Medine.co.uk

Viraferonpeg

o

EUROPEAN MEDICINES AGENCY

SCIENCE MEDICINES HEALTH

EMA/177459/2012

EMEA/H/C/000329

EPAR summary for the public

ViraferonPeg

peginterferon alfa-2b

This document is a summary of the European Public Assessment Report (EPAR) for ViraferonPeg. It explains how the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) assessed the medicine to reach its opinion in favour of granting a marketing authorisation and its recommendations on the conditions of use for ViraferonPeg.

What is ViraferonPeg?

ViraferonPeg is a medicine that contains the active substance peginterferon alfa-2b. It is available as a powder and solvent that are made up into a solution for injection, and as a single-use prefilled pen. These contain 50, 80, 100, 120 or 150 micrograms of peginterferon alfa-2b in 0.5 ml.

What is ViraferonPeg used for?

ViraferonPeg is used to treat long-term hepatitis C (a disease of the liver due to infection with the hepatitis C virus) in patients aged three years and older.

In adults (aged 18 years and older), ViraferonPeg can be used in patients who have not been treated before or whose previous treatment failed. ViraferonPeg can be given in a triple therapy combination with ribavirin and boceprevir to adults with type 1 hepatitis C whose liver is damaged but still able to work normally (compensated liver disease). In other adults with hepatitis C virus in their blood, including patients also infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), ViraferonPeg is given either with ribavirin (dual therapy) or on its own if they cannot take ribavirin.

Dual therapy with ribavirin is also used in previously untreated children and adolescents (aged between three and 17 years) as long as their liver is still working normally.

The medicine can only be obtained with a prescription.

An agency of the European Union


7 Westferry Circus • Canary Wharf • London E14 4HB • United Kingdom Telephone +44 (0)20 7418 8400 Facsimile +44 (0)20 7418 8416 E-mail info@ema.europa.eu Website www.ema.europa.eu

© European Medicines Agency, 2012. Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged.

How is ViraferonPeg used?

Treatment with ViraferonPeg should be started and supervised by a doctor who has experience in the management of patients with hepatitis C. ViraferonPeg is given once a week as an injection under the skin. In adults, it is used in combination treatments at a dose of 1.5 micrograms per kilogram body weight, or on its own at 0.5 or 1.0 micrograms/kg. In children and adolescents, the dose is 60 micrograms per square metre body surface area (calculated using the patient's height and weight). The duration of treatment depends on the patient's condition and response to treatment, and ranges from six months to a year. The doses of ribavirin and ViraferonPeg may need to be adjusted for patients who experience side effects. Depending on the severity of the side effects treatment may have to be stopped altogether (including boceprevir). Patients can inject themselves once they have been trained appropriately. For more information, see the package leaflet.

How does ViraferonPeg work?

The active substance in ViraferonPeg, peginterferon alfa-2b, belongs to the group 'interferons'. Interferons are natural substances produced by the body to help it fight against attacks such as infections caused by viruses. The exact way that they work in viral diseases is not fully understood, but it is thought that they act as immunomodulators (substances that modify how the immune system works). They may also block the multiplication of viruses.

Peginterferon alfa-2b is similar to interferon alfa-2b, which has been available in the European Union (EU) for a number of years. In ViraferonPeg, the interferon alfa-2b has been 'pegylated' (attached to a chemical called polyethylene glycol). This decreases the rate at which the substance is removed from the body and allows the medicine to be given less often. The interferon alfa-2b in ViraferonPeg is produced by a method known as 'recombinant DNA technology': it is made by a bacterium that has received a gene (DNA), which makes it able to produce interferon alfa-2b. The replacement acts in the same way as naturally produced interferon alpha.

How has ViraferonPeg been studied?

ViraferonPeg, with or without ribavirin, has been compared with interferon alfa-2b in five main studies involving a total of over 6,000 adults with hepatitis C who had not been treated before, including 328 patients with cirrhosis and 507 patients also infected with HIV. The combination of ViraferonPeg and ribavirin has also been studied in one study involving 1,354 adults whose previous treatment had failed and in one study involving 107 children and adolescents aged between three and 17 years who had not been treated before. The main measure of effectiveness was the level of hepatitis C virus circulating in the blood before and after six months or a year of treatment, and at 'follow-up', six months later.

Some studies also looked at signs of improvement of the condition of the liver.

Two main studies involving 1,503 adult patients with type 1 hepatitis C and compensated liver disease investigated the effect of ViraferonPeg in a triple therapy combination with ribavirin and boceprevir compared with ViraferonPeg and ribavirin alone. The first study involved previously untreated patients while the second study involved patients who had failed previous treatment. The main measure of effectiveness in these studies was the number of patients who had no detectable hepatitis C virus in their blood 24 weeks after the end of the treatment and could therefore be considered to be cured.

What benefit has ViraferonPeg shown during the studies?

In adults, ViraferonPeg was more effective than interferon alfa-2b in patients who had not been treated before, with around a quarter of the patients responding to ViraferonPeg alone and around a half responding to the combination of ViraferonPeg and ribavirin. The combination of ViraferonPeg with

ribavirin was effective in patients with cirrhosis and in patients infected with HIV. Around a quarter of the adults whose previous treatment had failed and around two-thirds of the children and adolescents responded to treatment with ViraferonPeg and ribavirin.

In the studies on triple therapy in patients with type 1 hepatitis C and compensated liver disease, ViraferonPeg in combination with ribavirin and boceprevir was shown to be more effective than the dual combination of ViraferonPeg with ribavirin alone. Triple therapy led to an increase of about 30% in the number of previously early responders who were cured after six months. A 40% increase was seen among patients who had been treated before.

What is the risk associated with ViraferonPeg?

In adults, the most common side effects with ViraferonPeg (seen in more than 1 patient in 10) are viral infection, pharyngitis (sore throat), anaemia (low red blood cell counts), neutropenia (low levels of neutrophils, a type of white blood cell), loss of appetite, depression, anxiety, emotional lability (mood swings), impaired concentration, insomnia (difficulty sleeping), headache, dizziness, dyspnoea (difficulty breathing), cough, vomiting, nausea (feeling sick), abdominal pain (stomach ache), diarrhoea, dry mouth, alopecia (hair loss), pruritus (itching), dry skin, rash, myalgia (muscle pain), arthralgia (joint pain), musculoskeletal pain (pain in the muscles and bones), reactions at the site of the injection, inflammation at the site of the injection, fatigue (tiredness), asthenia (weakness), irritability, chills, pyrexia (fever), influenza (flu)-like illness and weight loss. In children and adolescents receiving ViraferonPeg in combination with ribavirin, side effects were similar to adults, although reduced growth was also seen in more than 1 patient in 10. For the full list of all side effects reported with ViraferonPeg, see the package leaflet.

ViraferonPeg must not be used in people who are hypersensitive (allergic) to any interferon or any of the other ingredients. ViraferonPeg must not be used in patients with a severe medical condition, severe liver problems, thyroid disease that is not controlled, epilepsy or other central nervous system problems. It must not be used in patients who have had severe heart disease or an auto-immune disease (a disease caused by the body's own defence system attacking normal tissue), or in children or adolescents who have had severe mental disorders, particularly severe depression, thoughts about committing suicide or suicide attempts. For a full list of restrictions, see the package leaflet.

Because ViraferonPeg is linked to side effects such as depression, patients must be closely monitored during treatment. ViraferonPeg is also linked to weight loss and reduced growth in children and adolescents. Doctors should take this risk into account when deciding whether to treat a patient before adulthood.

Why has ViraferonPeg been approved?

The CHMP decided that ViraferonPeg's benefits are greater than its risks and recommended that it be given marketing authorisation.

The Committee noted that the dual combination with ribavirin was shown to be effective against longterm hepatitis C virus infection in adults and children. There is also a marked increase in cure rates in patients with long-term type 1 hepatitis C when given the triple therapy of PegIntron in combination with ribavirin and boceprevir.

Other information about ViraferonPeg:

The European Commission granted a marketing authorisation valid throughout the EU for ViraferonPeg on 29 May 2000.

ViraferonPeg

The full EPAR for ViraferonPeg can be found on the Agency's website: ema.europa.eu/Find medicine/Human medicines/European public assessment reports. For more information about treatment with ViraferonPeg, read the package leaflet (also part of the EPAR) or contact your doctor or pharmacist.

This summary was last updated in 03-2012.

ViraferonPeg

EMA/177459/2012

Page 4/4