Now that the HBV world has gathered extensive clinical experience with
interferons and polymerase inhibitors (NUCs) and with the resolve to finally find a
cure for a serious disease afflicting hundreds of millions worldwide, the
hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) has become recognized as the key determinant for treatment
outcome. This is being confirmed by trial after trial investigating combining the actions of both NUCs and interferons,
either one after the other or together at once.
Some of these studies were presented at the International
Liver Congress last week in Vienna (ILC2015). Emerging from them are actionable HBsAg rules which
can predict fairly well whether a patient will eventually seroconvert to (or at least
lose) HBsAg. No matter the excitement around CRISPR technologies, HBsAg seroconversion remains the gold standard outcome in HBV treatment in the foreseeable future.
These rules can be divided into pre- and post-IFN treatment onset.
In the pre-IFN setting, it is
those patients that have below ~500 IU/ml serum
HBsAg as a result of NUC treatment that will most likely respond to interferon
treatment/immune stimulation with s-antigen seroconversion (see earlier blog entry). Since NUCs alone hardly do anything to
promote s-antigen seroconversion despite its dramatic lowering of viral HBV
titers, it appears to be their slow impact on HBsAg levels ( 0.1 log per year HBsAg reduction) that has the synergistic effect with interferon: with HBsAg
lowering you take off the foot on the immune brake, with interferon you step on
the immmune gas pedal.
As such, HBsAg knockdown by RNA(i) Therapeutics would seem
to do the same for interferons as NUCs do, only in a more rapid and potent
manner. Of course, both could be used
concurrently as a run-in to IFN treatment.
However, once on IFNs (post-IFN onset),
it is the relative HBsAg decline that has high
positive predictive value in prognosticating who will seroconvert. Of note, the HBsAg decline comes before any adaptive immunity can be
detected. This supports that HBsAg decline in itself contributes to seroconversion
rather than it being a mere correlation.
In that setting, it is a 1 log decline
in HBsAg the first few weeks after IFN treatment onset that separates the winners
from the losers.
It is uncertain to me, however, whether 1 log is a precondition to s-antigen seroconversion as the non-responders do not
even come close to that (maybe 0.3log).
It is therefore possible that anything that pushes HBsAg below say -0.3-0.5log
could have a dramatic effect on s-antigen seroconversion rates.
An RNAi Therapeutic for HBV used simultaneously with IFNs may
therefore aim at helping IFNs to get to the
0.5-1log reduction threshold, and rapidly at that.
Ergo, there are now a number of obvious strategies that one
can apply regarding the use of RNAi Therapeutics in HBV with various knockdown goals,
both absolute and relative. The exact strategy would depend on how the RNA
agent is combined with polymerase inhibition/NUCs or immune
stimulation.
While a number of other HBV targets were reported at the
conference such as core assembly and entry inhibitors, HBsAg (and HBV mRNA
knockdown in general) lowering remains the most distinguished and the mechanism predicted to be most synergistic to existing treatment approaches. As combination treatment is strongly
predicted to be the future of HBV, HBsAg lowering should become a pillar of
those treatment regimes.
Disclosure: long
ARWR, looking for lower entry in TKMR.