Treatment-failure to direct antiviral HCV regimens in real world: frequency, patient characteristics and rescue therapy - data from the German hepatitis C registry (DHC-R).
Z Gastroenterol
; 58(4): 341-351, 2020 Apr.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32040979
BACKGROUND: Virologic failure to approved combinations of direct antiviral agents (DAA) in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is rare. Mostly it involves difficult to treat patients with advanced liver disease and prior interferon-experience. Before approval of VOX/VEL/SOF, a restricted number of patients received rescue treatment, and the choice of DAA combinations for re-treatment were selected on an individual basis. In the present analysis, patient characteristics and rescue-regimens after virologic failure mainly based on first generation DAAs are described. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Data were obtained from the German Hepatitis C-Registry (DHC-R), which is a national multicenter real-world cohort currently including about 16â500 patients recruited by more than 250 centers. The present analysis is based on 6683 patients who initiated a DAA therapy and for whom follow-up data (per-protocol analysis) were available. RESULTS: Among the patients, 188 (2.8â%) experienced a virologic relapse. Compared to SVR-patients, relapse patients were significantly more often male (77.7â% versus 56.9â%, respectively, pâ<â0.001), showed cirrhosis significantly more (48.4â% versus 28.1â%, respectively, pâ<â0.001) and a prior interferon-containing therapy (46.3â% versus 39.0â%, respectively, pâ=â0.049). The majority of patients who relapsed were infected with genotype 1 (47.4â%) followed by genotype 3 (29.8â%), and 95 relapse patients started DAA re-treatment. Characteristics of patients with rescue-treatment are similar to these of patients with relapse after initial DAA treatment. Thirty-one of 39 patients with complete follow-up data achieved SVR (79.5â%), and 8 patients had a relapse again (20.5â%). Patients who received rescue treatment including a new DAA class according to guidelines, except patients who received VOX/VEL/SOF, showed higher SVR rates than the entire group (21/25, 84â%). All patients who received VOX/VEL/SOF achieved SVR (nâ=â4, 100â%). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with failure with DAA combination therapies are a difficult but urgent to treat population with the frequent presence of cirrhosis and prior treatment failure with interferon-based therapies. Rescue therapy with inclusion of a new DAA class leads to high SVR rates, but multiple targeted therapy with VOX/VEL/SOF seems to be most effective.
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Antivirais
/
Hepatite C
/
Hepacivirus
Tipo de estudo:
Guideline
Limite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2020
Tipo de documento:
Article