Eligibility for and outcome of hepatitis C treatment of HIV-coinfected individuals in clinical practice: the Swiss HIV cohort study

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C7B8850DE941
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Eligibility for and outcome of hepatitis C treatment of HIV-coinfected individuals in clinical practice: the Swiss HIV cohort study
Journal
Antiviral Therapy
Author(s)
Zinkernagel  A. S., von Wyl  V., Ledergerber  B., Rickenbach  M., Furrer  H., Battegay  M., Hirschel  B., Tarr  P. E., Opravil  M., Bernasconi  E., Schmid  P., Weber  R.
ISSN
1359-6535 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2006
Volume
11
Number
2
Pages
131-42
Notes
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Morbidity and mortality of individuals co-infected with HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) is often determined by the course of their HCV infection. Only a selected proportion of those in need of HCV treatment are studied in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). We analysed the prevalence of HCV infection in a large cohort, the number of individuals requiring treatment, the eligibility for HCV treatment, and the outcome of the combination therapy with pegylated interferon-a and ribavirin in routine practice. METHODS: We analysed prescription patterns of HCV treatment and treatment outcomes among participants from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study with detectable hepatitis C viraemia (between January 2001 and October 2004). Efficacy was measured by the number of patients with undetectable HCV RNA at the end of therapy (EOTR) and at 6 months after treatment termination (SVR). Intention-to-continue-treatment principles were used. RESULTS: A total of 2150 of 7048 (30.5%) participants were coinfected with HCV; HCV RNA was detected in 60%, and not assessed in 26% of HCV-antibody-positive individuals. One hundred and sixty (12.5%) of HCV-RNA-positive patients started treatment. In patients infected with HCV genotypes 1/4 or 2/3, EOTR was achieved in 43.3% and 81.2% of patients, respectively, and SVR rates were 28.4% and 51.8%, respectively. More than 50% of the HCV-treated patients would have been excluded from two large published RCTs due to demographic, clinical and laboratory criteria. CONCLUSIONS: Despite clinical and psychosocial obstacles encountered in clinical practice, HCV treatment in HIV-coinfected individuals is feasible with results similar to those obtained in RCTs.
Keywords
Adult Antiviral Agents/*therapeutic use Cohort Studies Female HIV Infections/*complications Hepatitis C/*complications/*drug therapy/virology Hepatitis C Antibodies/blood Humans Interferon Alfa-2a/therapeutic use Interferon Alfa-2b/therapeutic use Male Middle Aged Polyethylene Glycols/therapeutic use RNA, Viral/blood Randomized Controlled Trials Reproducibility of Results Ribavirin/therapeutic use Switzerland
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
29/01/2008 9:52
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:43
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