Conference Coverage

Most HIV patients need treatment for acute HCV


 

REPORTING FROM CROI

The 2-log cutoff

“We are withholding effective treatment from people just because we’re concerned about the money,” said Christoph Boesecke, MD, of Bonn (Germany) University Hospital, who was the lead investigator in the study that found low spontaneous clearance rates with HIV coinfection.

Almost all the 465 subjects were on combination antiretroviral HIV therapy. Most had HCV genotype 1, but there were also type 3 and 4 cases. The investigators followed their subjects for at least a year after HCV infection. Just 55 (11.8%) cleared the infection on their own.

“Almost 90% of acutely infected patients face a chronic course. ... DAA drug labels, as well as clinical guidelines, need to be amended to allow usage of DAA during the acute phase of HCV infection in a high-risk population,” Dr. Boesecke and his team concluded.

Clearance was harbingered by a 2-log decline in HCV RNA by week 4. The 2-log drop cutoff is “the best predictor [we have] ... to identify patients” for early treatment. “There may be some patients you overtreat, but we have to keep in mind that we are not causing any harms with DAAs; maybe harms in terms of money, but not in terms of toxicity,” he said.

The message is beginning to get out. New European AIDS Clinical Society guidelines recommend DAA treatment for patients with HIV who don’t have a 2-log drop after a month.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Efavirenz-based ART may hamper vaginal ring contraception
MDedge Family Medicine
High adverse events with TB prevention in HIV-infected pregnant women
MDedge Family Medicine
MicroRNAs flag liver damage in HIV-, HCV-infected persons
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Women living with HIV have more myocardial steatosis, reduced diastolic function
MDedge Family Medicine
Time to HIV rebound in infants off ART linked to birth health
MDedge Family Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Can androgen therapy improve male frailty?
MDedge Family Medicine
Medical marijuana’s ‘Catch-22’: Federal limits on research hinder patients’ relief
MDedge Family Medicine
Comorbidity occurs earlier and more commonly with HIV infection
MDedge Family Medicine
Antiretroviral choice for pregnant women with HIV does not appear to impact birth outcomes
MDedge Family Medicine
HIV infection linked to higher risk of non-melanoma skin cancer
MDedge Family Medicine