Hepatitis C Awareness

Getting informed

Hepatitis C drugs offer hope for cure

By Erin Allday

Scientific breakthroughs, one piled on top of another at breakneck speed over the past few years, have put medical researchers on the cusp of curing almost everyone who suffers from hepatitis C, if not wiping out the disease entirely.

With 180 million people in the world thought to be infected with the virus – 12,000 of them in San Francisco alone – that’s potentially a huge public health coup, doctors and scientists say.

In a little more than a decade, a virus that was once almost untreatable could be made nearly extinct.

“It is just a remarkable moment in the history of hepatitis C,” said Dr. Warner Greene, director of the virology and immunology division at the Gladstone Institute in San Francisco. “I think hepatitis C and its sequela – liver cancer, cirrhosis, liver transplants – can largely be gone in the future. We just won’t have to worry about it.”

In the past year, new treatments have come out that already have doubled the number of people who can be cured of hepatitis C. Now the race is on among drug developers to market the first medical cocktails that would cure almost everyone on the planet, and do it safer and faster than the best treatments currently available.

New treatments – both those already available and those expected to be approved in the next five or so years – were a large part of the reason the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended this summer that all Baby Boomers get screened for hepatitis C.

That generation is thought to have the largest number of undiagnosed cases of the disease, with so many of them potentially exposed to the virus in the wild, drug-friendly hippie years of the ’60s and ’70s. Until recently it wasn’t practical to screen millions of people for possible cases of hepatitis C because few good treatments were available.
Hepatitis C’s spread

Hepatitis C is a virus transmitted through the blood, similar to HIV. It’s often spread through shared needles used by intravenous drug abusers. Decades ago, and even still in some developing parts of the world, people were exposed to hepatitis C through unsterilized equipment used for tattoos or surgical procedures. Also, the U.S. blood supply wasn’t screened for hepatitis C until the early 1990s, so people sometimes became infected from a blood transfusion or organ transplant.

In roughly 20 percent of hepatitis C cases, the body’s immune system fights off the virus without any medical intervention and probably without the individual ever being aware of having it. The remaining cases develop into chronic hepatitis C.

In some of those cases, the virus may lie dormant for decades, or even a lifetime, but in about 1 in 5 chronic cases, the virus will attack the liver, scarring it and causing cirrhosis, and potentially leading to liver cancer and liver failure. The infection causes about 10,000 deaths a year in the United States, and it’s the leading reason for liver transplants. Hepatitis C is especially prevalent in people who also have HIV infections; in fact, HIV-positive patients are more likely to die of hepatitis-caused liver disease than of AIDS or HIV.
Antiviral drugs

It’s only in the past seven years or so that doctors and scientists discovered the first antiviral drugs that can stop the virus, giving the body’s natural immune system a chance to fight it off. The cure rate with those drugs is 75 to 80 percent, but they require that patients also take interferon, a toxic medication that can cause disabling side effects for a year.

In the next five years, researchers expect to develop even more potent antiviral medications – drugs that will cure more than 90 percent of patients, and do it in half the time and without the interferon.

“There’s no question that with these new treatments, cure is going to be the rule and not the exception,” said Dr. Brad Hare, medical director of the HIV/AIDS ward at San Francisco General Hospital, who studies HIV and hepatitis C co-infections. “It’s more important than ever to identify people with hepatitis C, because we have something even better to offer them.”

That said, Hare added, it’s unlikely that the virus will ever be eradicated. There will always remain a pocket of people who don’t respond to drug therapy or aren’t able to take it for some reason. Those who have been cured can be reinfected.

And getting new medications to the tens of millions of people affected by hepatitis C won’t be easy, especially because the drugs will almost definitely be expensive.
Strains on the system

Just screening the millions of Baby Boomers in the United States, and getting those who test positive for hepatitis C into treatment, could be an overwhelming strain on the health care system, public health experts say. Drugs in development could ease some of that burden if they’re easier to take and more effective than the current treatments.

Hepatitis C was discovered in the late 1980s, although scientists had known for years that a virus existed that was causing inflammation in the liver and that wasn’t the hepatitis A or B viruses.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first treatment for hepatitis C – the chemotherapy drug interferon – in 1991, and added a second drug, ribavirin, in 1998. Those two medications were considered a breakthrough therapy for a virus that had previously been untreatable, but the treatment itself was rough and not all that effective.

The ribavirin comes in pill form, but the interferon has to be given intravenously three times a week for 48 weeks. Both drugs, especially the interferon, often come with awful side effects – major depression and, sometimes, suicidal thoughts, plus fatigue, nausea and flu-like symptoms.

And the worst of it is that the treatments lead to a cure only roughly half the time – less than half for patients with the most common strain of hepatitis C.

“A lot of us didn’t have bad symptoms before we went on treatment,” said Daniel Berrner, a San Francisco resident who was diagnosed with both HIV and hepatitis C in 2005, and underwent successful treatment for the latter in 2009. “People maybe feel some fatigue, but that’s it. So to convince them to feel awful for a year when they’re not feeling that bad to begin with is a really hard thing to do.”

Because treatment was, for many people, tougher to endure than the virus itself, many doctors over the years have “triaged” patients by performing liver biopsies or blood tests to determine if hepatitis C was causing severe enough damage to treat even at the risk of failure. If patients weren’t experiencing acute symptoms and their livers seemed relatively healthy, they’d often postpone treatment.
More seek treatment

Whether to get treatment for hepatitis C is still a personal decision and best made after a thoughtful conversation with a primary care doctor or a liver expert, doctors said. But increasingly patients are being encouraged to get treatment, even if their infection isn’t particularly virulent.

“I still try to triage based on the risk of end-stage liver disease. But now more patients are willing to be treated,” said Dr. Natalie Bzowej, a liver disease specialist at California Pacific Medical Center.

Bzowej helped lead national research into one of the first antiviral treatments that targeted hepatitis C, a protease inhibitor called telaprevir made by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which was approved by the FDA in June 2011. A similar drug, boceprevir from Merck, also won FDA approval last year.

Remarkable success

In clinical trials, about 80 percent of patients with the most common strain of hepatitis C who took one of those drugs, plus the usual interferon and ribavirin combination, were cured. That was a remarkable improvement over the previous 40 to 50 percent cure rate.

Also encouraging: Most of the patients who were cured were able to stop taking the medications after just 24 weeks, cutting the treatment time in half.

The reason for the difference is that the new drugs single out the hepatitis C virus specifically, whereas the interferon and the ribavirin essentially just give a boost to the body’s natural immune system. For many people, the immune system is not strong or fast enough on its own to fight off the virus.

Protease inhibitors are best known as a class of drugs used to treat HIV infection. They work by attacking specific enzymes, or proteases, in a virus that are a key part of the replication process. By inhibiting those enzymes, the virus is unable to reproduce and eventually dies off.

Now, scientists are looking for the next line of drugs to attack other points of the hepatitis life cycle. The pharmaceutical industry is racing toward clinical trials – companies battling to be the first to get new drugs, especially those that would make interferon obsolete, to the market.
Multidrug attack

Doctors and scientists alike expect the first of the new wave of drugs to be available in four or five years. Part of the reason not everyone can be cured of hepatitis C is that, like many viruses, it mutates so quickly and becomes immune to drugs. So ideally, doctors will have at their disposal several drugs – maybe dozens – that will attack the virus on several fronts at once.

If those drugs are strong and fast enough, they could cure patients without the need for interferon. Protease inhibitors and other antiviral drugs aren’t without side effects, but the symptoms are much less severe than those from interferon, and the newest classes of drugs may work in as little as 12 weeks, or about half the time it takes telaprevir, the protease inhibitor, to do the job.

“I feel like we are glimpsing the beginning of the end for hepatitis C,” said Dr. Cami Graham, vice president of global medical affairs at Vertex. “We really are beginning to see what that path to eradication is going to look like.”
Long incubation period

Both drug developers and doctors alike said they are advising patients not to raise their hopes too high. Almost all of the clinical trials are in their earliest stages, and for the Baby Boomers especially, patients with decades-old infections may not have even a few years to wait for new treatments.

“What we have now is better than anything we’ve had in a long time,” said Dr. Joanna Ready, chief of gastroenterology at Kaiser Santa Clara. “What will be even better is interferon-free therapies, and the early studies have been very, very, very promising. But the disease has such a long incubation period and damages the liver over decades, so we really need to be following people over time.

Still, Ready said, she’s hopeful.

“If we don’t wipe out hepatitis C entirely, we can probably make it go away like polio, where you haven’t gotten rid of it but you’ve really beaten it down,” she said. “The science behind these treatments is improving every day. And the more we know, the better we are at treating it.”

Erin Allday is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E-mail: eallday@sfchronicle.com

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Recording Hepatitis C: A Patient’s Treatment Journal

Recording Hepatitis C: A Patient’s Treatment Journal

Copyright © 2012 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Ana Johnson of San Marcos, Texas, underwent treatment for hepatitis C last year. She believes she contracted the disease after receiving a blood transfusion during a C-section. Johnson lived with the diagnosis for 17 years before seeking treatment. She says her mind changed because her treatment options changed.

ANA JOHNSON: At that time, Melissa, the treatment for what I have is called a 1B. And 1A and 1B are the most prevalent in the United States and they are what’s called hard to treat, hard to cure. So I would’ve had to have gone into a treatment that was 48 weeks long with about a 30 percent chance of a cure. And to me, that was not an option and I just kept holding out for something better to come along.

BLOCK: And ultimately, something did.

JOHNSON: Ultimately, it did and it came out last year. And for us hard to treat, 1A, 1Bs, there is a treatment now that is an 80 percent cure rate.

BLOCK: And you’re done with your treatment and doctors have told you you are cured, right?

JOHNSON: I am 20 – I am past my 24-week post treatment mark and at that point, you are pretty much considered cured. And I came back with that, what they call, undetectable and that was one of the greatest days of my life.

BLOCK: When you decided to go forward with the treatment for hepatitis C, Ana, was that a hard decision to make? What changed your mind?

JOHNSON: Well, we have a unique situation in our household. My husband’s first wife, Mary, she as well had hepatitis C and Mary was diagnosed with cancer, liver cancer, which is one of the side effects, cirrhosis, liver cancer, and those are one of the things that we have to be tested for on a yearly basis. And Mary died from complications two years ago. And that was something I watched very closely with his three children.

And right about that same time, the new triple therapy came out and with a shorter treatment option. It used to be 48 weeks. My treatment was 29 weeks and the cure rate went from 30 percent to 80 percent. And I was in.

BLOCK: The treatment regimen, as we heard in Jon Hamilton’s piece, is quite grueling, can be really taxing on the body. Describe what it was like for you. What was your experience?

JOHNSON: Well, grueling is a really good way to put that. The side effects are flu-like symptoms. And when they say flu-like symptoms, they mean flu-like symptoms. I had fever for about six months of my treatment, which was managed with ibuprofen. The treatment causes a lot of anemia, so the fatigue, the weight loss, the mouth sores, the weakness. Let’s just say that, Melissa, I’m very athletic and in celebration of finishing my treatment, I did a 75-mile ride with my husband the other day.

And during treatment, I could not walk to the mailbox.

BLOCK: But you were convinced as you were going through this treatment that there was a positive outcome in store for you and that it was worth it.

JOHNSON: I believe, based on what I watched with Mary, the disease is either going to take your life or you’re going to beat it. So those are your options.

BLOCK: Ana, I was watching a bunch of video blogs that you posted on YouTube during the course of your treatment. What compelled you to do that? Who were you speaking to as you described what you were going through, what the effects were?

JOHNSON: Melissa, that video blog began because prior to going into treatment, I just had this need to look into the eyes of somebody who was ahead of me, somebody who had endured and the only thing I could find online was very, very scary stuff. And I decided to do a video blog based on the truth. And the support in the community that came out of that is absolutely mind-blowing.

I actually had a handful of people contact me and tell me that I am the only one they’ve ever shared that they have hepatitis C because there is such a stigma that surrounds the virus, the disease.

BLOCK: Walk me through just sort of what that stigma is.

JOHNSON: The stigma is that there is this idea that you had to be an IV drug user, Melissa. And I’m going to give you a story about one of the gastroenterologists that I was considering using for treatment and he asked me a few things, if I’d had an early tattoo and I had received blood.

And when I gave him the example of receiving blood when I had given birth to my child, he sat there with me and began to almost play with me in this way. He was like, no IV drug use? And I said, no, I was not an IV drug user. And he said, come on, maybe just one wild night at some point.

And that’s when my husband stepped in because the look on my face was – I had nothing to say. And he stepped in and said, I believe we’re here for a cure. So even the doctor was trying to convince me to admit to him that that I was an IV drug user.

(LAUGHTER)

JOHNSON: And I believe if you were, that’s OK. It’s OK. It’s just now we have a cure, get well. You can be well.

BLOCK: Ana Johnson, thank you for talking with us.

JOHNSON: You bet.

BLOCK: Ana Johnson of San Marcos, Texas, she went underwent successful treatment for hepatitis C last year.

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Hepatitis C Global Initiatives

To: Supporters for The Cure for Hepatitis C — Why We Started Our Petition

APRIL 2012 – Bristol-Myers Squibb and Gilead Sciences tell the world they have the CURE for Hepatitis C. According to the results released at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL), this CURE was obtained by combining daclatasvir and GS-7977. Results showed this drug-combination CURED 100% of genotype 1, and 91% of genotype 2/3… WITHOUT ribavirin OR interferon!

Shortly thereafter, Gilead Sciences announces there will be NO further collaboration with Bristol-Myers Squibb to make this CURE available to the millions who are suffering and dying with hepatitis C. Gilead Sciences gave some very lame reasons for NOT continuing this collaboration, such as, they were waiting to see if the people in the trials were still clear of HCV more than four weeks after end of treatment. Now the results SIX MONTHS after end of treatment (SVR24) have been released and all the people in the trials who were CURED remain free and clear of this virus!

Perhaps the lamest excuse offered by Gilead Sciences was their need to justify the $11 billion spent buying Pharmasset for the rights to GS-7977. Their plan seems to be to try and put GS-7977 with Ribavirin and/or interferon. We DON’T WANT ribavirin OR interferon. Those two drugs have destroyed the lives of many people with their wretched and debilitating side effects. Just read the “reasons for signing” here on this petition to see how interferon and/or ribavirin has destroyed people’s lives forever.

Gilead’s other plan seems to be trials of their unproven GS-5885 with GS-7977, in hopes it can prove to be as effective as daclatasvir was when combined with GS-7977. WHY??? Why delay and keep “looking for the cure”, when you have already FOUND IT!

Gilead Sciences please listen! Right now only 3% of us treat because we do not want to risk what little quality of life we have by subjecting ourselves to the long, brutal treatment with interferon or ribavirin. Gilead Sciences if you will make the life-saving combination of GS-7977 and daclatasvir available to us now, as much as 85 to 95% of us are likely to treat! You will make your $11 billion back in no time, thereby making your investors/shareholders happy beyond their wildest dreams. AND you will be giving MILLIONS of people with Hepatitis C and their families, the chance for a life and a future WITHOUT Hepatitis C.

Gilead Sciences: We want the CURE for Hepatitis C and you HOLD the KEY! Please, we beg you, OPEN the DOOR. And open it NOW.

Over 170 million people have hepatitis C.

Left untreated, it can progress to cirrhosis and/or liver cancer.

Hepatitis C is now the leading cause for liver transplant

Hepatitis C now kills more people than AIDS. It kills over 350,000 people a year.

To the people out there who have this disease or have a loved one with hepatitis C, let Gilead Sciences KNOW we and our families are desperate for this CURE! You do that by continuing to ask everyone you know to sign this petition, put it on Facebook, Twitter, email, etc. Call your congressmen, senators, public media, ANYONE you can think of. Surely, if we are LOUD ENOUGH, Gilead Sciences will SOON HEAR US.

We grow larger everyday…we have people across the world now helping us. We cannot STOP….we will NOT STOP! Our very lives depend on it. So we URGE each and every one of you to continue until we have The Cure.

Warmest regards,

Margaret Dudley
HCV Sufferer & Advocate for The Cure
Texas HCV Coalition for The Cure

P.S. At least 80 people died from HCV in the time it took to compose and send this letter. http://www.change.org/petitions/gilead-sciences-please-collaborate-with-bristol-myers-for-the-cure-for-hepatitis-c-now?utm_source=supporter_message&utm_medium=email

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Scientists Develop Nanoparticle Which Completely Destroys Hepatitis C

Scientists Develop Nanoparticle Which Completely Destroys Hepatitis C
by Jamie Condliffe
Jul 19, 2012 8:40 AM
Gizmodo

Scientists Develop Nanoparticle Which Completely Destroys Hepatitis CHepatitis C now kills more Americans than HIV and, while there’s increasing progress towards finding a reliable vaccine, results can’t come soon enough. Now, researchers have developed a nanoparticle that effectively eradicates hepatitis C 100 percent of the time.

Researchers from the University of Florida have developed what they call a “nanozyme”. Based around gold nanoparticles, these things have their surface coated with two biological agents. One is an enzyme that attacks and kills the mRNA which allows hep C to replicate, while the other is a short string of DNA which identities the disease and sends the enzyme off to kill it.

While current hep C treatments attack the same replication process, they only work on about 50 percent of patients treated. In lab-based tests, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the Univeristy of Florida researchers showed that their approach was 100 percent effective in both cell cultures and mice. They observed no side effects in the mouse models, either.

While it’s great news, such a treatment is some way off becoming available to patients any time soon. All targeted drugs have to be extremely carefully tested, as there’s always a risk that they could also end up targeting healthy parts of the body by accident. Given the current problems posed by hepatitis C, though, that testing can’t happen soon enough. [PNAS via IEEE Spectrum]

Image by Andres Rueda under Creative Commons license

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Liver disease on the rise | Mark Menzies MP

Liver disease on the rise | Mark Menzies MP.

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Hepatitis C in baby boomers on the rise

Hepatitis C in baby boomers on the rise
Article By: Lisa Lagace- Mar 15, 2012

March is Liver Disease Awareness month — and there’s no better time to get yourself checked for hepatitis C, experts say.

The recent increase in deaths among baby boomers in the United States has created an emphasis in Canada on diagnosing and treating the disease. In fact, doctors are recommending that boomers get tested for it at least once.

Why the sudden increase of cases? Boomers grew up in the 60s experimental drug culture before the disease was on anyone’s radar, experts say. Which means that many who experimented with drugs just once or twice could have been infected without knowing it.

Hepatitis C is most commonly contracted through infected needles. But many boomers, and Canadians in general, may have contracted hepatitis C from blood transfusions prior to the 1990s, when donated blood wasn’t tested for the disease.

If left untreated, it can lead to inflammation of the liver, organ scarring, cirrhosis of the liver and even liver cancer.

Symptoms often don’t occur until there is liver failure (which occurs 20 to 30 years after originally contracting hepatitis C). Many boomers are just coming to realize they have the disease, which accounts for the recent increase in diagnosis.

Toronto Western Hospital’s Dr. David Wong, director of the liver clinic, told the CBC, “They’re now trying to say if you’re born between 1945 and 1965 — that is a baby boomer — you actually have a reasonable chance of having hepatitis C in North America. All of those people should routinely get hep C testing at least once.”

The death count is on the rise, surpassing the number of deaths from HIV. In the US, 15,000 deaths were caused by hepatitis C, while 13,000 were caused by HIV.

The American Center for Disease Control and Prevention notes that three per cent of baby boomers are infected, and most are unaware that the disease is causing damage.

One of these boomers is Shane Carr of Muskoka, who believes he contracted the disease 26 years ago after a doctor in Mexico gave him an injection using a dirty needle. He had always been healthy, and only found out he had contracted it last year after his insurance company required a blood test.

“My liver was basically scarred completely and I was in very grave condition,” he told CBC.

Carr is being treated by Wong with an expensive new drug called telaprevir that has a cure rate of about 70 per cent. The side effects include anemia, skin rashes, and gastrointestinal problems, but they are much cheaper and easier to acquire than a liver transplant for those in advanced stages of the disease. About 30 per cent of people who need a transplant die while waiting for a liver. Wong notes that better drugs will likely be available in the next two to three years.

In Ontario, hepatitis C is the leading cause of premature death from infectious disease. Nearly a quarter of a million Canadians have contracted it.

Sources: Health Canada, CBC
Photo ©iStockphoto.com/Christopher O Driscoll

READ MORE
Liver disease: What you need to know [1]
Do you have all you need for winter travel? [2]
Excess weight and liver disease [3]
The wonders of coconut [4]

Copyright 2012 All Rights Reserved – ZoomerMedia Limited.

Article printed from 50Plus.com: http://www.50plus.com

URL to article: http://www.50plus.com/health/hepatitis-c-in-baby-boomers-on-the-rise/159673/

URLs in this post:

[1] Liver disease: What you need to know: http://www.50plus.com/health/fight-liver-disease/1544/

[2] Do you have all you need for winter travel?: http://www.50plus.com/travel/do-you-have-all-you-need-for-winter-travel/1263/

[3] Excess weight and liver disease: http://www.50plus.com/health/excess-weight-and-liver-disease/27364/

[4] The wonders of coconut: http://www.50plus.com/health/the-wonders-of-coconut/128101/

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Social Security and HCV

This may come as a surprise, but I have been involved with SS for almost 2 years. After I lost my Job, I went on Long Term Disability. (LTD) The company I worked for had a good health plan so I took advantage of it and was able to use the LTD around the time of the lay off. Once it started though, and things were moving forward, the insurance company wanted me to file for SS insurance. I saw no reason for this, however this is a procedure that they do to remove themselves from the financial burden that this creates. The insurance company referred me to an attorney’s office and I filed for SS. That procedure lasted 2 years. File, denied. File, denied. And it goes on and on.

Then just this past December I was informed by my attorneys office that I had been assigned an attorney and that my case is going to a hearing to make a final decision. So to make a long story tolerable, the hearing lasted all of a half hour. It took all most 90 days to get an answer. And when I did it was denied again. According to the judge I was not credible. This is a joke for all of us. Social Security does not have a defined description of Hep C. Nor does it address the effects of the disease or treatment side effects.

I hope I can reach people with this. We need to write to folks that can make a difference. Doctors, Attorneys, Congress men and women. They all need to be brought up to speed on what we face on a daily basis. Make a move and take a stand.

Good Luck and be strong.

Rich

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