| Literature DB >> 18036096 |
Abstract
Patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and disease-related complications - among them cirrhosis and liver failure - pose a particular management challenge. Some of these patients may fail to respond to current therapy (non-responders), and some are affected so severely that treatment puts them at an unacceptable risk for complications. Treatment with pegylated interferon (peg-IFN) plus ribavirin improves hepatic enzyme levels and eradicates the virus in approximately 50% of patients; however, a significant number of patients do not respond to therapy or relapse following treatment discontinuation. Several viral, hepatic and patient-related factors influence response to IFN therapy; many of these factors cannot be modified to improve long-term outcomes. Identifying risk factors and measuring viral load early in the treatment can help to predict response to IFN therapy and determine the need to modify or discontinue treatment. Retreatment options for patients who have failed therapy are limited. Retreatment with peg-IFN has been successful in some patients who exhibit an inadequate response to conventional IFN treatment, particularly those who have relapsed. Consensus IFN, another option in treatment-resistant patients, has demonstrated efficacy in the retreatment of non-responders and relapsers. Although the optimal duration of retreatment and the benefits and safety of maintenance therapy have not been determined, an extended duration is likely needed. This article reviews the risk factors for HCV treatment resistance and discusses the assessment and management of difficult-to-treat patients.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18036096 PMCID: PMC2779464 DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2007.01613.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Liver Int ISSN: 1478-3223 Impact factor: 5.828
Fig. 1Natural history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. [Reprinted from Postgraduate Medical Journal, Lo Ro viiiet al. ‘Management of Chronic hepatitis C’ 2005; 81: 378; with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd (4).]
Treatment outcomes in hepatitis C management (5, 8)
| Treatment outcome | Definition |
|---|---|
| Non-response | <2-log decline in baseline HCV RNA levels after 12 weeks of therapy |
| Partial response | ≥2-log decline in serum HCV RNA occurs, but the virus is detectable after 24 weeks of treatment |
| Sustained virological response | HCV RNA remains undetectable in the serum 6 months after therapy is discontinued |
| Relapse | Reappearance of HCV RNA following treatment withdrawal |
HCV, hepatitis C virus.
Adverse effects of interferon and ribavirin
| Interferon |
| Common (≥10%) |
| Mild bone marrow suppression (anaemia, leucopaenia, thrombocytopaenia) |
| Depression |
| Insomnia |
| Fatigue and irritability |
| Weight loss/anorexia |
| Fever, myalgia, headaches, and flu-like symptoms |
| Injection-site irritation |
| Nausea/vomiting and diarrhoea |
| Occasional (2–9%) |
| Retinopathy (usually not clinically significant) |
| Exacerbation of autoimmune condition (e.g. hepatitis, thyroiditis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis) |
| Congestive heart failure and arrhythmias |
| Rare (≤1%) |
| Severe bone marrow depression |
| Seizures |
| Tinnitus and hearing loss |
| Hyperglycaemia |
| Renal failure |
| Pneumonitis |
| Ribavirin |
| Common (≥10%) |
| Haemolytic anaemia (dose dependent) |
| Fatigue |
| Rash and pruritis |
| Nasal stuffiness |
| Cough |
‘Hepatitis C: a review for primary care physicians’. Adapted from CMAJ; 174: 649–659 by permission from the publisher. © Canadian Medical Association (107).
Sustained response to consensus interferon/ribavirin vs. interferon-α-2b/ribavirin by hepatitis C virus genotype, ethnicity, gender and body weight
| Consensus interferon/ribavirin ( | interferon-α-2b/ribavirin ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| All genotypes | |||
| <800 000 IU/mL | 12/21 (57%) | 14/26 (54%) | 0.82 |
| ≥800 000 IU/mL | 24/42 (57%) | 12/39 (31%) | 0.017 |
| Genotype 1 | |||
| <800 000 IU/mL | 5/13 (38%) | 9/20 (45%) | 0.70 |
| ≥800 000 IU/mL | 13/28 (46%) | 4/28 (14%) | 0.0089 |
| Genotype-non 1 | |||
| <800 000 IU/mL | 7/8 (88%) | 5/6 (83%) | 0.82 |
| ≥800 000 IU/mL | 11/14 (79%) | 8/11 (73%) | 0.70 |
| Race | |||
| White | 28/42 (67%) | 16/40 (40%) | 0.015 |
| Non-white | 8/21 (38%) | 10/25 (40%) | 0.89 |
| Sex | |||
| Men | 19/43 (44%) | 17/44 (39%) | 0.59 |
| Women | 17/20 (85%) | 9/21 (43%) | 0.005 |
| Weight | |||
| <75 kg | 15/19 (79%) | 10/20 (50%) | 0.059 |
| ≥75 kg | 21/44 (48%) | 16/45 (36%) | 0.24 |
[Adapted with permission of Springer Heidelberg from Digestive Diseases & Sciences;50: 227–232. © 2005 (108).]
Statistically significant.
Fig. 2Sustained virological response per baseline viral and patient characteristics. [Reprinted from Journal of Hepatology, Cornberg M et al.‘Treatment with daily consensus interferon (CIFN) plus ribavirin in non-responder patients with chronic hepatitis C: a randomized open-label pilot study.’ 2006; 44: 296. With permission from the European Association for the Study of the Liver (110).]
Positive and negative values, clinical sensitivity and specificity of viral load, and log-decline predictors of sustained and non-sustained virological response*
| Negative predictive value | Positive predictive value | Clinical specificity | Clinical sensitivity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week | Prediction rules | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | ||
| 4 | 100 000 IU/mL | 96.6 (88.3–99.6) | 57/59 | 55.5 (49.2–61.7) | 142/256 | 33.3 (26.3–40.9) | 98.6 (95.1–99.8) |
| 1-log decline | 94.0 (86.7–98.0) | 79/84 | 60.2 (53.5–66.5) | 139/231 | 46.2 (38.6–54.0) | 96.5 (92.1–98.9) | |
| 8 | 10 000 IU/mL | 98.7 (92.8–100.0) | 74/75 | 66.5 (59.6–73.0) | 135/203 | 52.1 (43.6–60.6) | 99.3 (96.0–100) |
| 2-log decline or <1000 IU/mL | 97.5 (91.2–99.7) | 77/79 | 67.3 (60.3–73.8) | 134/199 | 54.2 (45.7–62.6) | 98.5 (94.8–99.8) | |
| 12 | 10 000 IU/mL | 97.1 (90.1–99.7) | 68/70 | 59.1 (52.6–65.3) | 143/242 | 40.7 (33.2–48.6) | 98.6 (95.1–99.8) |
| 2-log decline or <1000 IU/mL | 97.4 (90.9–99.7) | 75/77 | 60.9 (54.3–67.1) | 143/235 | 44.9 (37.2–52.8) | 98.6 (95.1–99.8) | |
[Adapted with permission of Blackwell Publishing Ltd from Journal of Viral Hepatitis. 2005; 12: 465–472. © 2005.]
All patients included.
Percentage of patients with actual non-sustained virological response of those who were predicted to have non-sustained virological response (i.e. HCV RNA positive at 6 months post-therapy).
Percentage of patients with actual sustained virological response of those who were predicted to have sustained virological response (i.e., HCV RNA negative at 6 months post-therapy).
Percentage of patients correctly predicted by the test as having non-sustained virological response.
Percentage of patients correctly predicted to have a sustained virological response of all patients having sustained virological response.
None of the log decline rules at week 4 attained a negative predictive value of >95%. The 1-log decline had the highest negative predictive value.
CI, confidence interval.
Fig. 3Percentage of sustained responders who showed first viral response by week. [Reprinted with permission of John Wiley & Sons Inc., Hepatology, 1998; 28, 1411–1415. © 1998 American Association for the study of Liver Diseases.]