| Literature DB >> 29299684 |
Goki Suda1, Koji Ogawa2, Kenichi Morikawa2, Naoya Sakamoto2.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is one of the primary causes of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. In hemodialysis patients, the rate of HCV infection is high and is moreover associated with a poor prognosis. In liver transplantation patients with HCV infection, recurrent HCV infection is universal, and re-infected HCV causes rapid progression of liver fibrosis and graft loss. Additionally, in patients with HCV and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection, liver fibrosis progresses rapidly. Thus, there is an acute need for prompt treatment of HCV infection in these special populations (i.e., hemodialysis, liver transplantation, HIV co-infection). However, until recently, the standard anti-HCV treatment involved the use of interferon-based therapy. In these special populations, interferon-based therapies could not achieve a high rate of sustained viral response and moreover were associated with a higher rate of adverse events. With the development of novel direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), the landscape of anti-HCV therapy for special populations has changed dramatically. Indeed, in special populations treated with interferon-free DAAs, the sustained viral response rate was above 90%, with a lower incidence and severity of adverse events.Entities:
Keywords: Direct-acting antiviral; HCV; HIV; Hemodialysis; Liver transplantation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29299684 PMCID: PMC5910474 DOI: 10.1007/s00535-017-1427-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastroenterol ISSN: 0944-1174 Impact factor: 7.527
Safety and efficacy comparison between IFN-based therapy and IFN-free DAA therapy in special populations
| Indicator/population | IFN-based therapy | IFN-free DAA therapy |
|---|---|---|
| SVR rate % | ||
| Hemodialysis | 40–41% [ | 90–100% [ |
| HIV/HCV co-infection | 27–40% [ | 78–98% [ |
| Liver transplantation | 8–50% [ | 70–98% [ |
| Treatment discontinuation rate | ||
| Hemodialysis | 14–16% [ | 0–5% [ |
| HIV/HCV co-infection | 12–39% [ | 0–3% [ |
| Liver transplantation | 27.6% [ | 2–18% [ |
IFN interferon, DAA direct-acting antiviral, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, HCV hepatitis C virus
Outcomes of combination therapies with IFN-free DAAs in patients who have severe renal dysfunction and/or are receiving HD
| Treatment regimen (treatment duration) study | Type of study | Patient population | HCV | Sample size | SVR rate (%) | SAE (%) | Treatment discontinuation rate (%) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grazoprevir/elbasvir (12 weeks) | AEs were comparable between intervention and placebo groups | |||||||
| C-SURFER | CT | CKD 4/5 | GT1 | 122 (HD: 92) | 94.2% (115/122) | 14.4% (16/111) | 4.1% (5/122)a | |
| C-SURFER | CT | CKD 4/5 | GT1 | 102 | 95.1% (97/102) | 12.7% (13/102) | 2.9% (3/102) | |
| PTV/RTV/OBV and DSV ± RBV (12 weeks) | Should be monitored for DDIs | |||||||
| RUBY-1 | CT | CKD 4/5 including HD | GT1 | 20 | 90% (18/20) | 20% (4/20) | 0 | |
| PTV/RTV/OBV (12 weeks) | ||||||||
| Atsukawa et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1b | 31 | 96.8% (30/31) | 3.2% (1/31) | 3.2% | |
| DCV/ASV (24 weeks) | 24-Week treatment regimen | |||||||
| Suda et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1 | 21 | 95.2% (20/21) | 5% (1/21) | 5% (1/21) | |
| Toyoda et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1b | 28 | 100% | 3.6% | ||
| Kawakami et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1 | 18 | 100% | 6% | 0% | |
| Miyazaki et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1b | 10 | 100% | 20% | 0% | |
| Suda et al. [ | RW | HD | GT1 | 123 | 95.9% | 3.3% | ||
| Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (12 weeks) | Pan-genotypic activity | |||||||
| Gane et al. [ | CT | CKD4/5 including HD | GT1-6 | 104 | 98% | 24% | 4% | |
| SOF-based therapy | SOF is still not recommended for patients with severe renal dysfunction | |||||||
| Saxena et al. [ | RW | eGFR < 45 mL/min/1.73 m2 | GT1-6 | 73 | 83% | 22% | 7% | |
| eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m2 | GT1-3 | 17 (HD: 5) | 88% (15/17) | 18% (3/17) | 6% (1/17) | |||
| SOF/SMV (12 weeks) | ||||||||
| Nazario et al. [ | RW | eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m2 | GT1 | 17 (HD: 15) | 100% (17/17) | 0 | 0 | |
CT clinical trials, RW real-world data, IFN interferon, DAAs direct-acting antivirals, PTV paritaprevir, OBV ombitasvir, DSV dasabuvir, SOF sofosbuvir, RBV ribavirin, RTV ritonavir, Peg-IFN pegylated interferon, SMV simeprevir, DCV daclatasvir, ASV asunaprevir, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, GT genotype, SVR sustained viral response, SAE serious adverse event, HD hemodialysis, CKD chronic kidney disease, DDI drug–drug interactions
a All-treatment discontinuation due to unrelated AEs
Outcomes of combination therapies with IFN-free DAAs in patients with HIV/HCV co-infection
| Treatment regimen/ study | Type of study | Treatment duration (weeks) | HCV GT | Sample size | SVR rate (%) | SAE rate (%) | Treatment discontinuation rate (%) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sofosbuvir/ribavirin | ||||||||
| PHOTON-1 | CT | 12–24 | GT1–3 | 223 | GT1 24 W: 76% (87/114) | 6% | 3% | |
| PHOTON-2 | CT | 12–24 | GT1–4 | 274 | GT1 24 W: 85% (95/112) | 1% | 2% | |
| Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir | Co-administration of ledipasvir and TDF caused an increase in TDF serum concentration | |||||||
| ERADICATE study | CT | 12 | GT1 | 50 | 98% (49/50) | 2% | 0 | |
| ION-4 | CT | 12 | GT1/4 | 335 | 96% (322/335) | 2% | 0 | |
| PTV/RTV/OBV and DSV | Should be monitored for drug–drug interactions with RTV | |||||||
| TURQUOISE-1 | CT | 12–24 | GT1 | 63 | 12 W: 94% (29/31) | 0 | 0 | |
| Elbasvir/grazoprevir | ||||||||
| C-EDGE CO-INFECTION | CT | 12 | GT1/4/6 | 218 | 96% (210/218) | 1% (2/218) | 0 | |
| Sofosbuvir/velpatasvir | Renal function should be monitored in TDF with velpatasvir co-administration | |||||||
| ASTRAL-5 | CT | 12 | GT1–4 | 106 | 95% (101/106) | 2% (2/106) | 2% | |
| Sofosbuvir/daclatasvir | ||||||||
| ALLY-2 | CT | 8-12 | GT1–4 | 203 | 12 W: 97.4% (149/153) | 2% (4/203) | 0 | |
CT clinical trials, RW real-world data, IFN interferon, DAAs direct-acting antivirals, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, HCV hepatitis C virus, 12 W at 12 weeks, 24 W at 24 weeks, GT genotype, SVR sustained viral response, SAE serious adverse event, TDF tenofovir disoproxil fumarate
Outcomes of combination therapies with IFN-free DAAs in patients with recurrent HCV infection after liver transplantation in HCV/HCV co-infected patients
| Treatment regimen (treatment duration) study | Type of study | Treatment duration (weeks) | HCV GT | Sample size | SVR rate (ITT) | SAE rate (%) | Treatment discontinuation rate (%) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sofosbuvir/ribavirin | ||||||||
| Charlton et al. [ | CT | 24 | GT1,3,4 | 40 | 70% (28/40) | 15% (6/40) | 5% (2/40) | |
| Daclatasvir/asunaprevir | ||||||||
| Ikegami et al. [ | RW | 24 | GT 1b | 74 | 80.3% | 18% | ||
| Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir/RBV | ||||||||
| SOLAR-1 | CT | 12–24 | GT1, (4) | 223 | CH or CP-A: 96–98% | 11 to 75% | 0–12% | |
| SOLAR-2 | CT | 12–24 | GT1, 4 | 227 | CH/CP-A: 93–100% (GT1) | 9 to 67% | 3.5% (8/227) | |
| Sofosbuvir/ledipasvir | ||||||||
| Ueda et al. [ | RW | 12 | GT1 | 54 | 98 (53/54) | 13% (7/54) | 2% (1/54) | |
| Sofosbuvir/daclatasvir/RBV | ||||||||
| ALLY-1 | CT | 12 | GT1,3,6 | 53 | 94 (50/53) | 9% (5/53) | 2% (1/53) | |
| PTV/RTV/OBV/DSV + RBV | Concentration of CI should be carefully monitored due to interactions with RTV | |||||||
| CORAL-2 | CT | 24 | GT1 | 34 | 96% (33/34) | 6% (2/34) | 3% (1/34) | |
| SMV/sofosbuvir ± RBV | ||||||||
| Pungpapong et al. [ | RW | 12 | GT1 | 123 | 90% (94/105) | 2% (3/123) | 2% (3/123) | |
| Brown et al. [ | RW | 12–24 | GT1 | 151 | 88% (133/151) | 12% (18/151) | ||
CT clinical trials, RW real-world data, IFN interferon, DAAs direct-acting antivirals, HCV hepatitis C virus, GT genotype, SVR sustained viral response, SAE serious adverse event, CP Child–Pugh classification (classes A through C), ITT intention to treat, CH chronic hepatitis, RBV ribavirin, SMV simeprevir, RTV ritonavir, CI calcineurin inhibitor