HIV-coinfected patients respond worse to direct-acting antiviral-based therapy against chronic hepatitis C in real life than HCV-monoinfected individuals: a prospective cohort study.

Q2 Medicine HIV Clinical Trials Pub Date : 2017-05-01 DOI:10.1080/15284336.2017.1330801
Karin Neukam, Luis E Morano-Amado, Antonio Rivero-Juárez, María Mancebo, Rafael Granados, Francisco Téllez, Antonio Collado, María J Ríos, Ignacio de Los Santos-Gil, Sergio Reus-Bañuls, Francisco Vera-Méndez, Paloma Geijo-Martínez, Marta Montero-Alonso, Marta Suárez-Santamaría, Juan A Pineda
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引用次数: 30

Abstract

Objective: HIV/HCV-coinfected patients and hepatitis C virus (HCV) monoinfected subjects are thought to respond equally to direct-acting antiviral (DAA)-based therapy despite the lack of data derived from clinical trials. This study is aimed to evaluate the impact of HIV coinfection on the response to DAA-based treatment against HCV infection in the clinical practice.

Patients and methods: In a prospective multicohort study, patients who initiated DAA-based therapy at the Infectious Disease Units of 33 hospitals throughout Spain were included. The primary efficacy outcome variables were the achievement of sustained virologic response 12 weeks after the scheduled end of therapy date (SVR12).

Results: A total of 908 individuals had reached the SVR12 evaluation time-point, 426 (46.9%) were HIV/HCV-coinfected, and 472 (52%) received interferon (IFN)-free therapy. In an intention-to-treat analysis, SVR12 rates in subjects with and without HIV-coinfection were 55.3% (94/170 patients) versus 67.3% (179/266 subjects; p = 0.012) for IFN-based treatment and 86.3% (221/256 subjects) versus 94.9% (205/216 patients, p = 0.002) for IFN-free regimens. Relapse after end-of-treatment response to IFN-free therapy was observed in 3/208 (1.4%) HCV-monoinfected subjects and 10/231 (4.4%) HIV/HCV-coinfected individuals (p = 0.075). In a multivariate analysis adjusted for age, sex, transmission route, body-mass index, HCV genotype, and cirrhosis, the absence of HIV-coinfection (adjusted odds ratio: 3.367; 95% confidence interval: 1.15-9.854; p = 0.027) was independently associated with SVR12 to IFN-free therapy.

Conclusions: HIV-coinfection is associated with worse response to DAA-based therapy against HCV infection. In patients receiving IFN-free therapy, this fact seems to be mainly driven by a higher rate of relapses among HIV-coinfected subjects.

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一项前瞻性队列研究表明,在现实生活中,hiv合并感染患者对慢性丙型肝炎直接抗病毒治疗的反应比单hcv感染者更差。
目的:尽管缺乏来自临床试验的数据,但HIV/HCV合并感染患者和丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)单感染患者被认为对基于直接作用抗病毒(DAA)治疗的反应相同。本研究旨在评估HIV合并感染对临床实践中基于daa的HCV感染治疗反应的影响。患者和方法:在一项前瞻性多队列研究中,纳入了在西班牙33家医院传染病科接受daa治疗的患者。主要疗效结局变量是在计划治疗结束日期(SVR12)后12周实现持续病毒学应答。结果:908例患者达到SVR12评估时间点,426例(46.9%)为HIV/ hcv合并感染,472例(52%)接受无干扰素(IFN)治疗。在意向治疗分析中,伴有和未伴有hiv合并感染的受试者的SVR12率分别为55.3%(94/170例)和67.3%(179/266例);p = 0.012)和86.3%(221/256名受试者)与94.9%(205/216名患者,p = 0.002)的无ifn治疗方案。3/208(1.4%)单hcv感染者和10/231 (4.4%)HIV/ hcv合并感染者治疗结束后出现复发(p = 0.075)。在一项校正了年龄、性别、传播途径、体重指数、HCV基因型和肝硬化因素的多变量分析中,没有hiv合并感染(校正优势比:3.367;95%置信区间:1.15-9.854;p = 0.027)与无ifn治疗的SVR12独立相关。结论:hiv合并感染与基于daa的HCV感染治疗反应较差相关。在接受无干扰素治疗的患者中,这一事实似乎主要是由hiv合并感染者的复发率较高引起的。
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来源期刊
HIV Clinical Trials
HIV Clinical Trials 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
1.76
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: HIV Clinical Trials is devoted exclusively to presenting information on the latest developments in HIV/AIDS clinical research. This journal enables readers to obtain the most up-to-date, innovative research from around the world.
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