| Literature DB >> 27471521 |
Mark Hull1, Stephen Shafran2, Alex Wong3, Alice Tseng4, Pierre Giguère5, Lisa Barrett6, Shariq Haider7, Brian Conway8, Marina Klein9, Curtis Cooper10.
Abstract
Background. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) coinfection occurs in 20-30% of Canadians living with HIV and is responsible for a heavy burden of morbidity and mortality. Purpose. To update national standards for management of HCV-HIV coinfected adults in the Canadian context with evolving evidence for and accessibility of effective and tolerable DAA therapies. The document addresses patient workup and treatment preparation, antiviral recommendations overall and in specific populations, and drug-drug interactions. Methods. A standing working group with HIV-HCV expertise was convened by The Canadian Institute of Health Research HIV Trials Network to review recently published HCV antiviral data and update Canadian HIV-HCV Coinfection Guidelines. Results. The gap in sustained virologic response between HCV monoinfection and HIV-HCV coinfection has been eliminated with newer HCV antiviral regimens. All coinfected individuals should be assessed for interferon-free, Direct Acting Antiviral HCV therapy. Regimens vary in content, duration, and success based largely on genotype. Reimbursement restrictions forcing the use of pegylated interferon is not acceptable if optimal patient care is to be provided. Discussion. Recommendations may not supersede individual clinical judgement. Treatment advances published since December 2015 are not considered in this document.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27471521 PMCID: PMC4947683 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4385643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol ISSN: 1712-9532 Impact factor: 2.471
Grading system for recommendations.
| Classification description | |
|---|---|
| Class of evidence | |
| Class 1 | Conditions for which there is evidence and/or general agreement that a given diagnostic evaluation procedure or treatment is beneficial, useful, and effective |
| Class 2 | Conditions for which there is conflicting evidence and/or a divergence of opinion about the usefulness/efficacy of a diagnostic evaluation, procedure, or treatment |
| Class 2a | Weight of evidence/opinion is in favour of usefulness/efficacy |
| Class 2b | Usefulness/efficacy is less well established by evidence/opinion |
| Class 3 | Conditions for which there is evidence and/or general agreement that a diagnostic evaluation and procedure/treatment is not useful/effective and in some cases may be harmful |
|
| |
| Grade of evidence | |
| Level A | Data derived from multiple randomized clinical trials or meta-analyses |
| Level B | Data derived from a single randomized trial or nonrandomized studies |
| Level C | Only consensus opinions of experts, case studies, or standard-of-care |
Adapted from [7].
Baseline assessment of coinfected patients.
| Test | Comment | |
|---|---|---|
| Viral hepatitis screens | HCV antibody | |
| Quantitative HCV RNA | ||
| HCV genotype | ||
| Hepatitis B surface antigen | Chronic HBV infection | |
| Hepatitis B surface antibody | Immunity to HBV | |
| Hepatitis B core antibody | ||
| Hepatitis A IgG | If negative, indicates need for HAV vaccine | |
|
| ||
| Liver-related | Complete blood count | Thrombocytopenia may indicate advanced liver disease |
| ALT, AST | ||
| ALP, GGT | ||
| Albumin, INR, and total bilirubin | Abnormalities suggest advanced liver disease | |
| Ultrasound | ||
| Fibroscan | ||
|
| ||
| Screens for other chronic conditions of liver disease | Alpha-1-antitrypsin | Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency |
| Antinuclear antibody, anti-smooth muscle antibody | Autoimmune hepatitis | |
| Anti-mitochondrial antibody | Primary biliary cholangitis | |
| Ceruloplasmin | Wilson's disease | |
| Iron saturation | Hemochromatosis | |
| Lipid Profile | Fatty liver disease | |
| TSH | Autoimmune thyroiditis | |
| Immunoglobulins A, G, and M | Autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cholangitis, and alcoholic liver disease | |
Criteria for interpretation of transient elastography in HIV-HCV coinfected patients [115, 116].
| Score (kilo Pascals, kPa) | Metavir equivalent | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| ≤7.2 | F0/1 | Mild fibrosis |
| 7.2–9.5 | F2 | Moderate fibrosis |
| 9.5–12.5 | F3 | Advanced fibrosis |
| >12.5 | F4 | Severe fibrosis/cirrhosis |
Drug-drug interactions between antiretroviral agents and directly acting antivirals for hepatitis C.
| Usual doses | 90 mg/400 mg daily | 150/100/25 mg daily + 250 mg BID with food | 150 mg daily and 400 mg daily with food | 60 mg daily plus 400 mg daily |
|
| ||||
| Nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors | ||||
| Abacavir/lamivudine | 18% ↑ AUC, 10%, ↑ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction expected.§ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected.§ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected.§ |
| Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF)/emtricitabine | TDF exposures are increased (AUC 40–98%, | No clinically significant changes. No dose adjustment required (Holkira Pak PM)§ | No clinically significant changes in pharmacokinetics of TDF, simeprevir, or sofosbuvir noted. No dose adjustment is required (Galexos PM, Harvoni PM).§ | No clinically significant changes in pharmacokinetics of TDF, daclatasvir, or sofosbuvir noted. No dose adjustment is required (Galexos PM, Harvoni PM).§ |
|
| ||||
| Integrase strand transfer inhibitors | ||||
| Dolutegravir | TDF exposures were 65–115% higher when ledipasvir/sofosbuvir was coadministered with dolutegravir plus TDF DF/emtricitabine. Ledipasvir/sofosbuvir may be coadministered with dolutegravir. If TDF DF/emtricitabine is included as an NRTI backbone, appropriate monitoring for TDF-associated toxicities is recommended [ | Dolutegravir exposures increased 22–38% while paritaprevir | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected.§ | No clinically significant changes in pharmacokinetics of dolutegravir or daclatasvir noted. No dose adjustment is required [ |
| Elvitegravir/cobicistat | Increased TDF exposures anticipated with coadministration; appropriate monitoring for TDF-associated toxicities is recommended [ | Coadministration has not been studied but cobicistat is expected to increase paritaprevir and ritonavir concentrations (Holkira Pak PM). Coadministration |
| Potential for increased daclatasvir exposures due to CYP3A4 inhibition by cobicistat. Reduce daclatasvir dose to 30 mg once daily when coadministering with cobicistat-based regimens (Daklinza PM).§ |
| Raltegravir | No clinically significant changes noted with coadministration. No dose adjustment required (Harvoni PM).§ | No clinically significant changes noted with coadministration. No dose adjustment required (Holkira Pak PM).§ | No clinically significant changes noted with coadministration. No dose adjustment is required [ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected (Daklinza PM).§ |
|
| ||||
| Nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors | ||||
| Efavirenz | In combination with TDF/FTC, no clinically significant changes in sofosbuvir or efavirenz pharmacokinetics were noted, while tenofovir AUC ↑ 98% and | Coadministration of efavirenz based regimens with paritaprevir, ritonavir plus dasabuvir is | 91% ↓ | Daclatasvir exposures are decreased with coadministration. Increase daclatasvir to 90 mg once daily with efavirenz (Daklinza PM).‡ |
| Etravirine | Coadministration has not been studied.‡ |
|
| Coadministration has not been studied. Potential for decreased daclatasvir concentrations; |
| Rilpivirine | In combination with TDF/FTC, no clinically significant changes in sofosbuvir or rilpivirine pharmacokinetics were noted, while tenofovir AUC ↑ 40% and | 3.25-fold ↑ AUC, 2.55-fold ↑ | No clinically significant changes noted with coadministration. No dose adjustment required [ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction expected (Daklinza PM).§ |
|
| ||||
| Protease inhibitors | ||||
| Atazanavir/ritonavir | 75% ↑ | Atazanavir should be taken without additional ritonavir with the 3D regimen (Holkira Pak PM).‡ |
| Reduce dose of daclatasvir to 30 mg once daily when coadministering with atazanavir/ritonavir (Daklinza PM).‡ |
| Atazanavir/cobicistat | Combination is not studied. In combination with elvitegravir/cobicistat, cobicistat exposure is increased. Clinical significance is unknown but likely not clinically relevant [ | Atazanavir plus cobicistat is |
| Reduce dose of daclatasvir to 30 mg once daily when coadministering with cobicistat (Daklinza PM).‡ |
| Darunavir/ritonavir | No changes in darunavir pharmacokinetic parameters; 39% ↑ AUC, 45% ↑ | 24% ↓ AUC, 8% ↓ | 2.59-fold ↑ AUC, 1.79-fold ↑ | Daclatasvir AUC increased 41%, |
| Darunavir/cobicistat | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction expected. In combination with elvitegravir/cobicistat, cobicistat exposure is increased. Clinical significance is unknown but likely not clinically relevant [ | Darunavir plus cobicistat is |
| Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected.§ |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir | Coadministration has not been studied. Significant drug interaction not anticipated.§ |
|
| No clinically significant changes noted with coadministration. No dose adjustment required [ |
|
| ||||
| CCR5 antagonist | ||||
| Maraviroc | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction expected.§ | Coadministration has not been studied but maraviroc exposure is expected to be increased by ritonavir. Reduce maraviroc to 150 mg BID or 300 mg daily.‡ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected (Galexos PM).§ | Coadministration has not been studied but no clinically significant drug interaction is expected (Daklinza PM).§ |
Key: †avoid combination; ‡caution/dose adjustment; §acceptable combination OK.
AUC: area under the curve; C min: concentration minimum; C max: peak concentration; C trough: trough concentration; BID: twice a day; NNRTI: nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; PI: protease inhibitor; PM: product monogram.
Summary of antiretroviral regimen recommendations for patients who require concomitant HIV and hepatitis C treatment.
| Recommended | Alternative | Not recommended | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sofosbuvir 400 mg/ledipasvir 90 mg once daily | No restrictions with first or second line ART regimens | In patients with preexisting renal dysfunction or significant risk factors for nephrotoxicity: may wish to avoid tenofovir-containing regimens due to potential for ↑ tenofovir concentrations | |
|
| |||
| Paritaprevir 150 mg/ritonavir 100 mg/ombitasvir 25 mg once daily + dasabuvir 250 mg BID with food | Atazanavir (without additional ritonavir), raltegravir, and Dolutegravir | Darunavir (without additional ritonavir) | Ritonavir- or cobicistat-boosted regimens; efavirenz, etravirine, and rilpivirine |
|
| |||
| Simeprevir | Dolutegravir, raltegravir, or rilpivirine-based regimens | Ritonavir- or cobicistat-boosted regimens; efavirenz, etravirine, and nevirapine | |
|
| |||
| Daclatasvir 60 mg daily plus sofosbuvir 400 mg daily | Atazanavir (requires decrease in daclatasvir dose to 30 mg daily), darunavir, dolutegravir, raltegravir, or rilpivirine-based regimens | Efavirenz (requires increase in daclatasvir dose to 90 mg daily) | Etravirine and nevirapine |
BID: twice daily.