| Literature DB >> 28370222 |
Manuel Mendizabal1,2, Leila Haddad3, Patricia E Gallardo4, Alejandro Ferrada5, Alejandro A Soza2,6, Raul Adrover2,7, Edmundo Aravena5, Juan P Roblero5, Jhon Prieto8, Claudia Vujacich9, Gustavo Romero10, Alberto Muñoz10, Margarita Anders11, Nelia Hernández12, Daniel Coccozella2,7, Fernando Gruz13, Maria V Reggiardo2,14, Andres E Ruf15, Adriana Varón16, Mariano Cartier10, Roberto Pérez Ravier17, Ezequiel Ridruejo1,2,18, Mirta Peralta19, Daniel Poncino20, Julio Vorobioff21, Gabriel Aballay Soteras22, Marcelo O Silva1,2.
Abstract
Information about the use of ombitasvir/paritaprevir/ritonavir/dasabuvir ± ribavirin (OBV/PTV/r/DSV ± RBV) in real-clinical practice in Latin America is scarce. We aimed to confirm safety and effectiveness of OBV/PTV/r/DSV ± RBV therapy in real-world setting. We analyzed a cohort of patients with genotype 1 infection treated with OBV/PTV/r/DSV ± RBV. Data on demographics, clinical features, safety, and virological response were retrospectively collected from 21 centers in Latin America. A total of 96 patients received OBV/PTV/r/DSV, associated with RBV in 68% of the cases. Most were genotype 1b (80%), 56 (58%) had cirrhosis, and 45 (47%) failed prior HCV treatment. Adverse events occurred in 62% of patients. The most common adverse events were pruritus (21%), hyperbilirubinemia (17%), and asthenia (17%). Five patients discontinued therapy prematurely due to hepatic decompensation, three of them were Child-Pugh B at baseline and one patient died due to multi-organ failure. Follow up HCV-RNA 12 weeks after completion of therapy was evaluated in all the patients and sustained virologic response rate was 97%. No virologic breakthrough was detected. Our study confirms that OBV/PTV/r/DSV treatment is highly effective in patients with chronic HCV without cirrhosis or with Child-Pugh A cirrhosis in non-European populations. Adverse events were often mild and rarely led to treatment discontinuation except for patients with Child-Pugh B cirrhosis or with previous history of hepatic decompensation. These results can support the development of public strategies to expand the access of OBV/PTV/r + DSV and other DAAs combinations in order to reduce the burden of HCV infection in our region.Entities:
Keywords: antiviral agents; disease control; hepatitis C virus; public policy
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28370222 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.24816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Virol ISSN: 0146-6615 Impact factor: 2.327