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Treatment and monitoring of children with chronic hepatitis C in the Pre-DAA era: A European survey of 38 paediatric specialists

Authors :
Indolfi, Giuseppe Bailey, Heather Serranti, Daniele and Giaquinto, Carlo Thorne, Claire Indolfi, Giuseppe Bailey, Heather Serranti, Daniele Giaquinto, Carlo Thorne, Claire and Jahnel, Joerg Sokal, Etienne Lamireau, Thierry Lacaille, Florence Debray, Dominique Girard, Muriel Feiterna-Sperling, Cornelia Wirth, Stefan Vassiliki, Papaevangelou Dezsofi, Antal Guidi, Roberto Verucchi, Gabriella D'Antiga, Lorenzo and Nicastro, Emanuele Maggiore, Giuseppe Trapani, Sandra and Ricci, Silvia Resti, Massimo Giacomet, Vania Benincaso, Anna Rita Nebbia, Gabriella Iorio, Raffaele Cananzi, Mara and Riva, Silvia Bossi, Grazia Dodi, Icilio Nobili, Valerio and Comparcola, Donatella Garazzino, Silvia Calvo, Pier Luigi and Pokorska-Spiewak, Maria Pawlowska, Malgorzata Goncalves, Cristina Goncalves, Isabel Tudor, Ana Maria Noguera-Julian, Antoni Hierro, Loreto Ramos, Jose T. Fischler, Bjorn and McLin, Valerie Kansu, Aydan Brown, Maxine Kelly, Deirdre and Davison, Suzanne Turkova, Anna Bamford, Alasdair PENTAHep Study Grp
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The burden of paediatric Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection across Europe is unknown, as are current policies regarding monitoring and treatment. This collaborative study aimed to collect aggregate data to characterise the population of = 6 years and 90% vertically infected. HCV genotype 1 was the most common (n 380; 57.3%), followed by genotype 3, 4 and 2. Seventeen children (3%) with chronic HCV infection were diagnosed with cirrhosis, and six were reported to have received liver transplantation for HCV-related liver disease. The majority (n 425; 64.1%) of the European children with HCV infection remained treatment-naive in 2016. Age affected clinicians’ attitudes towards treatment; 94% reported being willing to use direct-acting antivirals, if available, in adolescents (aged >= 11 years), 78% in children aged 6-10 and 42% in those 3-5 years of age (Pearson correlation coefficient -0.98; P 0.0001). This survey provides the largest characterisation of the population of children in clinical follow-up for chronic HCV infection in Europe, alongside important contextual information on their management and treatment. Discussion is needed around strategies and criteria for use of direct-acting antivirals in these children.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..e32c112d5152be5d012ee8e19f6c8d1a