News

Sofosbuvir and Ribavirin Critical to Preventing Posttransplantation HCV Recurrence

Author and Disclosure Information

 

FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY

References

Sofosbuvir and ribavirin treatments should be administered to patients with hepatitis C virus who undergo liver transplantations in order to significantly decrease the risks of posttransplant HCV recurrence, according to two new studies published in the January issue of Gastroenterology (10.1053/j.gastro.2014.09.023 and 10.1053/j.gastro.2014.10.001).

“In clinical trials, administration of sofosbuvir with ribavirin was associated with rapid decreases of HCV RNA to undetectable levels in patients with HCV genotype 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 infections,” wrote lead author Dr. Michael P. Curry of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, and his coauthors on the first of these two studies. “In more than 3,000 patients treated to date, sofosbuvir has been shown to be safe, viral breakthrough during treatment has been rare (and associated with nonadherence), and few drug interactions have been observed.”

In a phase II, open-label study, Dr. Curry and his coinvestigators enrolled 61 patients with HCV of any genotype, and cirrhosis with a Child-Turcotte-Pugh score no greater than 7, who were all wait-listed to receive liver transplantations. Subjects received up to 48 weeks of treatment with 400 mg of sofosbuvir, and a separate dose of ribavirin prior to liver transplantation, while 43 patients received transplantations alone. The primary outcome sought by investigators was HCV-RNA levels less than 25 IU/mL at 12 weeks after transplantation among patients that had this level prior to the operation.

The investigators found that 43 subjects had the desired HCV-RNA levels; of that population, 49% had a posttransplantation virologic response, with the most frequent side effects reported by subjects being fatigue (38%), headache (23%), and anemia (21%). Of the 43 applicable subjects, 30 (70% of the population) had a posttransplantation virologic response at 12 weeks, 10 (23%) had recurrent infection, and 3 (7%) died.

“This study provides proof of concept that virologic suppression without interferon significantly can reduce the rate of recurrent HCV after liver transplantation,” the study says, adding that the results “compare favorably with those observed in other trials of pretransplantation antiviral therapy.”

Continue for second study findings >>

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Most Baby Boomers Didn’t Know Their Hep C Status
Clinician Reviews
Drug Combination Successful in Hepatitis C Plus HIV
Clinician Reviews
VIDEO: Hepatitis C Screening Rises, But Where Are the Positive Cases?
Clinician Reviews
Best HCV Value? Screen All Baby Boomers, Treat All Infections
Clinician Reviews
Sofosbuvir/GS-5816 Combo Offers Promising HCV Treatment Results
Clinician Reviews
VIDEO: Will New HCV Drugs’ Costs Kill Health Care Budgets?
Clinician Reviews
HCV Regimen Worked After Sofosbuvir Combos Failed
Clinician Reviews
Direct-acting Antivirals Treat Recurrent HCV After Transplant
Clinician Reviews
FDA Approves Four-Drug Combination for HCV
Clinician Reviews
HCV Continuum Critical to Providing Better Care in Urban Areas
Clinician Reviews