| Literature DB >> 29963780 |
Christian Manzardo1, Maria C Londoño1, LLuís Castells2,3, Milagros Testillano4, José Luis Montero2,5, Judit Peñafiel1, Marta Subirana1, Ana Moreno6, Victoria Aguilera7, María Luisa González-Diéguez8, Jorge Calvo-Pulido9, Xavier Xiol10, Magdalena Salcedo11, Valentin Cuervas-Mons12, José Manuel Sousa13, Francisco Suarez14, Trinidad Serrano2,15, Jose Ignacio Herrero2,16, Miguel Jiménez17, José R Fernandez4, Carlos Giménez9, Santos Del Campo6, Juan I Esteban-Mur2,3, Gonzalo Crespo1,2, Asunción Moreno1, Gloria de la Rosa18, Antoni Rimola1,2, Jose M Miro1.
Abstract
Direct-acting antivirals have proved to be highly efficacious and safe in monoinfected liver transplant (LT) recipients who experience recurrence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. However, there is a lack of data on effectiveness and tolerability of these regimens in HCV/HIV-coinfected patients who experience recurrence of HCV infection after LT. In this prospective, multicenter cohort study, the outcomes of 47 HCV/HIV-coinfected LT patients who received DAA therapy (with or without ribavirin [RBV]) were compared with those of a matched cohort of 148 HCV-monoinfected LT recipients who received similar treatment. Baseline characteristics were similar in both groups. HCV/HIV-coinfected patients had a median (IQR) CD4 T-cell count of 366 (256-467) cells/µL. HIV-RNA was <50 copies/mL in 96% of patients. The DAA regimens administered were SOF + LDV ± RBV (34%), SOF + SMV ± RBV (31%), SOF + DCV ± RBV (27%), SMV + DCV ± RBV (5%), and 3D (3%), with no differences between the groups. Treatment was well tolerated in both groups. Rates of SVR (negative serum HCV-RNA at 12 weeks after the end of treatment) were high and similar for coinfected and monoinfected patients (95% and 94%, respectively; P = .239). Albeit not significant, a trend toward lower SVR rates among patients with advanced fibrosis (P = .093) and genotype 4 (P = .088) was observed. In conclusion, interferon-free regimens with DAAs for post-LT recurrence of HCV infection in HIV-infected individuals were highly effective and well tolerated, with results comparable to those of HCV-monoinfected patients.Entities:
Keywords: clinical research/practice; infection and infectious agents-viral: hepatitis C; infection and infectious agents-viral: human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS); liver transplantation/hepatology
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29963780 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086