,rtS202或rtM250位点的置换变异,都会造成对恩替卡韦的显型敏感受性降低更多(>70倍。)
临床研究
核苷类药物初治患者:81%的核苷类药物初治病人在口服恩替卡韦0.5mg/天48周后,病毒载量达到<300拷贝/mL。HbeAg阳性(AI463022研究,n=219)或HbeAg阴性(AI463027研究,n=211)的核苷类药特初治患者在治疗48周后,基因型分析结果表明HBV DNA多聚酶的基因没有发生与表型耐药相关基因型变异。在AI463022研究中,有2名病人发生了病毒学反弹(HBV DNA从最低上升1个log10),但没有发现与恩替卡韦耐药相关的基因型或表型证据。
拉米夫定治疗失效的患者:22%的拉米夫定失效病人在口服恩替卡韦1.0mg/天48周后,病毒载量达到<300拷贝/ml。对血清HBV DNA在可测出水平的病人进行基因型分析,结果表明在原先就有拉米夫定耐药变异(rtL180M和/或rtM204/1)的病人中,有7%(13/189)的病人在48周出现rtI169,rtT184,rtS202和/或rtM250等位点与恩替卡韦耐药相关的置换变异。在这13名发生变异的病人中,有3名病人在48周之发生了病毒学反弹(HBV DNA从最低点上≥1个log10),多数病人在48周后发生了病毒学反弹。
交叉耐药
在抗乙肝病毒的核苷类似物药物中已发现有交叉耐药现象,在细胞试验中发现恩替卡韦对拉米夫定耐药(rtL180M和/或rtM204V/I)的病毒株的抑制作用比野生株减弱8至30倍。恩替卡韦对阿德福韦耐药性变异(HBV DNA多聚酶rtN236T或rtA181V变异)的重组病毒也完全敏感,体外试验显示,从拉米夫定和恩替卡韦都失效的病人中分离出来的病毒株,对阿德福韦敏感,但对拉米夫定依然保持耐药性。
毒理研究
遗传毒性
在人类淋巴细胞培养的实验中,发现恩替卡韦是染色体断裂的诱导剂。在Ames实验(使用伤寒杆菌,大肠杆菌,使用或不用代谢激活剂)、基因突变实验和叙利亚仓鼠胚胎细胞转染实验中,发现恩替卡韦不是突变诱导剂。在大鼠的经口给药微核实验和DNA修复实验中,恩替卡韦也呈阴性。
生殖毒性
在生殖毒性研究中,连续4周给予恩替卡韦,剂量最高达30mg/kg,在给药剂量超过人体最高推荐剂量1.0mg/天的90倍时,没有发现雄性和雌性大鼠的生育力受到影响。在恩替卡韦的毒理学研究中,当剂量至人体剂量的35倍或以上时,发现啮齿类动物与狗出现了输精管的退行性变。在猴子实验中,未发现睾丸的改变。
在大鼠和家兔的生殖毒性研究中,口服本品的剂量达200和13mg/kg/天,即相当于人体最高剂量1.0mg/天的28倍(对于大鼠)和212倍(对于家兔)时,没有发现胚胎和母体毒性。在大鼠实验中,当母鼠的用药量相当于人体剂量3100倍时,观察到恩替卡韦对胚胎-胎鼠的毒性作用(重吸收)、体重降低、尾巴和脊椎形态异常和骨化水平降低(脊椎、趾骨和指骨)并观察到额外的腰椎和肋骨。在家兔实验中,对雌兔的用药量为人体的1.0mg/日剂量的883倍时,观察到对胚胎-胎兔的毒性作用(吸收)、骨化水平降低(舌骨),并且第13根肋骨的发生率增加。在对出生前和出生后大鼠口服恩替卡韦的研究中发现用药量大于人的1.0mg/日剂量的94倍未对后代产生影响。
恩替卡韦可从大鼠乳汁分泌。
致癌性
在小鼠和大鼠口服恩替卡韦的长期致癌性研究中,药物暴露量大约分别是人类最高推荐剂量(1.0mg/每天)的42倍(大鼠)和35倍(小鼠)。在上述研究中,恩替卡韦致癌性出现阳性结果。
在小鼠试验中,当剂量至人体剂量的3至40倍时,雄性或雌性小鼠的肺部腺瘤的发生率增加。当剂量至人体剂量的40倍时,雄性或雌性小鼠的肺部肿瘤的发生率增加。当剂量至人体剂量的3倍时,雄性小鼠的肺部腺瘤和肿瘤的发生率增加;当剂量致人体剂量的40倍时,雌性小鼠的肺部腺瘤和肿瘤的发生率增加。小鼠先出现肺细胞增生,继而出现肺部肿瘤,但给予本品的大鼠、狗和猴中并未发现肺细胞增生,这提示在小鼠体内发生的肺部肿瘤可能具有种属特异性。当剂量至人体剂量的42倍时,雄性小鼠的肝细胞肿瘤与混合瘤(肿瘤和腺瘤)的发生率增加。当剂量至人体剂量的40倍时,雌性小鼠的血管性肿瘤(包括卵巢,子宫的血管瘤和脾脏的血管肉瘤)发生率增加。在大鼠的试验中,当剂量至人体剂量的24倍时,雌性大鼠的肝细胞腺瘤的发生率增加,混合瘤(肿瘤和腺瘤)的发生率也增加。当剂量至人体剂量的35倍和24倍时,分别在雄性大鼠和雌性大鼠身上发现有脑胶质瘤。当剂量至人体剂量的4倍时,在雌性大鼠身上发现有皮肤纤维瘤。
目前尚不清楚本品啮齿类动物致癌性试验的结果能否预测本品对人体的致癌作用。
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【博路定药代动力学】
吸收
健康人群口服用药后,本品被迅速吸收,0.5到1.5小时达到峰浓度(Cmax)。每天给药一次,6-10天后可达稳态,累积量约为两倍。
食物对口服吸收的影响
进食标准高脂餐或低脂餐的同时口服0.5mg本品会导致药物吸收的轻微延迟(从原来的0.75小时变为1.0-1.5小时),Cmax降低44-46%,药时曲线下面积(AUC)降低18-20%。因此,本品应空腹服用(餐前或餐后至少2小时)。
药代动力学资料表明,其表观分布容积超过全身液体量,这说明本品广泛分布于各组织。
体外实验表明本品与人血浆蛋白结合率为13%。
代谢和清除
在给人和大鼠服用14C标记的恩替卡韦后,未观察到本品的氧化或乙酰化代谢物,但观察到少量II期代谢产物葡萄糖醛酸甙结合物和硫酸结合物。恩替卡韦不是细胞色素P450(CYP450)酶系统的底物、抑制剂或诱导剂。
在达到血浆峰浓度后,血药浓度以双指数方式下降,达到终末清除半衰期约需128-149小时。药物累积指数约为每天一次给药剂量的2倍,这表明其有效累积半衰期约为24小时。
本品主要以原形通过肾脏清除,清除率为给药量的62-73%。肾清除率为360-471mL/min,且不依赖于给药剂量,这表明恩替卡韦同时通过肾小球滤过和网状小管分泌。
特殊人群
性别:本品的药代动力学不因性别的不同面改变。
种族:本品的药代动力学不因种族的不同而改变。
老年人:一项评价年龄与本品药代动力学关系的研究(口服本品1.0mg)显示老年人的AUC较健康年轻人升高29.3%,这很可能是由于个体肾功能的差异所造成的。老年人的用药剂量参看肾功能不全者的剂量调节。
肾功能不全
在不同程度肾功能不全患者(无慢性乙型肝炎病毒感染),包括使用血液透析或持续性便携式腹膜透析(CAPD)治疗的患者中,单次给药1.0mg本品后的药代动力学结果显示清除率随肌酐清除率的降低而下降。单次给药1.0mg本品4小时后,血液透析能清除约给药剂量的13%,给药7天后,CAPD治疗仅能清除约给药剂量的0.3%。
肝功能不全
在中度和重度肝功能不全(Child-Pugh分级B或C)患者(不包括慢性乙肝病毒感染患者)中,研究了单次给药1.0 mg后恩替卡韦的药代动力学情况,肝功能不全患者与健康对照人群的恩替卡韦的药代动力学情况相似。因此,无需在肝功能不全患者中调节恩替卡韦的给药剂量。
肝移植后:
目前尚不清楚本品在肝移植患者中的安全性和有效性。在一个小型的研究中,在使用稳定剂量的环孢酶素A(n=5)或他克莫司(n=4)治疗HBV感染肝移植患者中,由于肾功能的改变,本品在体内的总量约为肾功能正常的健康人的两倍。肾功能的改变是导致本品在这些病人中浓度增加的原因。本品与环孢酶素A或他克莫司之间的药物动力学的相互作用尚未被评价。这些患者在肝移植前、移植中使用本品或在肝移植后使用免疫抑制如环孢酶素A或他克莫司的同时使用本品都有可能影响肾功能,故必须仔细评价患者的肾功能。
儿童用药:尚无儿童使用该药的药代动力学数据..
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BARACLUDE®
(entecavir) Tablets
WARNING
SEVERE ACUTE EXACERBATIONS OF HEPATITIS B, PATIENTS CO-INFECTED WITH HIV AND HBV, and LACTIC ACIDOSIS AND HEPATOMEGALY
Severe acute exacerbations of hepatitis B have been reported in patients who have discontinued anti-hepatitis B therapy, including entecavir. Hepatic function should be monitored closely with both clinical and laboratory follow-up for at least several months in patients who discontinue anti-hepatitis B therapy. If appropriate, initiation of anti-hepatitis B therapy may be warranted [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
Limited clinical experience suggests there is a potential for the development of resistance to HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors if BARACLUDE is used to treat chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in patients with HIV infection that is not being treated. Therapy with BARACLUDE is not recommended for HIV/HBV co-infected patients who are not also receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
Lactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis, including fatal cases, have been reported with the use of nucleoside analogue inhibitors alone or in combination with antiretrovirals [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
DESCRIPTIONBARACLUDE® is the tradename for entecavir, a guanosine nucleoside analogue with selective activity against HBV. The chemical name for entecavir is 2-amino-1,9-dihydro-9-[(1S,3R,4S)-4-hydroxy-3-(hydroxymethyl)-2-methylenecyclopentyl]-6H-purin-6-one, monohydrate. Its molecular formula is C12H15N5O3•H2O, which corresponds to a molecular weight of 295.3. Entecavir has the following structural formula:
|
Entecavir is a white to off-white powder. It is slightly soluble in water (2.4 mg/mL), and the pH of the saturated solution in water is 7.9 at 25° C ± 0.5° C.
BARACLUDE film-coated tablets are available for oral administration in strengths of 0.5 mg and 1 mg of entecavir. BARACLUDE 0.5 mg and 1 mg film-coated tablets contain the following inactive ingredients: lactose monohydrate, microcrystalline cellulose, crospovidone, povidone, and magnesium stearate. The tablet coating contains titanium dioxide, hypromellose, polyethylene glycol 400, polysorbate 80 (0.5 mg tablet only), and iron oxide red (1 mg tablet only). BARACLUDE Oral Solution is available for oral administration as a ready-to-use solution containing 0.05 mg of entecavir per milliliter. BARACLUDE Oral Solution contains the following inactive ingredients: maltitol, sodium citrate, citric acid, methylparaben, propylparaben, and orange flavor.
Indications
INDICATIONSBARACLUDE® (entecavir) is indicated for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus infection in adults and pediatric patients 2 years of age and older with evidence of active viral replication and either evidence of persistent elevations in serum aminotransferases (ALT or AST) or histologically active disease.
The following points should be considered when initiating therapy with BARACLUDE:
· In adult patients, this indication is based on clinical trial data in nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve and lamivudine-resistant subjects with HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative HBV infection and compensated liver disease and a more limited number of subjects with decompensated liver disease [see Clinical Studies].
· In pediatric patients 2 years of age and older, this indication is based on clinical trial data in nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve and in a limited number of lamivudine-experienced subjects with HBeAg-positive chronic HBV infection and compensated liver disease [seeClinical Studies].
Dosage
DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATIONTiming Of AdministrationBARACLUDE should be administered on an empty stomach (at least 2 hours after a meal and 2 hours before the next meal).
Recommended Dosage In AdultsCompensated Liver DiseaseThe recommended dose of BARACLUDE for chronic hepatitis B virus infection in nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve adults and adolescents 16 years of age and older is 0.5 mg once daily.
The recommended dose of BARACLUDE in adults and adolescents (at least 16 years of age) with a history of hepatitis B viremia while receiving lamivudine or known lamivudine or telbivudine resistance substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M, rtL80I/V, or rtV173L is 1 mg once daily.
Decompensated Liver DiseaseThe recommended dose of BARACLUDE for chronic hepatitis B virus infection in adults with decompensated liver disease is 1 mg once daily.
Recommended Dosage In Pediatric PatientsTable 1 describes the recommended dose of BARACLUDE for pediatric patients 2 years of age or older and weighing at least 10 kg. The oral solution should be used for patients with body weight up to 30 kg.
Table 1: Dosing Schedule for Pediatric Patients
Body Weight (kg) |
Recommended Once-Daily Dose of Oral Solution (mL) |
|
Treatment-Na'ive Patientsa |
Lamivudine-Experienced Patientsb |
|
10 to 11 |
3 |
6 |
greater than 11 to 14 |
4 |
8 |
greater than 14 to 17 |
5 |
10 |
greater than 17 to 20 |
6 |
12 |
greater than 20 to 23 |
7 |
14 |
greater than 23 to 26 |
8 |
16 |
greater than 26 to 30 |
9 |
18 |
greater than 30 |
10 |
20 |
a Children with body weight greater than 30 kg should receive 10 mL (0.5 mg) of oral solution or one 0.5 mg tablet once daily. |
In adult subjects with renal impairment, the apparent oral clearance of entecavir decreased as creatinine clearance decreased [see CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY]. Dosage adjustment is recommended for patients with creatinine clearance less than 50 mL/min, including patients on hemodialysis or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD), as shown in Table 2. The once-daily dosing regimens are preferred.
Table 2: Recommended Dosage of BARACLUDE in Adult Patients with Renal Impairment
Creatinine Clearance (mL/min) |
Usual Dose (0.5 mg) |
Lamivudine-Refractory or Decompensated Liver Disease (1 mg) |
50 or greater |
0.5 mg once daily |
1 mg once daily |
30 to less than 50 |
0.25 mg once dailya OR 0.5 mg every 48 hours |
0.5 mg once daily |
10 to less than 30 |
0.15 mg once dailya OR 0.5 mg every 72 hours |
0.3 mg once dailya |
Less than 10 Hemodialysisb or CAPD |
0.05 mg once dailya OR 0.5 mg every 7 days |
0.1 mg once dailya |
a For doses less than 0.5 mg, BARACLUDE Oral Solution is recommended. |
Although there are insufficient data to recommend a specific dose adjustment of BARACLUDE in pediatric patients with renal impairment, a reduction in the dose or an increase in the dosing interval similar to adjustments for adults should be considered.
Hepatic ImpairmentNo dosage adjustment is necessary for patients with hepatic impairment.
Duration Of TherapyThe optimal duration of treatment with BARACLUDE for patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection and the relationship between treatment and long-term outcomes such as cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma are unknown.
HOW SUPPLIEDDosage Forms And Strengths· BARACLUDE 0.5 mg film-coated tablets are white to off-white, triangular-shaped, and debossed with “BMS” on one side and “1611” on the other side.
· BARACLUDE 1 mg film-coated tablets are pink, triangular-shaped, and debossed with “BMS” on one side and “1612” on the other side.
· BARACLUDE oral solution, 0.05 mg/mL, is a ready-to-use, orange-flavored, clear, colorless to pale yellow, aqueous solution. Ten milliliters of the oral solution provides a 0.5 mg dose and 20 mL provides a 1 mg dose of entecavir.
Storage And HandlingBARACLUDE® (entecavir) Tablets and Oral Solution are available in the following strengths and configurations of plastic bottles with child-resistant closures:
Product Strength and Dosage Form |
Description |
Quantity |
NDC Number |
0.5 mg film-coated tablet |
White to off-white, triangular-shaped tablet, debossed with “BMS” on one side and “1611” on the other side. |
30 tablets |
0003-1611-12 |
90 tablets |
0003-1611-13 |
||
1 mg film-coated tablet |
Pink, triangular-shaped tablet, debossed with “BMS” on one side and “1612” on the other side. |
30 tablets |
0003-1612-12 |
0.05 mg/mL oral solution |
Ready-to-use, orange-flavored, clear, colorless to pale yellow, aqueous solution in a 260 mL bottle. |
210 mL |
0003-1614-12 |
BARACLUDE Oral Solution is a ready-to-use product; dilution or mixing with water or any other solvent or liquid product is not recommended. Each bottle of the oral solution is accompanied by a dosing spoon that is calibrated in 0.5 mL increments up to 10 mL.
StorageBARACLUDE Tablets should be stored in a tightly closed container at 25°C (77°F); excursions permitted between 15°C and 30°C (59°F and 86°F) [see USP Controlled Room Temperature]. Store in the outer carton to protect from light.
BARACLUDE Oral Solution should be stored in the outer carton at 25°C (77°F); excursions permitted between 15°C and 30°C (59°F and 86°F) [see USP Controlled Room Temperature]. Protect from light. After opening, the oral solution can be used up to the expiration date on the bottle. The bottle and its contents should be discarded after the expiration date.
Distributed by: Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Princeton, NJ 08543 USA. Revised: August 2015
Side Effects & Drug Interactions
SIDE EFFECTSThe following adverse reactions are discussed in other sections of the labeling:
· Exacerbations of hepatitis after discontinuation of treatment [see BOXED WARNING, WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
· Lactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis [see BOXED WARNING, WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
Clinical Trial Experience In AdultsBecause clinical trials are conducted under widely varying conditions, adverse reaction rates observed in the clinical trials of a drug cannot be directly compared to rates in the clinical trials of another drug and may not reflect the rates observed in practice.
Compensated Liver DiseaseAssessment of adverse reactions is based on four studies (AI463014, AI463022, AI463026, and AI463027) in which 1720 subjects with chronic hepatitis B virus infection and compensated liver disease received double-blind treatment with BARACLUDE 0.5 mg/day (n=679), BARACLUDE 1 mg/day (n=183), or lamivudine (n=858) for up to 2 years. Median duration of therapy was 69 weeks for BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 63 weeks for lamivudine-treated subjects in Studies AI463022 and AI463027 and 73 weeks for BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 51 weeks for lamivudine-treated subjects in Studies AI463026 and AI463014. The safety profiles of BARACLUDE and lamivudine were comparable in these studies.
The most common adverse reactions of any severity ( ≥ 3%) with at least a possible relation to study drug for BARACLUDE-treated subjects were headache, fatigue, dizziness, and nausea. The most common adverse reactions among lamivudine-treated subjects were headache, fatigue, and dizziness. One percent of BARACLUDE-treated subjects in these four studies compared with 4% of lamivudine-treated subjects discontinued for adverse events or abnormal laboratory test results.
Clinical adverse reactions of moderate-severe intensity and considered at least possibly related to treatment occurring during therapy in four clinical studies in which BARACLUDE was compared with lamivudine are presented in Table 3.
Table 3: Clinical Adverse Reactionsa of Moderate-Severe Intensity (Grades 2–4) Reported in Four Entecavir Clinical Trials Through 2 Years
Body System/ Adverse Reaction |
Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïveb |
Lamivudine-Refractoryc |
||
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
BARACLUDE 1 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
|
Any Grade 2-4 adverse reactiona |
15% |
18% |
22% |
23% |
Gastrointestinal |
||||
Diarrhea |
< 1% |
0 |
1% |
0 |
Dyspepsia |
< 1% |
< 1% |
1% |
0 |
Nausea |
< 1% |
< 1% |
< 1% |
2% |
Vomiting |
< 1% |
< 1% |
< 1% |
0 |
General |
||||
Fatigue |
1% |
1% |
3% |
3% |
Nervous System |
||||
Headache |
2% |
2% |
4% |
1% |
Dizziness |
< 1% |
< 1% |
0 |
1% |
Somnolence |
< 1% |
< 1% |
0 |
0 |
Psychiatric |
||||
Insomnia |
< 1% |
< 1% |
0 |
< 1% |
a Includes events of possible, probable, certain, or unknown relationship to treatment regimen. |
Frequencies of selected treatment-emergent laboratory abnormalities reported during therapy in four clinical trials of BARACLUDE compared with lamivudine are listed in Table 4.
Table 4: Selected Treatment-Emergenta Laboratory Abnormalities Reported in Four Entecavir Clinical Trials Through 2 Years
Test |
Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïveb |
Lamivudine-Refractoryc |
||
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
BARACLUDE 1 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
|
Any Grade 3-4 laboratory abnormalityd |
35% |
36% |
37% |
45% |
ALT > 10 x ULN and > 2 x baseline |
2% |
4% |
2% |
11% |
ALT > 5 x ULN |
11% |
16% |
12% |
24% |
Albumin < 2.5 g/dL |
< 1% |
< 1% |
0 |
2% |
Total bilirubin > 2.5 x ULN |
2% |
2% |
3% |
2% |
Lipase ≥ 2.1 x ULN |
7% |
6% |
7% |
7% |
Creatinine > 3 x ULN |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Confirmed creatinine increase ≥ 0.5 mg/dL |
1% |
1% |
2% |
1% |
Hyperglycemia, fasting > 250 mg/dL |
2% |
1% |
3% |
1% |
Glycosuriae |
4% |
3% |
4% |
6% |
Hematuriaf |
9% |
10% |
9% |
6% |
Platelets < 50,000/mm³ |
< 1% |
< 1% |
< 1% |
< 1% |
a On-treatment value worsened from baseline to Grade 3 or Grade 4 for all parameters except albumin (any on-treatment value < 2.5 g/dL), confirmed creatinine increase ≥ 0.5 mg/dL, and ALT > 10 × ULN and > 2 × baseline. |
Among BARACLUDE-treated subjects in these studies, on-treatment ALT elevations greater than 10 times the upper limit of normal (ULN) and greater than 2 times baseline generally resolved with continued treatment. A majority of these exacerbations were associated with a ≥ 2 log10/mL reduction in viral load that preceded or coincided with the ALT elevation. Periodic monitoring of hepatic function is recommended during treatment.
Exacerbations of Hepatitis after Discontinuation of TreatmentAn exacerbation of hepatitis or ALT flare was defined as ALT greater than 10 times ULN and greater than 2 times the subject's reference level (minimum of the baseline or last measurement at end of dosing). For all subjects who discontinued treatment (regardless of reason), Table 5 presents the proportion of subjects in each study who experienced post-treatment ALT flares. In these studies, a subset of subjects was allowed to discontinue treatment at or after 52 weeks if they achieved a protocol-defined response to therapy. If BARACLUDE is discontinued without regard to treatment response, the rate of post-treatment flares could be higher. [See WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS]
Table 5: Exacerbations of Hepatitis During Off-Treatment Follow-up, Subjects in Studies AI463022, AI463027, and AI463026
|
Subjects with ALT Elevations > 10 x ULN and > 2 x Referencea |
|
BARACLUDE |
Lamivudine |
|
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naive |
||
HBeAg-positive |
4/174 (2%) |
13/147 (9%) |
HBeAg-negative |
24/302 (8%) |
30/270 (11%) |
Lamivudine-refractory |
6/52 (12%) |
0/16 |
a Reference is the minimum of the baseline or last measurement at end of dosing. Median time to off-treatment exacerbation was 23 weeks for BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 10 weeks for lamivudine-treated subjects. |
Study AI463048 was a randomized, open-label study of BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily versus adefovir dipivoxil 10 mg once daily given for up to 48 weeks in adult subjects with chronic HBV infection and evidence of hepatic decompensation, defined as a Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) score of 7 or higher [see Clinical Studies]. Among the 102 subjects receiving BARACLUDE, the most common treatment-emergent adverse events of any severity, regardless of causality, occurring through Week 48 were peripheral edema (16%), ascites (15%), pyrexia (14%), hepatic encephalopathy (10%), and upper respiratory infection (10%). Clinical adverse reactions not listed in Table 3 that were observed through Week 48 include blood bicarbonate decreased (2%) and renal failure ( < 1%).
Eighteen of 102 (18%) subjects treated with BARACLUDE and 18/89 (20%) subjects treated with adefovir dipivoxil died during the first 48 weeks of therapy. The majority of deaths (11 in the BARACLUDE group and 16 in the adefovir dipivoxil group) were due to liver-related causes such as hepatic failure, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, and upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage. The rate of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) through Week 48 was 6% (6/102) for subjects treated with BARACLUDE and 8% (7/89) for subjects treated with adefovir dipivoxil. Five percent of subjects in either treatment arm discontinued therapy due to an adverse event through Week 48.
No subject in either treatment arm experienced an on-treatment hepatic flare (ALT > 2 × baseline and > 10 × ULN) through Week 48. Eleven of 102 (11%) subjects treated with BARACLUDE and 11/89 (13%) subjects treated with adefovir dipivoxil had a confirmed increase in serum creatinine of 0.5 mg/dL through Week 48.
HIV/HBV Co-infectedThe safety profile of BARACLUDE 1 mg (n=51) in HIV/HBV co-infected subjects enrolled in Study AI463038 was similar to that of placebo (n=17) through 24 weeks of blinded treatment and similar to that seen in non-HIV infected subjects [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
Liver Transplant RecipientsAmong 65 subjects receiving BARACLUDE in an open-label, post-liver transplant trial [see Use in Specific Populations], the frequency and nature of adverse events were consistent with those expected in patients who have received a liver transplant and the known safety profile of BARACLUDE.
Clinical Trial Experience In Pediatric SubjectsBecause clinical trials are conducted under widely varying conditions, adverse reaction rates observed in the clinical trials of a drug cannot be directly compared to rates in the clinical trials of another drug and may not reflect the rates observed in practice.
The safety of BARACLUDE in pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years of age is based on two ongoing clinical trials in subjects with chronic HBV infection (one Phase 2 pharmacokinetic trial [AI463028] and one Phase 3 trial [AI463189]). These trials provide experience in 168 HBeAg-positive subjects treated with BARACLUDE for a median duration of 72 weeks. The adverse reactions observed in pediatric subjects who received treatment with BARACLUDE were consistent with those observed in clinical trials of BARACLUDE in adults. Adverse drug reactions reported in greater than 1% of pediatric subjects included abdominal pain, rash events, poor palatability (“product taste abnormal”), nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting.
Postmarketing ExperienceThe following adverse reactions have been reported during postmarketing use of BARACLUDE. Because these reactions were reported voluntarily from a population of unknown size, it is not possible to reliably estimate their frequency or establish a causal relationship to BARACLUDE exposure.
Immune system disorders: Anaphylactoid reaction.
Metabolism and nutrition disorders: Lactic acidosis.
Hepatobiliary disorders: Increased transaminases.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: Alopecia, rash.
DRUG INTERACTIONSSince entecavir is primarily eliminated by the kidneys [see CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY], coadministration of BARACLUDE with drugs that reduce renal function or compete for active tubular secretion may increase serum concentrations of either entecavir or the coadministered drug. Coadministration of entecavir with lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, or tenofovir disoproxil fumarate did not result in significant drug interactions. The effects of coadministration of BARACLUDE with other drugs that are renally eliminated or are known to affect renal function have not been evaluated, and patients should be monitored closely for adverse events when BARACLUDE is coadministered with such drugs.
Warnings & Precautions
WARNINGSIncluded as part of the PRECAUTIONS section.
PRECAUTIONSSevere Acute Exacerbations Of Hepatitis BSevere acute exacerbations of hepatitis B have been reported in patients who have discontinued anti-hepatitis B therapy, including entecavir [see ADVERSE REACTIONS]. Hepatic function should be monitored closely with both clinical and laboratory follow-up for at least several months in patients who discontinue anti-hepatitis B therapy. If appropriate, initiation of anti-hepatitis B therapy may be warranted.
Patients Co-infected With HIV And HBVBARACLUDE has not been evaluated in HIV/HBV co-infected patients who were not simultaneously receiving effective HIV treatment. Limited clinical experience suggests there is a potential for the development of resistance to HIV nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors if BARACLUDE is used to treat chronic hepatitis B virus infection in patients with HIV infection that is not being treated [see Microbiology]. Therefore, therapy with BARACLUDE is not recommended for HIV/HBV co-infected patients who are not also receiving HAART. Before initiating BARACLUDE therapy, HIV antibody testing should be offered to all patients. BARACLUDE has not been studied as a treatment for HIV infection and is not recommended for this use.
Lactic Acidosis And Severe Hepatomegaly With SteatosisLactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis, including fatal cases, have been reported with the use of nucleoside analogue inhibitors, including BARACLUDE, alone or in combination with antiretrovirals. A majority of these cases have been in women. Obesity and prolonged nucleoside inhibitor exposure may be risk factors. Particular caution should be exercised when administering nucleoside analogue inhibitors to any patient with known risk factors for liver disease; however, cases have also been reported in patients with no known risk factors.
Lactic acidosis with BARACLUDE use has been reported, often in association with hepatic decompensation, other serious medical conditions, or drug exposures. Patients with decompensated liver disease may be at higher risk for lactic acidosis. Treatment with BARACLUDE should be suspended in any patient who develops clinical or laboratory findings suggestive of lactic acidosis or pronounced hepatotoxicity (which may include hepatomegaly and steatosis even in the absence of marked transaminase elevations).
Patient Counseling InformationSee FDA-approved patient labeling (PATIENT INFORMATION).
Information About Treatment· Physicians should inform their patients of the following important points when initiating BARACLUDE treatment:
· Patients should remain under the care of a physician while taking BARACLUDE. They should discuss any new symptoms or concurrent medications with their physician.
· Patients should be advised that treatment with BARACLUDE has not been shown to reduce the risk of transmission of HBV to others through sexual contact or blood contamination.
· Patients should be advised to take BARACLUDE on an empty stomach (at least 2 hours after a meal and 2 hours before the next meal).
· Patients using the oral solution should be instructed to hold the dosing spoon in a verticalposition and fill it gradually to the mark corresponding to the prescribed dose. Rinsing of the dosing spoon with water is recommended after each daily dose. Some patients may find it difficult to accurately measure the prescribed dose using the provided dosing spoon; therefore, patients/caregivers should refer to the steps in the Patient Information section that demonstrate the correct technique of using the provided dosing spoon to measure the prescribed BARACLUDE dose.
· Patients should be advised to take a missed dose as soon as remembered unless it is almost time for the next dose. Patients should not take two doses at the same time.
· Patients should be advised that treatment with BARACLUDE will not cure HBV.
· Patients should be informed that BARACLUDE may lower the amount of HBV in the body, may lower the ability of HBV to multiply and infect new liver cells, and may improve the condition of the liver.
· Patients should be informed that it is not known whether BARACLUDE will reduce their chances of getting liver cancer or cirrhosis.
Post-treatment Exacerbation of HepatitisPatients should be informed that deterioration of liver disease may occur in some cases if treatment is discontinued, and that they should discuss any change in regimen with their physician.
HIV/HBV Co-infectionPatients should be offered HIV antibody testing before starting BARACLUDE therapy. They should be informed that if they have HIV infection and are not receiving effective HIV treatment, BARACLUDE may increase the chance of HIV resistance to HIV medication.
Nonclinical ToxicologyCarcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment Of FertilityCarcinogenesisLong-term oral carcinogenicity studies of entecavir in mice and rats were carried out at exposures up to approximately 42 times (mice) and 35 times (rats) those observed in humans at the highest recommended dose of 1 mg/day. In mouse and rat studies, entecavir was positive for carcinogenic findings.
In mice, lung adenomas were increased in males and females at exposures 3 and 40 times those in humans. Lung carcinomas in both male and female mice were increased at exposures 40 times those in humans. Combined lung adenomas and carcinomas were increased in male mice at exposures 3 times and in female mice at exposures 40 times those in humans. Tumor development was preceded by pneumocyte proliferation in the lung, which was not observed in rats, dogs, or monkeys administered entecavir, supporting the conclusion that lung tumors in mice may be a species-specific event. Hepatocellular carcinomas were increased in males and combined liver adenomas and carcinomas were also increased at exposures 42 times those in humans. Vascular tumors in female mice (hemangiomas of ovaries and uterus and hemangiosarcomas of spleen) were increased at exposures 40 times those in humans. In rats, hepatocellular adenomas were increased in females at exposures 24 times those in humans; combined adenomas and carcinomas were also increased in females at exposures 24 times those in humans. Brain gliomas were induced in both males and females at exposures 35 and 24 times those in humans. Skin fibromas were induced in females at exposures 4 times those in humans.
It is not known how predictive the results of rodent carcinogenicity studies may be for humans.
MutagenesisEntecavir was clastogenic to human lymphocyte cultures. Entecavir was not mutagenic in the Ames bacterial reverse mutation assay using S. typhimurium and E. coli strains in the presence or absence of metabolic activation, a mammalian-cell gene mutation assay, and a transformation assay with Syrian hamster embryo cells. Entecavir was also negative in an oral micronucleus study and an oral DNA repair study in rats.
Impairment of FertilityIn reproductive toxicology studies, in which animals were administered entecavir at up to 30 mg/kg for up to 4 weeks, no evidence of impaired fertility was seen in male or female rats at systemic exposures greater than 90 times those achieved in humans at the highest recommended dose of 1 mg/day. In rodent and dog toxicology studies, seminiferous tubular degeneration was observed at exposures 35 times or greater than those achieved in humans. No testicular changes were evident in monkeys.
Use In Specific PopulationsPregnancyPregnancy Category CThere are no adequate and well-controlled studies of BARACLUDE in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies are not always predictive of human response, BARACLUDE should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.
Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry: To monitor fetal outcomes of pregnant women exposed to BARACLUDE, an Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry has been established. Healthcare providers are encouraged to register patients by calling 1-800-258-4263.
Animal DataAnimal reproduction studies with entecavir in rats and rabbits revealed no evidence of teratogenicity. Developmental toxicity studies were performed in rats and rabbits. There were no signs of embryofetal or maternal toxicity when pregnant animals received oral entecavir at approximately 28 (rat) and 212 (rabbit) times the human exposure achieved at the highest recommended human dose of 1 mg/day. In rats, maternal toxicity, embryofetal toxicity (resorptions), lower fetal body weights, tail and vertebral malformations, reduced ossification (vertebrae, sternebrae, and phalanges), and extra lumbar vertebrae and ribs were observed at exposures 3100 times those in humans. In rabbits, embryofetal toxicity (resorptions), reduced ossification (hyoid), and an increased incidence of 13th rib were observed at exposures 883 times those in humans. In a peri-postnatal study, no adverse effects on offspring occurred when rats received oral entecavir at exposures greater than 94 times those in humans.
Labor And DeliveryThere are no studies in pregnant women and no data on the effect of BARACLUDE on transmission of HBV from mother to infant. Therefore, appropriate interventions should be used to prevent neonatal acquisition of HBV.
Nursing MothersIt is not known whether BARACLUDE is excreted into human milk; however, entecavir is excreted into the milk of rats. Because many drugs are excreted into human milk and because of the potential for serious adverse reactions in nursing infants from BARACLUDE, a decision should be made to discontinue nursing or to discontinue BARACLUDE taking into consideration the importance of continued hepatitis B therapy to the mother and the known benefits of breastfeeding.
Pediatric UseBARACLUDE was evaluated in two clinical trials of pediatric subjects 2 years of age and older with HBeAg-positive chronic HBV infection and compensated liver disease. The exposure of BARACLUDE in nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve and lamivudine-experienced pediatric subjects 2 years of age and older with HBeAg-positive chronic HBV infection and compensated liver disease receiving 0.015 mg/kg (up to 0.5 mg once daily) or 0.03 mg/kg (up to 1 mg once daily), respectively, was evaluated in Study AI463028. Safety and efficacy of the selected dose in treatment-naïve pediatric subjects were confirmed in Study AI463189, a randomized, placebo-controlled treatment trial [seeINDICATIONS AND USAGE, DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION, ADVERSE REACTIONS, CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, and Clinical Studies].
There are limited data available on the use of BARACLUDE in lamivudine-experienced pediatric patients; BARACLUDE should be used in these patients only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the child. Since some pediatric patients may require long-term or even lifetime management of chronic active hepatitis B, consideration should be given to the impact of BARACLUDE on future treatment options [see Microbiology].
The efficacy and safety of BARACLUDE have not been established in patients less than 2 years of age. Use of BARACLUDE in this age group has not been evaluated because treatment of HBV in this age group is rarely required.
Geriatric UseClinical studies of BARACLUDE did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 years and over to determine whether they respond differently from younger subjects. Entecavir is substantially excreted by the kidney, and the risk of toxic reactions to this drug may be greater in patients with impaired renal function. Because elderly patients are more likely to have decreased renal function, care should be taken in dose selection, and it may be useful to monitor renal function [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Racial/Ethnic GroupsThere are no significant racial differences in entecavir pharmacokinetics. The safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE 0.5 mg once daily were assessed in a single-arm, open-label trial of HBeAg- positive or -negative, nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, Black/African American (n=40) and Hispanic (n=6) subjects with chronic HBV infection. In this trial, 76% of subjects were male, the mean age was 42 years, 57% were HBeAg-positive, the mean baseline HBV DNA was 7.0 log10 IU/mL, and the mean baseline ALT was 162 U/L. At Week 48 of treatment, 32 of 46 (70%) subjects had HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL (approximately 300 copies/mL), 31 of 46 (67%) subjects had ALT normalization ( ≤ 1 × ULN), and 12 of 26 (46%) HBeAg-positive subjects had HBe seroconversion. Safety data were similar to those observed in the larger controlled clinical trials.
Because of low enrollment, safety and efficacy have not been established in the US Hispanic population.
Renal ImpairmentDosage adjustment of BARACLUDE is recommended for patients with creatinine clearance less than 50 mL/min, including patients on hemodialysis or CAPD [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION and CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY].
Liver Transplant RecipientsThe safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE were assessed in a single-arm, open-label trial in 65 subjects who received a liver transplant for complications of chronic HBV infection. Eligible subjects who had HBV DNA less than 172 IU/mL (approximately 1000 copies/mL) at the time of transplant were treated with BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily in addition to usual post-transplantation management, including hepatitis B immune globulin. The trial population was 82% male, 39% Caucasian, and 37% Asian, with a mean age of 49 years; 89% of subjects had HBeAg-negative disease at the time of transplant.
Four of the 65 subjects received 4 weeks or less of BARACLUDE (2 deaths, 1 retransplantation, and 1 protocol violation) and were not considered evaluable. Of the 61 subjects who received more than 4 weeks of BARACLUDE, 60 received hepatitis B immune globulin post-transplant.
Fifty-three subjects (82% of all 65 subjects treated) completed the trial and had HBV DNA measurements at or after 72 weeks treatment post-transplant. All 53 subjects had HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL (approximately 300 copies/mL). Eight evaluable subjects did not have HBV DNA data available at 72 weeks, including 3 subjects who died prior to study completion. No subjects had HBV DNA values ≥ 50 IU/mL while receiving BARACLUDE (plus hepatitis B immune globulin). All 61 evaluable subjects lost HBsAg post-transplant; 2 of these subjects experienced recurrence of measurable HBsAg without recurrence of HBV viremia. This trial was not designed to determine whether addition of BARACLUDE to hepatitis B immune globulin decreased the proportion of subjects with measurable HBV DNA post-transplant compared to hepatitis B immune globulin alone.
If BARACLUDE treatment is determined to be necessary for a liver transplant recipient who has received or is receiving an immunosuppressant that may affect renal function, such as cyclosporine or tacrolimus, renal function must be carefully monitored both before and during treatment with BARACLUDE [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION and CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY].
Overdosage & Contraindications
OVERDOSEThere is limited experience of entecavir overdosage reported in patients. Healthy subjects who received single entecavir doses up to 40 mg or multiple doses up to 20 mg/day for up to 14 days had no increase in or unexpected adverse events. If overdose occurs, the patient must be monitored for evidence of toxicity, and standard supportive treatment applied as necessary.
Following a single 1 mg dose of entecavir, a 4-hour hemodialysis session removed approximately 13% of the entecavir dose.
CONTRAINDICATIONSNone.
Clinical Pharmacology
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGYMechanism Of ActionEntecavir is an antiviral drug [see Microbiology].
PharmacokineticsThe single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetics of entecavir were evaluated in healthy subjects and subjects with chronic hepatitis B virus infection.
AbsorptionFollowing oral administration in healthy subjects, entecavir peak plasma concentrations occurred between 0.5 and 1.5 hours. Following multiple daily doses ranging from 0.1 to 1 mg, Cmax and area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) at steady state increased in proportion to dose. Steady state was achieved after 6 to 10 days of once-daily administration with approximately 2-fold accumulation. For a 0.5 mg oral dose, Cmax at steady state was 4.2 ng/mL and trough plasma concentration (Ctrough) was 0.3 ng/mL. For a 1 mg oral dose, Cmax was 8.2 ng/mL and Ctrough was 0.5 ng/mL.
In healthy subjects, the bioavailability of the tablet was 100% relative to the oral solution. The oral solution and tablet may be used interchangeably.
Effects of Food on Oral Absorption
Oral administration of 0.5 mg of entecavir with a standard high-fat meal (945 kcal, 54.6 g fat) or a light meal (379 kcal, 8.2 g fat) resulted in a delay in absorption (1.0–1.5 hours fed vs. 0.75 hours fasted), a decrease in Cmax of 44%–46%, and a decrease in AUC of 18%–20% [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
DistributionBased on the pharmacokinetic profile of entecavir after oral dosing, the estimated apparent volume of distribution is in excess of total body water, suggesting that entecavir is extensively distributed into tissues.
Binding of entecavir to human serum proteins in vitro was approximately 13%.
Metabolism and EliminationFollowing administration of 14C-entecavir in humans and rats, no oxidative or acetylated metabolites were observed. Minor amounts of phase II metabolites (glucuronide and sulfate conjugates) were observed. Entecavir is not a substrate, inhibitor, or inducer of the cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system. See DRUG INTERACTIONS, below.
After reaching peak concentration, entecavir plasma concentrations decreased in a bi-exponential manner with a terminal elimination half-life of approximately 128–149 hours. The observed drug accumulation index is approximately 2-fold with once-daily dosing, suggesting an effective accumulation half-life of approximately 24 hours.
Entecavir is predominantly eliminated by the kidney with urinary recovery of unchanged drug at steady state ranging from 62% to 73% of the administered dose. Renal clearance is independent of dose and ranges from 360 to 471 mL/min suggesting that entecavir undergoes both glomerular filtration and net tubular secretion [see DRUG INTERACTIONS].
Special PopulationsGender: There are no significant gender differences in entecavir pharmacokinetics.
Race: There are no significant racial differences in entecavir pharmacokinetics.
Elderly: The effect of age on the pharmacokinetics of entecavir was evaluated following administration of a single 1 mg oral dose in healthy young and elderly volunteers. Entecavir AUC was 29.3% greater in elderly subjects compared to young subjects. The disparity in exposure between elderly and young subjects was most likely attributable to differences in renal function. Dosage adjustment of BARACLUDE should be based on the renal function of the patient, rather than age [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Pediatrics: The steady-state pharmacokinetics of entecavir were evaluated in nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve and lamivudine-experienced HBeAg-positive pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years of age with compensated liver disease. Results are shown in Table 6. Entecavir exposure among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects was similar to the exposure achieved in adults receiving once-daily doses of 0.5 mg. Entecavir exposure among lamivudine-experienced subjects was similar to the exposure achieved in adults receiving once-daily doses of 1 mg.
Table 6: Pharmacokinetic Parameters in Pediatric Subjects
|
Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naivea |
Lamivudine-Experiencedb |
Cmax (ng/mL)(CV%) |
6.31(30) |
14.48(31) |
AUC(0-24) (ng•h/mL)(CV%) |
18.33(27) |
38.58(26) |
Cmin (ng/mL)(CV%) |
0.28(22) |
0.47(23) |
a Subjects received once-daily doses of 0.015 mg/kg up to a maximum of 0.5 mg. |
Renal impairment: The pharmacokinetics of entecavir following a single 1 mg dose were studied in subjects (without chronic hepatitis B virus infection) with selected degrees of renal impairment, including subjects whose renal impairment was managed by hemodialysis or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Results are shown in Table 7 [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Table 7: Pharmacokinetic Parameters in Subjects with Selected Degrees of Renal Function
|
Renal Function Group |
|||||
Baseline Creatinine Clearance (mL/min) |
Severe Managed with Hemodialysisa |
Severe Managed with CAPD |
||||
Unimpaired > 80 |
Mild > 50- ≤ 80 |
Moderate 30-50 |
Severe < 30 |
|||
Cmax (ng/mL) (CV%) |
8.1 (30.7) |
10.4 (37.2) |
10.5 (22.7) |
15.3 (33.8) |
15.4 (56.4) |
16.6 (29.7) |
AUC(0–T) (ng•h/mL) (CV) |
27.9 (25.6) |
51.5 (22.8) |
69.5 (22.7) |
145.7 (31.5) |
233.9 (28.4) |
221.8 (11.6) |
CLR (mL/min) (SD) |
383.2 (101.8) |
197.9 (78.1) |
135.6 (31.6) |
40.3 (10.1) |
NA |
NA |
CLT/F (mL/min) (SD) |
588.1 (153.7) |
309.2 (62.6) |
226.3 (60.1) |
100.6 (29.1) |
50.6 (16.5) |
35.7 (19.6) |
a Dosed immediately following hemodialysis. |
Following a single 1 mg dose of entecavir administered 2 hours before the hemodialysis session, hemodialysis removed approximately 13% of the entecavir dose over 4 hours. CAPD removed approximately 0.3% of the dose over 7 days [see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION].
Hepatic impairment: The pharmacokinetics of entecavir following a single 1 mg dose were studied in adult subjects (without chronic hepatitis B virus infection) with moderate or severe hepatic impairment (Child-Turcotte-Pugh Class B or C). The pharmacokinetics of entecavir were similar between hepatically impaired and healthy control subjects; therefore, no dosage adjustment of BARACLUDE is recommended for patients with hepatic impairment. The pharmacokinetics of entecavir have not been studied in pediatric subjects with hepatic impairment.
Post-liver transplant: Limited data are available on the safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE in liver transplant recipients. In a small pilot study of entecavir use in HBV-infected liver transplant recipients on a stable dose of cyclosporine A (n=5) or tacrolimus (n=4), entecavir exposure was approximately 2-fold the exposure in healthy subjects with normal renal function. Altered renal function contributed to the increase in entecavir exposure in these subjects. The potential for pharmacokinetic interactions between entecavir and cyclosporine A or tacrolimus was not formally evaluated [see Use in Specific Populations].
Drug InteractionsThe metabolism of entecavir was evaluated in in vitro and in vivo studies. Entecavir is not a substrate, inhibitor, or inducer of the cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system. At concentrations up to approximately 10,000-fold higher than those obtained in humans, entecavir inhibited none of the major human CYP450 enzymes 1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4, 2B6, and 2E1. At concentrations up to approximately 340-fold higher than those observed in humans, entecavir did not induce the human CYP450 enzymes 1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 3A4, 3A5, and 2B6. The pharmacokinetics of entecavir are unlikely to be affected by coadministration with agents that are either metabolized by, inhibit, or induce the CYP450 system. Likewise, the pharmacokinetics of known CYP substrates are unlikely to be affected by coadministration of entecavir.
The steady-state pharmacokinetics of entecavir and coadministered drug were not altered in interaction studies of entecavir with lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate [see DRUG INTERACTIONS].
MicrobiologyMechanism of ActionEntecavir, a guanosine nucleoside analogue with activity against HBV reverse transcriptase (rt), is efficiently phosphorylated to the active triphosphate form, which has an intracellular half-life of 15 hours. By competing with the natural substrate deoxyguanosine triphosphate, entecavir triphosphate functionally inhibits all three activities of the HBV reverse transcriptase: (1) base priming, (2) reverse transcription of the negative strand from the pregenomic messenger RNA, and (3) synthesis of the positive strand of HBV DNA. Entecavir triphosphate is a weak inhibitor of cellular DNA polymerases α, β, and δ and mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ with Ki values ranging from 18 to > 160 μM.
Antiviral ActivityEntecavir inhibited HBV DNA synthesis (50% reduction, EC50) at a concentration of 0.004 μM in human HepG2 cells transfected with wild-type HBV. The median EC50 value for entecavir against lamivudine-resistant HBV (rtL180M, rtM204V) was 0.026 μM (range 0.010–0.059 μM).
The coadministration of HIV nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) with BARACLUDE is unlikely to reduce the antiviral efficacy of BARACLUDE against HBV or of any of these agents against HIV. In HBV combination assays in cell culture, abacavir, didanosine, lamivudine, stavudine, tenofovir, or zidovudine were not antagonistic to the anti-HBV activity of entecavir over a wide range of concentrations. In HIV antiviral assays, entecavir was not antagonistic to the cell culture anti-HIV activity of these six NRTIs or emtricitabine at concentrations greater than 100 times the Cmax of entecavir using the 1 mg dose.
Antiviral Activity Against HIVA comprehensive analysis of the inhibitory activity of entecavir against a panel of laboratory and clinical HIV type 1 (HIV-1) isolates using a variety of cells and assay conditions yielded EC50 values ranging from 0.026 to > 10 μM; the lower EC50 values were observed when decreased levels of virus were used in the assay. In cell culture, entecavir selected for an M184I substitution in HIV reverse transcriptase at micromolar concentrations, confirming inhibitory pressure at high entecavir concentrations. HIV variants containing the M184V substitution showed loss of susceptibility to entecavir.
ResistanceIn Cell Culture
In cell-based assays, 8- to 30-fold reductions in entecavir phenotypic susceptibility were observed for lamivudine-resistant strains. Further reductions ( > 70-fold) in entecavir phenotypic susceptibility required the presence of amino acid substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M along with additional substitutions at residues rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250, or a combination of these substitutions with or without an rtI169 substitution in the HBV reverse transcriptase.
Clinical Studies
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects: Genotypic evaluations were performed on evaluable samples ( > 300 copies/mL serum HBV DNA) from 562 subjects who were treated with BARACLUDE for up to 96 weeks in nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve studies (AI463022, AI463027, and rollover study AI463901). By Week 96, evidence of emerging amino acid substitution rtS202G with rtM204V and rtL180M substitutions was detected in the HBV of 2 subjects (2/562= < 1%), and 1 of them experienced virologic rebound ( ≥ 1 log10 increase above nadir). In addition, emerging amino acid substitutions at rtM204I/V and rtL180M, rtL80I, or rtV173L, which conferred decreased phenotypic susceptibility to entecavir in the absence of rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 changes, were detected in the HBV of 3 subjects (3/562= < 1%) who experienced virologic rebound. For subjects who continued treatment beyond 48 weeks, 75% (202/269) had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL at end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
HBeAg-positive (n=243) and -negative (n=39) treatment-naïve subjects who failed to achieve the study-defined complete response by 96 weeks were offered continued entecavir treatment in a rollover study. Complete response for HBeAg-positive was < 0.7 MEq/mL (approximately 7 × 105copies/mL) serum HBV DNA and HBeAg loss and, for HBeAg-negative was < 0.7 MEq/mL HBV DNA and ALT normalization. Subjects received 1 mg entecavir once daily for up to an additional 144 weeks. Of these 282 subjects, 141 HBeAg-positive and 8 HBeAg-negative subjects entered the long-term follow-up rollover study and were evaluated for entecavir resistance. Of the 149 subjects entering the rollover study, 88% (131/149), 92% (137/149), and 92% (137/149) attained serum HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by Weeks 144, 192, and 240 (including end of dosing), respectively. No novel entecavir resistance-associated substitutions were identified in a comparison of the genotypes of evaluable isolates with their respective baseline isolates. The cumulative probability of developing rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 entecavir resistance-associated substitutions (in the presence of rtM204V and rtL180M substitutions) at Weeks 48, 96, 144, 192, and 240 was 0.2%, 0.5%, 1.2%, 1.2%, and 1.2%, respectively.
Lamivudine-refractory subjects: Genotypic evaluations were performed on evaluable samples from 190 subjects treated with BARACLUDE for up to 96 weeks in studies of lamivudine-refractory HBV (AI463026, AI463014, AI463015, and rollover study AI463901). By Week 96, resistance-associated amino acid substitutions at rtS202, rtT184, or rtM250, with or without rtI169 changes, in the presence of amino acid substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M, rtL80V, or rtV173L/M emerged in the HBV from 22 subjects (22/190=12%), 16 of whom experienced virologic rebound ( ≥ 1 log10 increase above nadir) and 4 of whom were never suppressed < 300 copies/mL. The HBV from 4 of these subjects had entecavir resistance substitutions at baseline and acquired further changes on entecavir treatment. In addition to the 22 subjects, 3 subjects experienced virologic rebound with the emergence of rtM204I/V and rtL180M, rtL80V, or rtV173L/M. For isolates from subjects who experienced virologic rebound with the emergence of resistance substitutions (n=19), the median fold-change in entecavir EC50 values from reference was 19-fold at baseline and 106-fold at the time of virologic rebound. For subjects who continued treatment beyond 48 weeks, 40% (31/77) had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL at end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
Lamivudine-refractory subjects (n=157) who failed to achieve the study-defined complete response by Week 96 were offered continued entecavir treatment. Subjects received 1 mg entecavir once daily for up to an additional 144 weeks. Of these subjects, 80 subjects entered the long-term follow-up study and were evaluated for entecavir resistance. By Weeks 144, 192, and 240 (including end of dosing), 34% (27/80), 35% (28/80), and 36% (29/80), respectively, attained HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL. The cumulative probability of developing rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 entecavir resistance-associated substitutions (in the presence of rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M substitutions) at Weeks 48, 96, 144, 192, and 240 was 6.2%, 15%, 36.3%, 46.6%, and 51.5%, respectively. The HBV of 6 subjects developed rtA181C/G/S/T amino acid substitutions while receiving entecavir, and of these, 4 developed entecavir resistance-associated substitutions at rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 and 1 had an rtT184S substitution at baseline. Of 7 subjects whose HBV had an rtA181 substitution at baseline, 2 also had substitutions at rtT184, rtS202, or rtM250 at baseline and another 2 developed them while on treatment with entecavir.
Cross-resistanceCross-resistance has been observed among HBV nucleoside analogue inhibitors. In cell-based assays, entecavir had 8- to 30-fold less inhibition of HBV DNA synthesis for HBV containing lamivudine and telbivudine resistance substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M than for wild-type HBV. Substitutions rtM204I/V with or without rtL180M, rtL80I/V, or rtV173L, which are associated with lamivudine and telbivudine resistance, also confer decreased phenotypic susceptibility to entecavir. The efficacy of entecavir against HBV harboring adefovir resistance-associated substitutions has not been established in clinical trials. HBV isolates from lamivudine-refractory subjects failing entecavir therapy were susceptible in cell culture to adefovir but remained resistant to lamivudine. Recombinant HBV genomes encoding adefovir resistance-associated substitutions at either rtN236T or rtA181V had 0.3- and 1.1-fold shifts in susceptibility to entecavir in cell culture, respectively.
Clinical StudiesOutcomes In AdultsAt 48 WeeksThe safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE in adults were evaluated in three Phase 3 active-controlled trials. These studies included 1633 subjects 16 years of age or older with chronic hepatitis B virus infection (serum HBsAg-positive for at least 6 months) accompanied by evidence of viral replication (detectable serum HBV DNA, as measured by the bDNA hybridization or PCR assay). Subjects had persistently elevated ALT levels at least 1.3 times ULN and chronic inflammation on liver biopsycompatible with a diagnosis of chronic viral hepatitis. The safety and efficacy of BARACLUDE were also evaluated in a study of 191 HBV-infected subjects with decompensated liver disease and in a study of 68 subjects co-infected with HBV and HIV.
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve Subjects with Compensated Liver DiseaseHBeAg-positive: Study AI463022 was a multinational, randomized, double-blind study of BARACLUDE 0.5 mg once daily versus lamivudine 100 mg once daily for a minimum of 52 weeks in 709 (of 715 randomized) nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects with chronic hepatitis B virus infection, compensated liver disease, and detectable HBeAg. The mean age of subjects was 35 years, 75% were male, 57% were Asian, 40% were Caucasian, and 13% had previously received interferon-α. At baseline, subjects had a mean Knodell Necroinflammatory Score of 7.8, mean serum HBV DNA as measured by Roche COBAS Amplicor® PCR assay was 9.66 log10 copies/mL, and mean serum ALT level was 143 U/L. Paired, adequate liver biopsy samples were available for 89% of subjects.
HBeAg-negative (anti-HBe-positive/HBV DNA-positive): Study AI463027 was a multinational, randomized, double-blind study of BARACLUDE 0.5 mg once daily versus lamivudine 100 mg once daily for a minimum of 52 weeks in 638 (of 648 randomized) nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve subjects with HBeAg-negative (HBeAb-positive) chronic hepatitis B virus infection and compensated liver disease. The mean age of subjects was 44 years, 76% were male, 39% were Asian, 58% were Caucasian, and 13% had previously received interferon-α. At baseline, subjects had a mean Knodell Necroinflammatory Score of 7.8, mean serum HBV DNA as measured by Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay was 7.58 log10 copies/mL, and mean serum ALT level was 142 U/L. Paired, adequate liver biopsy samples were available for 88% of subjects.
In Studies AI463022 and AI463027, BARACLUDE was superior to lamivudine on the primary efficacy endpoint of Histologic Improvement, defined as a 2-point or greater reduction in Knodell Necroinflammatory Score with no worsening in Knodell Fibrosis Score at Week 48, and on the secondary efficacy measures of reduction in viral load and ALT normalization. Histologic Improvement and change in Ishak Fibrosis Score are shown in Table 8. Selected virologic, biochemical, and serologic outcome measures are shown in Table 9.
Table 8: Histologic Improvement and Change in Ishak Fibrosis Score at Week 48, Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïve Subjects in Studies AI463022 and AI463027
|
Study AI463022 (HBeAg-Positive) |
Study AI463027 (HBeAg-Negative) |
||
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
|
Histologic Improvement (Knodell Scores) |
||||
Improvementb |
72% |
62% |
70% |
61% |
No improvement |
21% |
24% |
19% |
26% |
Ishak Fibrosis Score |
||||
Improvementc |
39% |
35% |
36% |
38% |
No change |
46% |
40% |
41% |
34% |
Worseningc |
8% |
10% |
12% |
15% |
Missing Week 48 biopsy |
7% |
14% |
10% |
13% |
aSubjects with evaluable baseline histology(baseline Knodell Necroinflammatory Score ≥ 2). |
Table 9: Selected Virologic, Biochemical, and Serologic Endpoints at Week 48, Nucleoside-Inhibitor-Naïve Subjects in Studies AI463022 and AI463027
|
Study AI463022 (HBeAg-Positive) |
Study AI463027 (HBeAg-Negative) |
||
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
BARACLUDE 0.5 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
|
HBV DNAa |
||||
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
67% |
36% |
90% |
72% |
Mean change from baseline (log10copies/mL) |
-6.86 |
-5.39 |
-5.04 |
-4.53 |
ALT normalization ( < 1 x ULN) |
68% |
60% |
78% |
71% |
HBeAg seroconversion |
21% |
18% |
NA |
NA |
a Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay [lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) = 300 copies/mL]. |
Histologic Improvement was independent of baseline levels of HBV DNA or ALT.
Lamivudine-refractory Subjects with Compensated Liver DiseaseStudy AI463026 was a multinational, randomized, double-blind study of BARACLUDE in 286 (of 293 randomized) subjects with lamivudine-refractory chronic hepatitis B virus infection and compensated liver disease. Subjects receiving lamivudine at study entry either switched to BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily (with neither a washout nor an overlap period) or continued on lamivudine 100 mg for a minimum of 52 weeks. The mean age of subjects was 39 years, 76% were male, 37% were Asian, 62% were Caucasian, and 52% had previously received interferon-α. The mean duration of prior lamivudine therapy was 2.7 years, and 85% had lamivudine resistance substitutions at baseline by an investigational line probe assay. At baseline, subjects had a mean Knodell Necroinflammatory Score of 6.5, mean serum HBV DNA as measured by Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay was 9.36 log10 copies/mL, and mean serum ALT level was 128 U/L. Paired, adequate liver biopsy samples were available for 87% of subjects.
BARACLUDE was superior to lamivudine on a primary endpoint of Histologic Improvement (using the Knodell Score at Week 48). These results and change in Ishak Fibrosis Score are shown in Table 10. Table 11 shows selected virologic, biochemical, and serologic endpoints.
Table 10: Histologic Improvement and Change in Ishak Fibrosis Score at Week 48, Lamivudine-Refractory Subjects in Study AI463026
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
Histologic Improvement (Knodell Scores) |
||
Improvementb |
55% |
28% |
No improvement |
34% |
57% |
Ishak Fibrosis Score |
||
Improvementc |
34% |
16% |
No change |
44% |
42% |
Worseningc |
11% |
26% |
Missing Week 48 biopsy |
11% |
16% |
a Subjects with evaluable baseline histology (baseline Knodell Necroinflammatory Score ≥ 2). |
Table 11: Selected Virologic, Biochemical, and Serologic Endpoints at Week 48, Lamivudine-Refractory Subjects in Study AI463026
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg |
Lamivudine 100 mg |
HBV DNAa |
||
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
19% |
1% |
Mean change from baseline (log10 copies/mL) |
-5.11 |
-0.48 |
ALT normalization ( ≤ 1 x ULN) |
61% |
15% |
HBeAg seroconversion |
8% |
3% |
a Roche COBAS Amplicor PCR assay (LLOQ = 300 copies/mL). |
Histologic Improvement was independent of baseline levels of HBV DNA or ALT.
Subjects with Decompensated Liver DiseaseStudy AI463048 was a randomized, open-label study of BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily versus adefovir dipivoxil 10 mg once daily in 191 (of 195 randomized) adult subjects with HBeAg-positive or -negative chronic HBV infection and evidence of hepatic decompensation, defined as a Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) score of 7 or higher. Subjects were either HBV-treatment-naïve or previously treated, predominantly with lamivudine or interferon-α.
In Study AI463048, 100 subjects were randomized to treatment with BARACLUDE and 91 subjects to treatment with adefovir dipivoxil. Two subjects randomized to treatment with adefovir dipivoxil actually received treatment with BARACLUDE for the duration of the study. The mean age of subjects was 52 years, 74% were male, 54% were Asian, 33% were Caucasian, and 5% were Black/African American. At baseline, subjects had a mean serum HBV DNA by PCR of 7.83 log10copies/mL and mean ALT level of 100 U/L; 54% of subjects were HBeAg-positive; 35% had genotypic evidence of lamivudine resistance. The baseline mean CTP score was 8.6. Results for selected study endpoints at Week 48 are shown in Table 12.
Table 12: Selected Endpoints at Week 48, Subjects with Decompensated Liver Disease, Study AI463048
|
BARACLUDE 1 mg |
Adefovir Dipivoxil 10 mg |
HBV DNAb |
||
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
57% |
20% |
Stable or improved CTP scorec |
61% |
67% |
HBsAg loss |
5% |
0 |
Normalization of ALT ( < 1 x ULN)d |
49/78 (63%) |
33/71 (46%) |
a Endpoints were analyzed using intention-to-treat (ITT) method, treated subjects as randomized. |
Study AI463038 was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of BARACLUDE versus placebo in 68 subjects co-infected with HIV and HBV who experienced recurrence of HBV viremiawhile receiving a lamivudine-containing highly active antiretroviral (HAART) regimen. Subjects continued their lamivudine-containing HAART regimen (lamivudine dose 300 mg/day) and were assigned to add either BARACLUDE 1 mg once daily (51 subjects) or placebo (17 subjects) for 24 weeks followed by an open-label phase for an additional 24 weeks where all subjects received BARACLUDE. At baseline, subjects had a mean serum HBV DNA level by PCR of 9.13 log10 copies/mL. Ninety-nine percent of subjects were HBeAg-positive at baseline, with a mean baseline ALT level of 71.5 U/L. Median HIV RNA level remained stable at approximately 2 log10 copies/mL through 24 weeks of blinded therapy. Virologic and biochemical endpoints at Week 24 are shown in Table 13. There are no data in patients with HIV/HBV co-infection who have not received prior lamivudine therapy. BARACLUDE has not been evaluated in HIV/HBV co-infected patients who were not simultaneously receiving effective HIV treatment [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS].
Table 13: Virologic and Biochemical Endpoints at Week 24, Study AI463038
|
BARACLUDE 1 mga |
Placeboa |
HBV DNAb |
||
Proportion undetectable ( < 300 copies/mL) |
6% |
0 |
Mean change from baseline (log10 copies/mL) |
-3.65 |
+0.11 |
ALT normalization ( < 1 x ULN) |
34%c |
8%c |
a All subjects also received a lamivudine-containing HAART regimen. |
For subjects originally assigned to BARACLUDE, at the end of the open-label phase (Week 48), 8% of subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR, the mean change from baseline HBV DNA by PCR was -4.20 log10 copies/mL, and 37% of subjects with abnormal ALT at baseline had ALT normalization ( ≤ 1 × ULN).
Beyond 48 WeeksThe optimal duration of therapy with BARACLUDE is unknown. According to protocol-mandated criteria in the Phase 3 clinical trials, subjects discontinued BARACLUDE or lamivudine treatment after 52 weeks according to a definition of response based on HBV virologic suppression ( < 0.7 MEq/mL by bDNA assay) and loss of HBeAg (in HBeAg-positive subjects) or ALT < 1.25 × ULN (in HBeAg-negative subjects) at Week 48. Subjects who achieved virologic suppression but did not have serologic response (HBeAg-positive) or did not achieve ALT < 1.25 × ULN (HBeAg-negative) continued blinded dosing through 96 weeks or until the response criteria were met. These protocol-specified subject management guidelines are not intended as guidance for clinical practice.
Nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve SubjectsAmong nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-positive subjects (Study AI463022), 243 (69%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 164 (46%) lamivudine-treated subjects continued blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. Of those continuing blinded treatment in Year 2, 180 (74%) BARACLUDE subjects and 60 (37%) lamivudine subjects achieved HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR at the end of dosing (up to 96 weeks). 193 (79%) BARACLUDE subjects achieved ALT ≤ 1 × ULN compared to 112 (68%) lamivudine subjects, and HBeAg seroconversion occurred in 26 (11%) BARACLUDE subjects and 20 (12%) lamivudine subjects.
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-positive subjects, 74 (21%) BARACLUDE subjects and 67 (19%) lamivudine subjects met the definition of response at Week 48, discontinued study drugs, and were followed off treatment for 24 weeks. Among BARACLUDE responders, 26 (35%) subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 55 (74%) subjects had ALT ≤ 1 × ULN, and 56 (76%) subjects sustained HBeAg seroconversion at the end of follow-up. Among lamivudine responders, 20 (30%) subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 41 (61%) subjects had ALT ≤ 1 × ULN, and 47 (70%) subjects sustained HBeAg seroconversion at the end of follow-up.
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-negative subjects (Study AI463027), 26 (8%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 28 (9%) lamivudine-treated subjects continued blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. In this small cohort continuing treatment in Year 2, 22 BARACLUDE and 16 lamivudine subjects had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR, and 7 and 6 subjects, respectively, had ALT ≤ 1 × ULN at the end of dosing (up to 96 weeks).
Among nucleoside-inhibitor-naïve, HBeAg-negative subjects, 275 (85%) BARACLUDE subjects and 245 (78%) lamivudine subjects met the definition of response at Week 48, discontinued study drugs, and were followed off treatment for 24 weeks. In this cohort, very few subjects in each treatment arm had HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL by PCR at the end of follow-up. At the end of follow-up, 126 (46%) BARACLUDE subjects and 84 (34%) lamivudine subjects had ALT ≤ 1 × ULN.
Lamivudine-refractory SubjectsAmong lamivudine-refractory subjects (Study AI463026), 77 (55%) BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 3 (2%) lamivudine subjects continued blinded treatment for up to 96 weeks. In this cohort of BARACLUDE subjects, 31 (40%) subjects achieved HBV DNA < 300 copies/mL, 62 (81%) subjects had ALT ≤ 1 × ULN, and 8 (10%) subjects demonstrated HBeAg seroconversion at the end of dosing.
Outcomes In Pediatric SubjectsThe pharmacokinetics, safety and antiviral activity of BARACLUDE in pediatric subjects were initially assessed in Study AI463028. Twenty-four treatment-naïve and 19 lamivudine-experienced HBeAg-positive pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years of age with compensated CHB and elevated ALT were treated with BARACLUDE 0.015 mg/kg (up to 0.5 mg) or 0.03 mg/kg (up to 1 mg) once daily. Fifty-eight percent (14/24) of treatment-naïve subjects and 47% (9/19) of lamivudine-experienced subjects achieved HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL at Week 48 and ALT normalized in 83% (20/24) of treatment-naïve and 95% (18/19) of lamivudine-experienced subjects.
Safety and antiviral efficacy were confirmed in Study AI463189, an ongoing study of BARACLUDE among 180 nucleoside-inhibitor-treatment-naïve pediatric subjects 2 to less than 18 years of age with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B infection, compensated liver disease, and elevated ALT. Subjects were randomized 2:1 to receive blinded treatment with BARACLUDE 0.015 mg/kg up to 0.5 mg/day (N=120) or placebo (N=60). The randomization was stratified by age group (2 to 6 years; > 6 to 12 years; and > 12 to < 18 years). Baseline demographics and HBV disease characteristics were comparable between the 2 treatment arms and across age cohorts. At study entry, the mean HBV DNA was 8.1 log10 IU/mL and mean ALT was 103 U/L. The primary efficacy endpoint was a composite of HBeAg seroconversion and serum HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL at Week 48.assessed in the first 123 subjects reaching 48 weeks of blinded treatment. Twenty-four percent (20/82) of subjects in the BARACLUDE-treated group and 2% (1/41) of subjects in the placebo-treated group met the primary endpoint. Forty-six percent (38/82) of BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 2% (1/41) of placebo-treated subjects achieved HBV DNA < 50 IU/mL at Week 48. ALT normalization occurred in 67% (55/82) of BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 22% (9/41) of placebo-treated subjects; 24% (20/82) of BARACLUDE-treated subjects and 12% (5/41) of placebo-treated subjects had HBeAg seroconversion.
Medication Guide
PATIENT INFORMATION
BARACLUDE®
(BEAR ah klude)
(entecavir) Tablets
BARACLUDE®
(BEAR ah klude)
(entecavir) Oral Solution
Read this Patient Information before you start taking BARACLUDE and each time you get a refill. There may be new information. This information does not take the place of talking with your healthcare provider about your medical condition or treatment.
What is the most important information I should know about BARACLUDE?
1. Your hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection may get worse if you stop taking BARACLUDE. This usually happens within 6 months after stopping BARACLUDE.
· Take BARACLUDE exactly as prescribed.
· Do not run out of BARACLUDE.
· Do not stop BARACLUDE without talking to your healthcare provider.
· Your healthcare provider should monitor your health and do regular blood tests to check your liver if you stop taking BARACLUDE.
2. If you have or get HIV that is not being treated with medicines while taking BARACLUDE, the HIV virus may develop resistance to certain HIV medicines and become harder to treat. You should get an HIV test before you start taking BARACLUDE and anytime after that when there is a chance you were exposed to HIV.
BARACLUDE can cause serious side effects including:
3. Lactic acidosis (buildup of acid in the blood). Some people who have taken BARACLUDE or medicines like BARACLUDE (a nucleoside analogue) have developed a serious condition called lactic acidosis. Lactic acidosis is a serious medical emergency that can cause death. Lactic acidosismust be treated in the hospital. Reports of lactic acidosis with 38
BARACLUDE generally involved patients who were seriously ill due to their liver disease or other medical condition.
Call your healthcare provider right away if you get any of the following signs or symptoms of lactic acidosis:
· You feel very weak or tired.
· You have unusual (not normal) muscle pain.
· You have trouble breathing.
· You have stomach pain with nausea and vomiting.
· You feel cold, especially in your arms and legs.
· You feel dizzy or light-headed.
· You have a fast or irregular heartbeat.
4. Serious liver problems. Some people who have taken medicines like BARACLUDE have developed serious liver problems called hepatotoxicity, with liver enlargement (hepatomegaly) and fat in the liver (steatosis). Hepatomegaly with steatosis is a serious medical emergency that can cause death.
Call your healthcare provider right away if you get any of the following signs or symptoms of liver problems:
· Your skin or the white part of your eyes turns yellow (jaundice).
· Your urine turns dark.
· Your bowel movements (stools) turn light in color.
· You don't feel like eating food for several days or longer.
· You feel sick to your stomach (nausea).
· You have lower stomach pain.
You may be more likely to get lactic acidosis or serious liver problems if you are female, very overweight, or have been taking nucleoside analogue medicines, like BARACLUDE, for a long time.
What is BARACLUDE?
BARACLUDE is a prescription medicine used to treat chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) in adults and children 2 years of age and older who have active liver disease.
· BARACLUDE will not cure HBV.
· BARACLUDE may lower the amount of HBV in the body.
· BARACLUDE may lower the ability of HBV to multiply and infect new liver cells.
· BARACLUDE may improve the condition of your liver.
· It is not known whether BARACLUDE will reduce your chances of getting liver cancer or liver damage (cirrhosis), which may be caused by chronic HBV infection.
· It is not known if BARACLUDE is safe and effective for use in children less than 2 years of age.
What should I tell my healthcare provider before taking BARACLUDE?
Before you take BARACLUDE, tell your healthcare provider if you:
· have kidney problems. Your BARACLUDE dose or schedule may need to be changed.
· have received medicine for HBV before. Some people, especially those who have already been treated with certain other medicines for HBV infection, may develop resistance to BARACLUDE. These people may have less benefit from treatment with BARACLUDE and may have worsening of hepatitis after resistant virus appears. Your healthcare provider will test the level of the hepatitis B virus in your blood regularly.
· have any other medical conditions.
· are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. It is not known if BARACLUDE will harm your unborn baby. Talk to your healthcare provider if you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant.
Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry. If you take BARACLUDE while you are pregnant, talk to your healthcare provider about how you can take part in the BARACLUDE AntiretroviralPregnancy Registry. The purpose of the pregnancy registry is to collect information about the health of you and your baby.
· are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. It is not known if BARACLUDE can pass into your breast milk. You and your healthcare provider should decide if you will take BARACLUDE or breastfeed.
Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Especially tell your healthcare provider if you have taken a medicine to treat HBV in the past.
Know the medicines you take. Keep a list of your medicines with you to show your healthcare provider and pharmacist when you get a new medicine.
How should I take BARACLUDE?
· Take BARACLUDE exactly as your healthcare provider tells you to.
· Your healthcare provider will tell you how much BARACLUDE to take.
· Your healthcare provider will tell you when and how often to take BARACLUDE.
· Take BARACLUDE on an empty stomach, at least 2 hours after a meal and at least 2 hours before the next meal.
· If you are taking BARACLUDE Oral Solution, or giving it to your child, carefully measure the dose with the dosing spoon provided, as follows:
o Hold the dosing spoon in an upright (vertical) position and slowly fill it to the measurement line on the dosing spoon that is the same as the prescribed dose. Bring the dosing spoon to eye level to be sure that the level of the BARACLUDE Oral Solution is at the correct measurement line (see Figure 1).
Figure 1
|
With the dosing spoon at eye level, holding it with the measurement lines facing you, check that it has been filled to the correct measurement line. The top of the BARACLUDE Oral Solution in the dosing spoon will look curved, not flat. Measure the dose of BARACLUDE Oral Solution at the bottom of the curve. Your dose of BARACLUDE Oral Solution is measured correctly when the bottom of the curve is lined up with the measurement line of the prescribed dose. As an example, Figure 2 shows the right way to measure a 5 mL dose of BARACLUDE (see Figure 2).
Figure 2
|
o BARACLUDE Oral Solution should be swallowed directly from the dosing spoon.
o BARACLUDE Oral Solution should not be mixed with water or any other liquid.
o After each use, rinse the dosing spoon with water and allow it to air dry.
o If you lose the dosing spoon, call your pharmacist or healthcare provider for instructions.
· Do not change your dose or stop taking BARACLUDE without talking to your healthcare provider.
· If you miss a dose of BARACLUDE, take it as soon as you remember and then take your next dose at its regular time. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the missed dose. Do not take two doses at the same time. Call your healthcare provider or pharmacist if you are not sure what to do.
· When your supply of BARACLUDE starts to run low, call your healthcare provider or pharmacy for a refill. Do not run out of BARACLUDE.
· If you take too much BARACLUDE, call your healthcare provider or go to the nearest emergency room right away.
What are the possible side effects of BARACLUDE?
BARACLUDE may cause serious side effects. See “What is the most important information I should know about BARACLUDE?”
The most common side effects of BARACLUDE include:
· headache
· tiredness
· dizziness
· nausea
Tell your healthcare provider if you have any side effect that bothers you or that does not go away.
These are not all the possible side effects of BARACLUDE. For more information, ask your healthcare provider or pharmacist.
Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088.
How should I store BARACLUDE?
· Store BARACLUDE Tablets or Oral Solution at room temperature, between 68°F and 77°F (20°C and 25°C).
· Keep BARACLUDE Tablets in a tightly closed container.
· Store BARACLUDE Tablets or BARACLUDE Oral Solution in the original carton, and keep the carton out of the light.
· Safely throw away BARACLUDE that is out of date or no longer needed. Dispose of unused medicines through community take-back disposal programs when available or place BARACLUDE in an unrecognizable closed container in the household trash.
Keep BARACLUDE and all medicines out of the reach of children.
General information about the safe and effective use of BARACLUDE
BARACLUDE does not stop you from spreading the hepatitis B virus (HBV) to others by sex, sharing needles, or being exposed to your blood. Talk with your healthcare provider about safe sexual practices that protect your partner. Never share needles. Do not share personal items that can have blood or body fluids on them, like toothbrushes or razor blades. A shot (vaccine) is available to protect people at risk from becoming infected with HBV.
Medicines are sometimes prescribed for purposes other than those listed in a Patient Information leaflet. Do not use BARACLUDE for a condition for which it was not prescribed. Do not give BARACLUDE to other people, even if they have the same symptoms you have. It may harm them.
This Patient Information leaflet summarizes the most important information about BARACLUDE. If you would like more information, talk with your healthcare provider. You can ask your healthcare provider or pharmacist for information about BARACLUDE that is written for health professionals.
For more information, go to www.Baraclude.com or call 1-800-321-1335.
What are the ingredients in BARACLUDE?
Active ingredient: entecavir
Inactive ingredients in BARACLUDE Tablets: lactose monohydrate, microcrystalline cellulose, crospovidone, povidone, magnesium stearate.
Tablet film-coat: titanium dioxide, hypromellose, polyethylene glycol 400, polysorbate 80 (0.5 mg tablet only), and iron oxide red (1 mg tablet only).
Inactive ingredients in BARACLUDE Oral Solution: maltitol, sodium citrate, citric acid, methylparaben, propylparaben, and orange flavor.