Conference Coverage

Liver transplant outcomes improving for U.S. patients with HIV/HCV


 

FROM DDW 2021

Progress in a still-underserved population

The practice of liver transplant in the HIV population has been increasing since the HOPE Act, according to Dr. Wang.

Overall, out of 70,125 liver transplant recipients over the 2008-2019 period, 416 (0.6%) were HIV infected, the data show.

In 2014, 28 liver transplants (0.5%) were performed in HIV-infected individuals, which increased to 64 transplants (0.8%) in 2019, data show. Of those 64 HIV-positive liver transplant recipients in 2019, 23 (35.9%) were coinfected with HCV.

Graft survival has greatly improved, from a 3-year survival of only 58% in patients transplanted before the availability of DAAs to 82% in the DAA era, a difference that was statistically significant, Dr. Wang said.

In the DAA era, there was no significant difference in graft failure outcomes when comparing HIV/HCV-coinfected recipients with uninfected recipients, she added.

The largest proportion of liver transplantations in HIV/HCV-coinfected recipients have been done in OPTN Region 9 (New York), both in the pre- and post-DAA eras, according to Dr. Wang. Several regions have very low numbers or have performed no liver transplants in HIV/HCV-coinfected patients in either era.

“The number of transplant centers participating in liver transplant for coinfected patients is still quite low, so this is a very underserved patient population,” Dr. Wang said.

Dr. Wang provided no financial disclosures related to the research. Dr. Durand receives grants to the institution from Abbvie and GlaxoSmithKline and she receives honoraria from Gilead Sciences for serving on a grant review committee.

Pages

Recommended Reading

New CDC guidance for health care personnel exposed to HCV
MDedge Infectious Disease
Hepatitis screening now for all patients with cancer on therapy
MDedge Infectious Disease
Hepatocellular carcinoma shows risk factor shift
MDedge Infectious Disease
Preemptive CMV monitoring beats prophylaxis post liver transplant
MDedge Infectious Disease
HCC rates slow in cities, continue to climb in rural areas
MDedge Infectious Disease
Pronounced racial differences in HBsAg loss after stopping nucleos(t)ide
MDedge Infectious Disease
‘Excellent short-term outcomes’ seen in HCV+ liver transplants to HCV– recipients
MDedge Infectious Disease
Updated USPSTF HBV screening recommendation may be a ‘lost opportunity’
MDedge Infectious Disease
New ‘minimal monitoring’ approach to HCV treatment may simplify care
MDedge Infectious Disease
Treatment paradigm for chronic HBV in flux
MDedge Infectious Disease