| Literature DB >> 30466446 |
Antonio Di Biagio1, Lucia Taramasso2,3, Giovanni Cenderello4.
Abstract
The recently approved interferon-free DAA (direct antiviral agents) regimens have shown not only to be effective in terms of sustained virological response (SVR) rates (> 90%) but also well tolerated in most hepatitis C virus (HCV) infected patients. Nevertheless HCV genotypes are different and only a small percentage of trials consider genotype 4 (GT4), which was associated with lower rates of SVR compared with other genotypes before the arrival of the DAA's. In this review, we discuss the efficacy of DAA therapy in GT4 HCV infection with specific reference to more recent studies, including those conducted in a 'field-practice' scenario. Overall, DAA-based regimens appear more effective also in the poorly-explored setting of patients with HCV GT4 infection. Despite an overall limited number of patients was evaluated, favorable results are being derived from studies on ombitasvir/paritaprevir/ritonavir, sofosbuvir and velpatasvir, whether or not in association with voxilaprevir, and with the new combined therapy glecaprevir + pibentasvir.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30466446 PMCID: PMC6251143 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-018-1094-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Key results of the clinical trials included in the present analysis
| Clinical trial or field experience | n° of patients with G4-infection | Treatment | SVR rate in GT4 patients |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ruane 2015 [ | 34 | SOF + RBV | 68–93% |
| Feld 2015 [ | 116 | SOF/VEL | 100% |
| Curry 2015 [ | 8 | SOF/VEL | 100% |
| Gane 2016 [ | 17 | SOF/VEL + VOX | 58% |
| Bourliere 2017 [ | 41 (POLARIS-1 + POLARIS-4) | SOF/VEL + VOX | 97% |
| Colombo 2017 [ | 10 | SOF/LDV | 100% |
| Kholi 2015 [ | 21 | SOF/LDV | 95% |
| Buti 2017 [ | 40 | SMV/SOF | 100% |
| El Raziky 2017 [ | 63 | SMV/SOF | 92% |
| Kwo 2017 [ | 37 | EBR + GZR | 89% |
| Waked [ | 160 | OBV/PTV/R/RBV | 93–94% |
| Hézode 2015 [ | 135 | OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 100% with RBV, 91% without RBV |
| Forns [ | 16 | GLI/PIB | 100% |
| Kwo [ | 22(SURVEYOR-I and SURVEYOR-II) | GLI/ PIB | 100% |
| Asselah [ | SURVEYOR-II Part 4, ENDURANCE-4 and ENDURANCE-2) | GLI/ PIB | 93% 8 week treatment |
| Yakoot [ | 120 (randomized 60 in 12 weeks regimen and 60 in response tailored regimen) | SOF + DAC | 96.7% in the fixed regimen |
| El-Khayat [ | 551 cirrotic patients (432 naïve, 119 treatment experienced) | SOF + DAC + RBV | 92%in naïve |
| Willemse [ | 53 (naïve and IFN experienced) | SOF + SIM | 92% |
| Degre [ | 87, IFN experienced | SOF + SIM ± RBV | 87.4% |
| Elsharkawy 2017 [ | 8742 (F3) | SOF/peg/IFN-RBV | 94% |
| Asselah 2017 [ | 67 naïve, F0-F2 | SIM + PEG IFN | 97% |
| Ioannou [ | 135 (two arm: 104, 31) | SOF/LDV ± RBV and OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 89.6% |
| Crespo [ | 152 (two arm:130 and 122) | SOF/LDV ± RBV and OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 95.4 and 96.2% |
| Welzel [ | 53 | OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 100% |
| Perello [ | 87 (73% cirrhosis, 35% treatment naïve) | OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 100% |
| Petta 2017 [ | 17 | OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 94% |
| Wedemeyer 2017 [ | 112, 19 cirrhosis | OBV/PTV/r ± RBV | 96,5% |
| Komatsu [ | 26 | EBR + GZR | 100% |
| Maria 2017 [ | 7 | SOF ± SIM or DAC or LDV ± RBV | 100% |
| Hezode 2016 [ | 215 | SOF + DAC | 91% |
| Babatin 2017 [ | 40 | SOF + DAC | 100% |
| Abad 2017 [ | 35 | OBV/PTV/r | 100% |
| Ponziani 2017 [ | 8 | OBV/PTV/r | 100% |
| Manns 2016 [ | 37 | SOF/LDV + RBV | 81% |
GT4 HCV Genotype 4, SOF sofosbuvir, VEL velpatasvir, VOX voxilaprevir, LDV ledipasvir, SIM simeprevir, RBV ribavirin, EBR elbasvir, GZR grazoprevir, OBV ombitasvir, PTV paritaprevir, GLI glicaprevir, PIB pibrentasvir, DAC daclatasvir