| Literature DB >> 22851970 |
Cristina Simona Strahotin1, Michael Babich.
Abstract
Hepatitis C (HCV), a leading cause of chronic liver disease, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma, is the most common indication for liver transplantation in the United States. Although annual incidence of infection has declined since the 1980s, aging of the currently infected population is expected to result in an increase in HCV burden. HCV is prone to develop resistance to antiviral drugs, and despite considerable efforts to understand the virus for effective treatments, our knowledge remains incomplete. This paper reviews HCV resistance mechanisms, the traditional treatment with and the new standard of care for hepatitis C treatment. Although these new treatments remain PEG-IFN-α- and ribavirin-based, they add one of the newly FDA approved direct antiviral agents, telaprevir or boceprevir. This new "triple therapy" has resulted in greater viral cure rates, although treatment failure remains a possibility. The future may belong to nucleoside/nucleotide analogues, non-nucleoside RNA-dependent RNA polymerase inhibitors, or cyclophilin inhibitors, and the treatment of HCV may ultimately parallel that of HIV. However, research should focus not only on effective treatments, but also on the development of a HCV vaccine, as this may prove to be the most cost-effective method of eradicating this disease.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22851970 PMCID: PMC3407602 DOI: 10.1155/2012/267483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Virol ISSN: 1687-8639
Mutations conferring resistance to telaprevir.
| HCV resistant variant | Patients without resistant variants at followup |
|---|---|
| T54A | 94% |
| A156S | 88% |
| V55A | 86% |
| V36M | 75% |
| R155K | 68% |
| T54S | 68% |
Role of IL-28B in HCV treatment.
| IL-28B SNP | PR (IDEAL) | Telaprevir (advance) | Boceprevir (SPRINT-2) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITT population | Adherent population | TVR/PR | PR control | BOC/PR∗ | PR control | |
| CC | 69% | 79% | 90% | 64% | 80–82% | 78% |
| CT | 33% | 38% | 71% | 25% | 65–71% | 28% |
| TT | 27% | 26% | 73% | 23% | 55–59% | 27% |
∗Includes BOC/RGT and BOC/PR48 arms [61, 69, 80, 81].