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Demographic profile, host, disease & viral predictive factors of response in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection at a tertiary care hospital in north India.

Authors :
Vasudevan, Sreejith
Shalimar
Kavimandan, Amit
Kalra, Nancy
Nayak, Baibaswata
Thakur, Bhaskar
Das, Prasenjit
Gupta, Siddhartha Datta
Panda, Subrat Kumar
Acharya, Subrat Kumar
Source :
Indian Journal of Medical Research. Mar2016, Vol. 143 Issue 3, p331-340. 10p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background & objectives: Standard of care for chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in India is peginterferon and ribavirin (RBV). The response to treatment in real life stetting is unclear. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the demographic profile and assess the virological response and predictors of response in CHC patients. Methods: Consecutive patients with CHC were included in this study. Detailed clinical history, risk factors, and predictive factors of response were noted. Patients were treated with peginterferon α2b (1.5 μg/kg/wk) and RBV (12 mg/kg/day) for 6 to 18 months based on response. Results: A total of 211 patients were included in the analysis, mean age 40.6±12.3 yr, 144 (68%) were males and 71 (34%) had compensated cirrhosis. Commonest risk factor for acquiring CHC was previous transfusion and surgery (51%). Genotype 3 (72%) was most common followed by genotype 1 (23%). Overall sustained virologic response (SVR) was 64 per cent [95% CI 57.1%-70.4%]. The SVR was 66.5 per cent [95% CI 58.34-73.89%] for genotype 3 and 61.2 per cent [95% CI 46.23 to 74.80%] for genotype 1. Non-cirrhotics had better SVR rates compared to cirrhotics (76 vs 41%, P<0.001). On multivariate analysis, BMI ≥23 kg/m2, HOMA-IR ≥2, compliance (≤80%), and fibrosis >2 were predictors of low SVR. Interpretation & conclusions: Genotype 3 was the commonest HCV genotype. The commonest source of infection was previous transfusion and surgery. SVR rates for genotypes 3 were better than genotype 1 patients. Predictors of non-response were high BMI, insulin resistance, significant fibrosis and inadequate compliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09715916
Volume :
143
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Indian Journal of Medical Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
115561222
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/0971-5916.182624