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Short duration response-guided treatment is effective for most individuals with recent hepatitis C infection: the ATAHC II and DARE-C I studies

Authors :
Paul S. Haber
Gail V. Matthews
Margaret Hellard
Marianne Martinello
David Iser
David R. Shaw
Tanya L. Applegate
Andrew R. Lloyd
Gregory J. Dore
Laurence Maire
Kathy Petoumenos
Alexander J. Thompson
Joe Sasadeusz
Jason Grebely
Barbara Yeung
Source :
Antiviral therapy. 21(5)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background Individuals with recent HCV infection may benefit from shortened duration therapy. These studies evaluated the efficacy and safety of response-guided regimens with pegylated interferon-α2a and ribavirin for people with recent HCV infection. Methods Participants with recent hepatitis C (duration of infection ≤18 months) enrolled in the ATAHC II (pegylated interferon-α2a + ribavirin) and DARE-C I (pegylated interferon-α2a, ribavirin and telaprevir) studies were included for analysis. Treatment duration was response-guided (ATAHC II: 8, 16, 24 or 48 weeks; DARE-C I: 8, 12 or 24 weeks) and dependent on time to first undetectable HCV RNA using Roche Taqman HCV RNA testing. The primary efficacy end point was sustained virological response at 12 weeks (SVR12) by intention-to-treat. Logistic regression analyses were used to identify predictors of SVR. Results A total of 82 participants (62% HIV-positive) were enrolled in ATAHC II (treated, n=52) and 14 (79% HIV-positive) in DARE-C I. The predominant modes of HCV acquisition were injecting drug use (ATAHC II 55%, DARE-C I 36%) and sexual intercourse with a partner of the same sex (ATAHC II 39%, DARE-C I 64%). SVR12 was 71% in both ATAHC II (37/52) and DARE-C I (10/14) with 56% in ATAHC II receiving shortened therapy (8 or 16 weeks). SVR was associated with a rapid virological response (odds ratio 10.80; P=0.001). Conclusions The majority of participants were able to receive short duration response-guided therapy with pegylated interferon-α2a and ribavirin. Response-guided therapy for recent hepatitis C infection could be considered in the absence of available interferon-free therapies. ClinicalTrials.gov registry (ATAHC II: NCT01336010; DARE-C I: NCT01743521).

Details

ISSN :
20402058 and 01336010
Volume :
21
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antiviral therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90dc1d9dd44bbd406a0f34ee57066284