| Literature DB >> 26624849 |
Martin Lagging1, Rune Wejstål1,2, Gunnar Norkrans1, Olle Karlström3, Soo Aleman4, Ola Weiland4, Maria Castedal5, Filip Josephson3.
Abstract
In a recent expert meeting, Swedish recommendations for the treatment of HCV infection were updated. An interferon-free combination of direct-acting antiviral agents was recommended as the first line standard-of-care treatment for chronic HCV infection. Interferon-based therapy should be considered as a second line option after an individual benefit-risk assessment. Treatment is strongly recommended for HCV infected patients with bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis (Metavir stages F3-4), before and after liver transplantation, and in the presence of extra-hepatic manifestations. Additionally, patients with moderate liver fibrosis (stage F2) as well as women in need of in vitro fertilisation should be prioritised for therapeutic intervention. Treatment indications for people who inject drugs, children, chronic kidney disease and HIV co-infection are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: DAA, people who inject drugs; HCV; HIV co-infection; Hepatitis C virus; children; chronic kidney disease; direct-acting antiviral agents; guidelines
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26624849 PMCID: PMC4732459 DOI: 10.3109/23744235.2015.1113438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis (Lond) ISSN: 2374-4243
Grading of recommendations regarding the strength and underlying evidence; adapted from the GRADE system used by EASL.
| Evidence quality | Definition | |
|---|---|---|
| High | Further research is very unlikely to change the confidence in the estimate of effect | A |
| Moderate | Further research is likely to have an important impact on the confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate | B |
| Low | Further research is very likely to have an important impact on the confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate | C |
| Any change of estimate is uncertain | ||
| Strong | Factors influencing the strength of the recommendation included the quality of the evidence, presumed patient-important outcomes and cost | 1 |
| Weak | Variability in preferences and values or more uncertainty. Recommendation is made with less certainty, higher cost or resource consumption | 2 |
Direct-acting antiviral pharmaceuticals against HCV infection approved for use in interferon-free therapy within the EU.
| Substance class | Generic substance | Brand name | Genotype specificity | Barrier to resistence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NS5B polymerase inhibitor (nucleotide analogue) | Sofosbuvir | Sovaldi | High activity against genotype 1–6 | Very high |
| Harvoni | ||||
| NS5B polymerase inhibitor (non-nucleotide analogue) | Dasabuvir | Exviera | Relevant activity only for genotype 1 | Low |
| NS3/4A protease inhibitor | Simeprevir | Olysio | High activity against genotype 1 and 4 No activity against genotype 3 | Low |
| NS3/4A protease inhibitor | Paritaprevir | Viekirax | High activity against genotype 1 and 4 | Low |
| NS5A inhibitor | Daclatasvir | Daklinza | High activity against genotype 1 and 4 Clinical relevant activity also against other genotypes | Low |
| NS5A inhibitor | Ledipasvir | Harvoni | High activity against genotype 1 and 4 Clinical relevant activity also against genotypes 3–6 | Low |
| NS5A inhibitor | Ombitasvir | Viekirax | High activity against genotype 1 and 4 | Low |
Suggested starting dose of ribavirin for patients weighing 70 kg with renal insufficiency adjusted according to creatinine clearance.
| Creatinine clearance (ml/min) | Starting dose of ribavirin (mg/dag) |
|---|---|
| 80 | 800 |
| 60 | 600 |
| 40 | 400 |
| 20 | 400 three-times per week |