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VIDEO: 12-week HCV retreatment effective if short course fails

SAN FRANCISCO – Can patients who fail short-course treatment for hepatitis C and show high levels of resistance to an antiviral drug still respond to standard 12-week therapy?

“There were initially some data that retreatment might not be as good,” explained Dr. Eleanor Wilson of the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

In the SYNERGY trial, patients underwent short-course therapy with three or four directly acting antivirals. Those who failed the short-course therapies had the opportunity to re-enroll for 12-week standard-of-care therapy. Dr. Wilson and her colleagues studied patients who failed short-course therapy but then underwent 12-week HCV treatment.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Dr. Wilson discussed her findings and whether retreatment for 12 weeks was effective, particularly in patients with high levels of resistance to ledipasvir.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
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SAN FRANCISCO – Can patients who fail short-course treatment for hepatitis C and show high levels of resistance to an antiviral drug still respond to standard 12-week therapy?

“There were initially some data that retreatment might not be as good,” explained Dr. Eleanor Wilson of the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

In the SYNERGY trial, patients underwent short-course therapy with three or four directly acting antivirals. Those who failed the short-course therapies had the opportunity to re-enroll for 12-week standard-of-care therapy. Dr. Wilson and her colleagues studied patients who failed short-course therapy but then underwent 12-week HCV treatment.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Dr. Wilson discussed her findings and whether retreatment for 12 weeks was effective, particularly in patients with high levels of resistance to ledipasvir.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

SAN FRANCISCO – Can patients who fail short-course treatment for hepatitis C and show high levels of resistance to an antiviral drug still respond to standard 12-week therapy?

“There were initially some data that retreatment might not be as good,” explained Dr. Eleanor Wilson of the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

In the SYNERGY trial, patients underwent short-course therapy with three or four directly acting antivirals. Those who failed the short-course therapies had the opportunity to re-enroll for 12-week standard-of-care therapy. Dr. Wilson and her colleagues studied patients who failed short-course therapy but then underwent 12-week HCV treatment.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, Dr. Wilson discussed her findings and whether retreatment for 12 weeks was effective, particularly in patients with high levels of resistance to ledipasvir.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
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VIDEO: 12-week HCV retreatment effective if short course fails
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VIDEO: 12-week HCV retreatment effective if short course fails
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ledipasvir, hepatitis C, HCV
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AT THE LIVER MEETING 2015

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