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What’s new in hepatitis C: Four themes that dominated at the Liver Meeting

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Tue, 11/26/2019 - 14:15

– Treatment of persons who inject drugs, updates in pangenotypic direct-acting antiviral therapy, the benefits of sustained virologic response, and preemptive therapy in donor-positive organ transplantation topped the list of notable hepatitis C–related abstracts this year at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

That’s according to Marc Ghany, MD, of the liver diseases branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, who gave a hepatitis C debrief to attendees on the final day of the meeting. Here are some of the meeting highlights as summarized by Dr. Ghany in this well-attended last-day session.
 

Treatment of HCV in people who inject drugs

Emerging data suggest it is feasible to treat hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in persons who inject drugs (PWIDs); however, overcoming adherence issues remains a challenge, Dr. Ghany told attendees.

According to one study presented at AASLD by Dhiman and coauthors (Abstract 0165), decentralized care of PWIDs using direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy was safe and effective, even in those with cirrhosis. Authors demonstrated an “impressive” rate of sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (SVR12) of 91% by a modified intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Ghany said; however, treatment interruptions were frequent and reduced the overall SVR rate in the study to 78%.

Other studies at the meeting looked at strategies to improve DAA efficacy in this population of patients at high risk of nonadherence, including use of a digital medicine program (Abstract 1554) and a model of care in which an internist-addiction medicine specialist evaluated opiate-dependent patients for HCV infection in a hepatology clinic (Abstract 1589).

Reinfection remains a focus of research in PWIDs. At this meeting, Janjua and coauthors reported that DAA-treated PWIDs in British Columbia had a threefold higher rate of reinfection versus non-PWIDs; however, there were no detected reinfections among PWIDs who had received uninterrupted opioid agonist therapy. “These data suggested that opioid agonist therapy should be given before and after HCV treatment in persons who inject drugs to prevent the infection,” Dr. Ghany said in his presentation.
 

Updates on pangenotypic DAA therapy

Jonas and coauthors (Abstract 1551) reported on the safety and efficacy of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir for 8 weeks in children with chronic HCV infection enrolled in the ongoing phase 2/3 DORA study. The SVR12 was high, according to Dr. Ghany, at 96% overall, and consistent across age cohorts from 3 to less than 12 years of age.

“In the near future, we should have a safe and effective regimen (approved) for children 3 years or older,” Dr. Ghany said. “I think this will serve us well, as we try to eliminate HCV in children, who number up to 5 million cases worldwide.”

A short course of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir is approved for patients with HCV and compensated cirrhosis, and data to support that was presented last year at The Liver Meeting; however, data were not presented on patients with genotype 3, the most difficult-to-treat genotype, Dr. Ghany said. That gap was filled at this year’s meeting with a report (Abstract LP9) showing SVR12 rates of 98.4% per protocol and 95.2% in intention-to-treat analysis.
 

 

 

Relationship of SVR to clinical outcomes

While the impact of sustained virologic response (SVR) on all-cause mortality is clear in patients with HCV, less is known about the effect of SVR on liver-related mortality and other outcomes, Dr. Ghany said. In one study presented here (Abstract 0039), based on analysis of a Veterans Affairs database of patients with chronic HCV infection, SVR was linked to a significant reduction in liver-related mortality, while in another report (Abstract 0037), SVR was associated with significant reductions in acute coronary syndromes, end-stage renal disease, and ischemic stroke.

Similarly, a multinational, propensity score–matched analysis (Abstract 0040) demonstrated that SVR had an impact on 5-year overall survival and liver-related survival in patients with HCV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). “For HCC patients who are candidates for HCC therapy, consideration should also be given to treating these individuals (with DAA therapy) because of the impact on overall survival,” Dr. Ghany said.
 

Preemptive DAA therapy in organ transplantation

Exciting new data show that preemptive therapy, given for short durations, appears to either prevent or cure HCV infection after organ transplant, said Dr. Ghany.

A retrospective analysis by Wijarnpreecha and colleagues (Abstract 0003) showed that 12 or 24 weeks of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy resulted in an SVR12 for 24 out of 24 HCV-seropositive to HCV-seronegative liver transplants, while Durand and colleagues (Abstract 0042) showed that just 4 weeks of pre- and postexposure DAA prophylaxis resulted in SVR12s for 9 out of 9 HCV donor-positive, recipient-negative kidney transplants. Finally, Feld and coauthors (Abstract 0038) showed that preemptive ezetimibe with DAA therapy for 7 days prevented or rapidly cured infection in an experience that included 16 HCV-positive organ donors and 25 HCV-negative recipients.

“While these data are very encouraging, I think we do need to have long-term follow-up of these patients for graft survival, as well as the effect on wait times,” Dr. Ghany said.

Dr. Ghany reported no disclosures related to his presentation.

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– Treatment of persons who inject drugs, updates in pangenotypic direct-acting antiviral therapy, the benefits of sustained virologic response, and preemptive therapy in donor-positive organ transplantation topped the list of notable hepatitis C–related abstracts this year at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

That’s according to Marc Ghany, MD, of the liver diseases branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, who gave a hepatitis C debrief to attendees on the final day of the meeting. Here are some of the meeting highlights as summarized by Dr. Ghany in this well-attended last-day session.
 

Treatment of HCV in people who inject drugs

Emerging data suggest it is feasible to treat hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in persons who inject drugs (PWIDs); however, overcoming adherence issues remains a challenge, Dr. Ghany told attendees.

According to one study presented at AASLD by Dhiman and coauthors (Abstract 0165), decentralized care of PWIDs using direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy was safe and effective, even in those with cirrhosis. Authors demonstrated an “impressive” rate of sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (SVR12) of 91% by a modified intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Ghany said; however, treatment interruptions were frequent and reduced the overall SVR rate in the study to 78%.

Other studies at the meeting looked at strategies to improve DAA efficacy in this population of patients at high risk of nonadherence, including use of a digital medicine program (Abstract 1554) and a model of care in which an internist-addiction medicine specialist evaluated opiate-dependent patients for HCV infection in a hepatology clinic (Abstract 1589).

Reinfection remains a focus of research in PWIDs. At this meeting, Janjua and coauthors reported that DAA-treated PWIDs in British Columbia had a threefold higher rate of reinfection versus non-PWIDs; however, there were no detected reinfections among PWIDs who had received uninterrupted opioid agonist therapy. “These data suggested that opioid agonist therapy should be given before and after HCV treatment in persons who inject drugs to prevent the infection,” Dr. Ghany said in his presentation.
 

Updates on pangenotypic DAA therapy

Jonas and coauthors (Abstract 1551) reported on the safety and efficacy of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir for 8 weeks in children with chronic HCV infection enrolled in the ongoing phase 2/3 DORA study. The SVR12 was high, according to Dr. Ghany, at 96% overall, and consistent across age cohorts from 3 to less than 12 years of age.

“In the near future, we should have a safe and effective regimen (approved) for children 3 years or older,” Dr. Ghany said. “I think this will serve us well, as we try to eliminate HCV in children, who number up to 5 million cases worldwide.”

A short course of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir is approved for patients with HCV and compensated cirrhosis, and data to support that was presented last year at The Liver Meeting; however, data were not presented on patients with genotype 3, the most difficult-to-treat genotype, Dr. Ghany said. That gap was filled at this year’s meeting with a report (Abstract LP9) showing SVR12 rates of 98.4% per protocol and 95.2% in intention-to-treat analysis.
 

 

 

Relationship of SVR to clinical outcomes

While the impact of sustained virologic response (SVR) on all-cause mortality is clear in patients with HCV, less is known about the effect of SVR on liver-related mortality and other outcomes, Dr. Ghany said. In one study presented here (Abstract 0039), based on analysis of a Veterans Affairs database of patients with chronic HCV infection, SVR was linked to a significant reduction in liver-related mortality, while in another report (Abstract 0037), SVR was associated with significant reductions in acute coronary syndromes, end-stage renal disease, and ischemic stroke.

Similarly, a multinational, propensity score–matched analysis (Abstract 0040) demonstrated that SVR had an impact on 5-year overall survival and liver-related survival in patients with HCV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). “For HCC patients who are candidates for HCC therapy, consideration should also be given to treating these individuals (with DAA therapy) because of the impact on overall survival,” Dr. Ghany said.
 

Preemptive DAA therapy in organ transplantation

Exciting new data show that preemptive therapy, given for short durations, appears to either prevent or cure HCV infection after organ transplant, said Dr. Ghany.

A retrospective analysis by Wijarnpreecha and colleagues (Abstract 0003) showed that 12 or 24 weeks of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy resulted in an SVR12 for 24 out of 24 HCV-seropositive to HCV-seronegative liver transplants, while Durand and colleagues (Abstract 0042) showed that just 4 weeks of pre- and postexposure DAA prophylaxis resulted in SVR12s for 9 out of 9 HCV donor-positive, recipient-negative kidney transplants. Finally, Feld and coauthors (Abstract 0038) showed that preemptive ezetimibe with DAA therapy for 7 days prevented or rapidly cured infection in an experience that included 16 HCV-positive organ donors and 25 HCV-negative recipients.

“While these data are very encouraging, I think we do need to have long-term follow-up of these patients for graft survival, as well as the effect on wait times,” Dr. Ghany said.

Dr. Ghany reported no disclosures related to his presentation.

– Treatment of persons who inject drugs, updates in pangenotypic direct-acting antiviral therapy, the benefits of sustained virologic response, and preemptive therapy in donor-positive organ transplantation topped the list of notable hepatitis C–related abstracts this year at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

That’s according to Marc Ghany, MD, of the liver diseases branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, who gave a hepatitis C debrief to attendees on the final day of the meeting. Here are some of the meeting highlights as summarized by Dr. Ghany in this well-attended last-day session.
 

Treatment of HCV in people who inject drugs

Emerging data suggest it is feasible to treat hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in persons who inject drugs (PWIDs); however, overcoming adherence issues remains a challenge, Dr. Ghany told attendees.

According to one study presented at AASLD by Dhiman and coauthors (Abstract 0165), decentralized care of PWIDs using direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy was safe and effective, even in those with cirrhosis. Authors demonstrated an “impressive” rate of sustained virologic response at 12 weeks (SVR12) of 91% by a modified intention-to-treat analysis, Dr. Ghany said; however, treatment interruptions were frequent and reduced the overall SVR rate in the study to 78%.

Other studies at the meeting looked at strategies to improve DAA efficacy in this population of patients at high risk of nonadherence, including use of a digital medicine program (Abstract 1554) and a model of care in which an internist-addiction medicine specialist evaluated opiate-dependent patients for HCV infection in a hepatology clinic (Abstract 1589).

Reinfection remains a focus of research in PWIDs. At this meeting, Janjua and coauthors reported that DAA-treated PWIDs in British Columbia had a threefold higher rate of reinfection versus non-PWIDs; however, there were no detected reinfections among PWIDs who had received uninterrupted opioid agonist therapy. “These data suggested that opioid agonist therapy should be given before and after HCV treatment in persons who inject drugs to prevent the infection,” Dr. Ghany said in his presentation.
 

Updates on pangenotypic DAA therapy

Jonas and coauthors (Abstract 1551) reported on the safety and efficacy of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir for 8 weeks in children with chronic HCV infection enrolled in the ongoing phase 2/3 DORA study. The SVR12 was high, according to Dr. Ghany, at 96% overall, and consistent across age cohorts from 3 to less than 12 years of age.

“In the near future, we should have a safe and effective regimen (approved) for children 3 years or older,” Dr. Ghany said. “I think this will serve us well, as we try to eliminate HCV in children, who number up to 5 million cases worldwide.”

A short course of glecaprevir/pibrentasvir is approved for patients with HCV and compensated cirrhosis, and data to support that was presented last year at The Liver Meeting; however, data were not presented on patients with genotype 3, the most difficult-to-treat genotype, Dr. Ghany said. That gap was filled at this year’s meeting with a report (Abstract LP9) showing SVR12 rates of 98.4% per protocol and 95.2% in intention-to-treat analysis.
 

 

 

Relationship of SVR to clinical outcomes

While the impact of sustained virologic response (SVR) on all-cause mortality is clear in patients with HCV, less is known about the effect of SVR on liver-related mortality and other outcomes, Dr. Ghany said. In one study presented here (Abstract 0039), based on analysis of a Veterans Affairs database of patients with chronic HCV infection, SVR was linked to a significant reduction in liver-related mortality, while in another report (Abstract 0037), SVR was associated with significant reductions in acute coronary syndromes, end-stage renal disease, and ischemic stroke.

Similarly, a multinational, propensity score–matched analysis (Abstract 0040) demonstrated that SVR had an impact on 5-year overall survival and liver-related survival in patients with HCV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). “For HCC patients who are candidates for HCC therapy, consideration should also be given to treating these individuals (with DAA therapy) because of the impact on overall survival,” Dr. Ghany said.
 

Preemptive DAA therapy in organ transplantation

Exciting new data show that preemptive therapy, given for short durations, appears to either prevent or cure HCV infection after organ transplant, said Dr. Ghany.

A retrospective analysis by Wijarnpreecha and colleagues (Abstract 0003) showed that 12 or 24 weeks of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy resulted in an SVR12 for 24 out of 24 HCV-seropositive to HCV-seronegative liver transplants, while Durand and colleagues (Abstract 0042) showed that just 4 weeks of pre- and postexposure DAA prophylaxis resulted in SVR12s for 9 out of 9 HCV donor-positive, recipient-negative kidney transplants. Finally, Feld and coauthors (Abstract 0038) showed that preemptive ezetimibe with DAA therapy for 7 days prevented or rapidly cured infection in an experience that included 16 HCV-positive organ donors and 25 HCV-negative recipients.

“While these data are very encouraging, I think we do need to have long-term follow-up of these patients for graft survival, as well as the effect on wait times,” Dr. Ghany said.

Dr. Ghany reported no disclosures related to his presentation.

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ED-based HCV screening found feasible, linkage low

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Wed, 11/20/2019 - 14:43

– ED-based screening is a feasible method of detecting hepatitis C virus (HCV) in high-risk populations, but linkage to care remains low, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Charles S. Landis

An HCV screening program involving three Seattle hospitals and more than 4,000 patients showed that linkage to care was lowest among patients who were younger, homeless, or used injection drugs, reported lead author Charles S. Landis, MD, PhD, of the University of Washington, Seattle.

“In the U.S., rates of acute HCV infections are increasing in younger patients and in areas disproportionally affected by the opiate epidemic,” Dr. Landis said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “In order to achieve a goal of elimination, HCV screening, appropriate linkage to care, and treatment will need to be directed toward younger, marginalized, and underserved populations.”

Dr. Landis explained that EDs are suitable for HCV screening because users of emergency services are disproportionately affected by HCV, compared with patients in primary and specialty care settings. Despite this, linkage to care remains historically higher in primary and specialty care settings at approximately 70%, compared with 30% via the ED, Dr. Landis said.

Historically, EDs have been resistant to HCV screening programs, Dr. Landis said, but with the model used in the present study, which relied upon a full-time staff member in each ED who was employed by the infectious disease or hepatology department, no ED resources were needed.

Participants were willing adults who had reliable contact information. Patients were excluded if they were non–English speaking, incarcerated, enrolled or expected to enroll in another clinical study which excludes coenrollment, planned to move out of the region in the next 6 months, admitted to the ED with an acute life-threatening illness, or admitted to the ED for sexual assault. The program had three objectives: Screening, linkage to care, and treatment, all of which were coordinated by the aforementioned case manager.

To date, 4,182 patients have been screened, 936 have been enrolled, 95 have tested positive for HCV RNA, 32 have been linked with care, and 19 have been treated.

“So you can see, a lot of squeeze for a just a little bit of juice here,” Dr. Landis said, referring to the relatively low number of treated patients, compared with how many were screened.

The prevalence of HCV infection based on RNA testing was 2%, though one hospital had a rate of 5%. “This [prevalence] compares to, but is maybe slightly less than, the prevalence seen in others studies based in the emergency department,” Dr. Landis said. “The thought is, not all emergency departments are equal in terms of the patient population that they serve.”

Data analysis showed that the overall linkage to care was 36%. “This is still suboptimal, from my perspective,” Dr. Landis said, “but it does compare with several other ED-based studies.”

A closer look at the data showed that linkage was not uniform across the population. Among patients with homes, linkage to care was 59%, compared with 20% for patients who were homeless (P = .02).

“Ultimately, we need to tailor our approaches for linking homeless patients differently than patients who are not homeless,” Dr. Landis said.

Patients who reported no injection-drug use had a linkage to care of 50%, which was numerically higher than the rate of 20% among users of injection drugs; this difference was not statistically significant, which Dr. Landis attributed to insufficient population size. Similarly, younger patients showed numerical trends toward lower linkage to care.

“Future work will attempt to optimize linkage to care strategies based on patient demographic factors, such as active injection drug use or homelessness,” Dr. Landis said.

During discussion, a conference attendee from the United States expressed skepticism of the program’s merits.

“I may be a glass-half-empty person, but is it worth all this effort?” the attendee asked. “In all honesty, you treated a few dozen [patients] for 180,000 visits [per year]. I’m really not sure it’s worth those efforts, and I’m wondering if those efforts could be placed in different areas, especially for a higher yield.”

“Point well taken,” Dr. Landis said. “I think that was the purpose of the study, to see if the emergency department is a place to screen and link patients to care, and we’re trying to optimize that. Remember, there were 4,000 patients, but for many of those, it took literally a minute to screen them.”

An attendee from Australia offered a slightly more positive take on the findings, followed by a suggestion to improve linkage in marginalized populations.

“I’m not sure I’d be pessimistic,” the attendee said. “I think you ought to be commended for getting that number of people to link, because it is very difficult when we are looking at linking people from a hospital-based setting who actually live in the community and suffer from homelessness and mental health issues and incarceration and a whole range of other things. ... Maybe we need to change our idea of having these centralized silos where people are referred, and go out into the community, much like [tuberculosis] clinics used to do, and track people down.”

The study was funded by Gilead. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with HighTide Therapeutics, Intercept, AbbVie, and others.

SOURCE: Landis CS et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 168.

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– ED-based screening is a feasible method of detecting hepatitis C virus (HCV) in high-risk populations, but linkage to care remains low, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Charles S. Landis

An HCV screening program involving three Seattle hospitals and more than 4,000 patients showed that linkage to care was lowest among patients who were younger, homeless, or used injection drugs, reported lead author Charles S. Landis, MD, PhD, of the University of Washington, Seattle.

“In the U.S., rates of acute HCV infections are increasing in younger patients and in areas disproportionally affected by the opiate epidemic,” Dr. Landis said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “In order to achieve a goal of elimination, HCV screening, appropriate linkage to care, and treatment will need to be directed toward younger, marginalized, and underserved populations.”

Dr. Landis explained that EDs are suitable for HCV screening because users of emergency services are disproportionately affected by HCV, compared with patients in primary and specialty care settings. Despite this, linkage to care remains historically higher in primary and specialty care settings at approximately 70%, compared with 30% via the ED, Dr. Landis said.

Historically, EDs have been resistant to HCV screening programs, Dr. Landis said, but with the model used in the present study, which relied upon a full-time staff member in each ED who was employed by the infectious disease or hepatology department, no ED resources were needed.

Participants were willing adults who had reliable contact information. Patients were excluded if they were non–English speaking, incarcerated, enrolled or expected to enroll in another clinical study which excludes coenrollment, planned to move out of the region in the next 6 months, admitted to the ED with an acute life-threatening illness, or admitted to the ED for sexual assault. The program had three objectives: Screening, linkage to care, and treatment, all of which were coordinated by the aforementioned case manager.

To date, 4,182 patients have been screened, 936 have been enrolled, 95 have tested positive for HCV RNA, 32 have been linked with care, and 19 have been treated.

“So you can see, a lot of squeeze for a just a little bit of juice here,” Dr. Landis said, referring to the relatively low number of treated patients, compared with how many were screened.

The prevalence of HCV infection based on RNA testing was 2%, though one hospital had a rate of 5%. “This [prevalence] compares to, but is maybe slightly less than, the prevalence seen in others studies based in the emergency department,” Dr. Landis said. “The thought is, not all emergency departments are equal in terms of the patient population that they serve.”

Data analysis showed that the overall linkage to care was 36%. “This is still suboptimal, from my perspective,” Dr. Landis said, “but it does compare with several other ED-based studies.”

A closer look at the data showed that linkage was not uniform across the population. Among patients with homes, linkage to care was 59%, compared with 20% for patients who were homeless (P = .02).

“Ultimately, we need to tailor our approaches for linking homeless patients differently than patients who are not homeless,” Dr. Landis said.

Patients who reported no injection-drug use had a linkage to care of 50%, which was numerically higher than the rate of 20% among users of injection drugs; this difference was not statistically significant, which Dr. Landis attributed to insufficient population size. Similarly, younger patients showed numerical trends toward lower linkage to care.

“Future work will attempt to optimize linkage to care strategies based on patient demographic factors, such as active injection drug use or homelessness,” Dr. Landis said.

During discussion, a conference attendee from the United States expressed skepticism of the program’s merits.

“I may be a glass-half-empty person, but is it worth all this effort?” the attendee asked. “In all honesty, you treated a few dozen [patients] for 180,000 visits [per year]. I’m really not sure it’s worth those efforts, and I’m wondering if those efforts could be placed in different areas, especially for a higher yield.”

“Point well taken,” Dr. Landis said. “I think that was the purpose of the study, to see if the emergency department is a place to screen and link patients to care, and we’re trying to optimize that. Remember, there were 4,000 patients, but for many of those, it took literally a minute to screen them.”

An attendee from Australia offered a slightly more positive take on the findings, followed by a suggestion to improve linkage in marginalized populations.

“I’m not sure I’d be pessimistic,” the attendee said. “I think you ought to be commended for getting that number of people to link, because it is very difficult when we are looking at linking people from a hospital-based setting who actually live in the community and suffer from homelessness and mental health issues and incarceration and a whole range of other things. ... Maybe we need to change our idea of having these centralized silos where people are referred, and go out into the community, much like [tuberculosis] clinics used to do, and track people down.”

The study was funded by Gilead. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with HighTide Therapeutics, Intercept, AbbVie, and others.

SOURCE: Landis CS et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 168.

– ED-based screening is a feasible method of detecting hepatitis C virus (HCV) in high-risk populations, but linkage to care remains low, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Charles S. Landis

An HCV screening program involving three Seattle hospitals and more than 4,000 patients showed that linkage to care was lowest among patients who were younger, homeless, or used injection drugs, reported lead author Charles S. Landis, MD, PhD, of the University of Washington, Seattle.

“In the U.S., rates of acute HCV infections are increasing in younger patients and in areas disproportionally affected by the opiate epidemic,” Dr. Landis said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “In order to achieve a goal of elimination, HCV screening, appropriate linkage to care, and treatment will need to be directed toward younger, marginalized, and underserved populations.”

Dr. Landis explained that EDs are suitable for HCV screening because users of emergency services are disproportionately affected by HCV, compared with patients in primary and specialty care settings. Despite this, linkage to care remains historically higher in primary and specialty care settings at approximately 70%, compared with 30% via the ED, Dr. Landis said.

Historically, EDs have been resistant to HCV screening programs, Dr. Landis said, but with the model used in the present study, which relied upon a full-time staff member in each ED who was employed by the infectious disease or hepatology department, no ED resources were needed.

Participants were willing adults who had reliable contact information. Patients were excluded if they were non–English speaking, incarcerated, enrolled or expected to enroll in another clinical study which excludes coenrollment, planned to move out of the region in the next 6 months, admitted to the ED with an acute life-threatening illness, or admitted to the ED for sexual assault. The program had three objectives: Screening, linkage to care, and treatment, all of which were coordinated by the aforementioned case manager.

To date, 4,182 patients have been screened, 936 have been enrolled, 95 have tested positive for HCV RNA, 32 have been linked with care, and 19 have been treated.

“So you can see, a lot of squeeze for a just a little bit of juice here,” Dr. Landis said, referring to the relatively low number of treated patients, compared with how many were screened.

The prevalence of HCV infection based on RNA testing was 2%, though one hospital had a rate of 5%. “This [prevalence] compares to, but is maybe slightly less than, the prevalence seen in others studies based in the emergency department,” Dr. Landis said. “The thought is, not all emergency departments are equal in terms of the patient population that they serve.”

Data analysis showed that the overall linkage to care was 36%. “This is still suboptimal, from my perspective,” Dr. Landis said, “but it does compare with several other ED-based studies.”

A closer look at the data showed that linkage was not uniform across the population. Among patients with homes, linkage to care was 59%, compared with 20% for patients who were homeless (P = .02).

“Ultimately, we need to tailor our approaches for linking homeless patients differently than patients who are not homeless,” Dr. Landis said.

Patients who reported no injection-drug use had a linkage to care of 50%, which was numerically higher than the rate of 20% among users of injection drugs; this difference was not statistically significant, which Dr. Landis attributed to insufficient population size. Similarly, younger patients showed numerical trends toward lower linkage to care.

“Future work will attempt to optimize linkage to care strategies based on patient demographic factors, such as active injection drug use or homelessness,” Dr. Landis said.

During discussion, a conference attendee from the United States expressed skepticism of the program’s merits.

“I may be a glass-half-empty person, but is it worth all this effort?” the attendee asked. “In all honesty, you treated a few dozen [patients] for 180,000 visits [per year]. I’m really not sure it’s worth those efforts, and I’m wondering if those efforts could be placed in different areas, especially for a higher yield.”

“Point well taken,” Dr. Landis said. “I think that was the purpose of the study, to see if the emergency department is a place to screen and link patients to care, and we’re trying to optimize that. Remember, there were 4,000 patients, but for many of those, it took literally a minute to screen them.”

An attendee from Australia offered a slightly more positive take on the findings, followed by a suggestion to improve linkage in marginalized populations.

“I’m not sure I’d be pessimistic,” the attendee said. “I think you ought to be commended for getting that number of people to link, because it is very difficult when we are looking at linking people from a hospital-based setting who actually live in the community and suffer from homelessness and mental health issues and incarceration and a whole range of other things. ... Maybe we need to change our idea of having these centralized silos where people are referred, and go out into the community, much like [tuberculosis] clinics used to do, and track people down.”

The study was funded by Gilead. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with HighTide Therapeutics, Intercept, AbbVie, and others.

SOURCE: Landis CS et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 168.

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Hepatitis B debrief: Key themes that emerged at AASLD

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Wed, 11/20/2019 - 12:21

– Some of the most notable abstracts presented here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases dealt with key topics including the natural history of hepatitis B virus, novel treatment approaches, and prevention, according to Marc Ghany, MD.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Marc Ghany

During a special hepatitis debriefing session held on the last day of the conference, Dr. Ghany reviewed his key selections in hepatitis B virus (HBV) research, including the following:
 

Natural history

Steatohepatitis may worsen HBV-related liver injury, according to results of an analysis of liver biopsies from adult patients enrolled in a North American cohort study (Abstract 162). Investigators found that steatohepatitis was associated with a 1.6-fold increased risk of advanced fibrosis.

“For all patients with hepatitis B, I think it’s important to screen and manage metabolic abnormalities to prevent liver disease progression,” said Dr. Ghany, who is with the Liver Diseases Branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.

Risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with chronic hepatitis B was evaluated in two notable studies, Dr. Ghany said, including one that found no difference in risk of HCC development among white patients who received long-term entecavir versus those who received long-term tenofovir (Abstract 454). This stands in contrast to a previous and controversial finding, according to investigators, that HCC incidence was lower in Asian patients treated with tenofovir versus those treated with entecavir.

In the other study, investigators found that dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) was associated with a lower risk of HCC versus aspirin monotherapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B (Abstract 934). Antiplatelet therapy was associated with a near 20% reduction in HCC risk, while DAPT as compared with aspirin monotherapy was linked to a near 30% reduction. “These are very provocative findings,” Dr. Ghany said. “Of course they need to be confirmed, but if so, may open new avenues of HCC chemoprevention.”
 

Novel therapies

Several new and promising drugs are undergoing clinical trials, including JNJ-64530440 (JNJ-0440), a novel class N capsid assembly modulator. In phase 1a data presented here at The Liver Meeting, the treatment was safe, well tolerated, and resulted in potent inhibition of viral replication (Abstract 0089). “We await further studies on its effect on functional cure,” Dr. Ghany told attendees.

Another treatment to watch is GSK3389404 (GSK404), a liver-targeted antisense oligonucleotide; in a phase 2 placebo-controlled study in patients with chronic hepatitis B on stable nucleos(t)ide therapy, this treatment had acceptable safety and produced dose-dependent declines in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), according to investigators (Abstract 0695). Dr. Ghany said this constitutes “proof of principle” that antisense oligonucleotides can decrease HBsAg levels.

In a phase 2 randomized, placebo-controlled study in virally suppressed adults with chronic hepatitis B, the toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8) agonist GS-9688 was safe and well tolerated, and resulted in dose-dependent pharmacodynamic changes, with 5% of patients experiencing a 1 log10 IU/mL or greater decline in HBsAg levels or an HBsAg loss by week 24 (Abstract 0697). This is a “promising approach” that merits further study, according to Dr. Ghany.
 

 

 

Prevention: Vaccination and screening

A trivalent HBV vaccine is superior to monovalent vaccine, according to results from the double-blind, randomized, controlled, phase 3 PROTECT study presented here at the meeting (Abstract LP13). Known as Sci-B-Vac, the mammalian cell-derived trivalent vaccine had higher response rates versus the recombinant monovalent vaccine Engerix-B in difficult-to-vaccinate populations, according to Dr. Ghany.

A separate report based on a national health insurance cohort study in Korea demonstrated that regular follow-up, that is to say, every 3-6 months, significantly reduced liver cancer–related mortality (Abstract 0159). Patients compliant with screening in the study not only had a 44% reduction in risk of death from HCC, but also were more likely to receive curative treatments (23.1% versus 15.1%). “Notwithstanding the limitations or cohort studies, I think these data reinforce the need to screen patients with chronic hepatitis B,” Dr. Ghany said.

He provided no disclosures in his presentation.

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– Some of the most notable abstracts presented here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases dealt with key topics including the natural history of hepatitis B virus, novel treatment approaches, and prevention, according to Marc Ghany, MD.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Marc Ghany

During a special hepatitis debriefing session held on the last day of the conference, Dr. Ghany reviewed his key selections in hepatitis B virus (HBV) research, including the following:
 

Natural history

Steatohepatitis may worsen HBV-related liver injury, according to results of an analysis of liver biopsies from adult patients enrolled in a North American cohort study (Abstract 162). Investigators found that steatohepatitis was associated with a 1.6-fold increased risk of advanced fibrosis.

“For all patients with hepatitis B, I think it’s important to screen and manage metabolic abnormalities to prevent liver disease progression,” said Dr. Ghany, who is with the Liver Diseases Branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.

Risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with chronic hepatitis B was evaluated in two notable studies, Dr. Ghany said, including one that found no difference in risk of HCC development among white patients who received long-term entecavir versus those who received long-term tenofovir (Abstract 454). This stands in contrast to a previous and controversial finding, according to investigators, that HCC incidence was lower in Asian patients treated with tenofovir versus those treated with entecavir.

In the other study, investigators found that dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) was associated with a lower risk of HCC versus aspirin monotherapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B (Abstract 934). Antiplatelet therapy was associated with a near 20% reduction in HCC risk, while DAPT as compared with aspirin monotherapy was linked to a near 30% reduction. “These are very provocative findings,” Dr. Ghany said. “Of course they need to be confirmed, but if so, may open new avenues of HCC chemoprevention.”
 

Novel therapies

Several new and promising drugs are undergoing clinical trials, including JNJ-64530440 (JNJ-0440), a novel class N capsid assembly modulator. In phase 1a data presented here at The Liver Meeting, the treatment was safe, well tolerated, and resulted in potent inhibition of viral replication (Abstract 0089). “We await further studies on its effect on functional cure,” Dr. Ghany told attendees.

Another treatment to watch is GSK3389404 (GSK404), a liver-targeted antisense oligonucleotide; in a phase 2 placebo-controlled study in patients with chronic hepatitis B on stable nucleos(t)ide therapy, this treatment had acceptable safety and produced dose-dependent declines in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), according to investigators (Abstract 0695). Dr. Ghany said this constitutes “proof of principle” that antisense oligonucleotides can decrease HBsAg levels.

In a phase 2 randomized, placebo-controlled study in virally suppressed adults with chronic hepatitis B, the toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8) agonist GS-9688 was safe and well tolerated, and resulted in dose-dependent pharmacodynamic changes, with 5% of patients experiencing a 1 log10 IU/mL or greater decline in HBsAg levels or an HBsAg loss by week 24 (Abstract 0697). This is a “promising approach” that merits further study, according to Dr. Ghany.
 

 

 

Prevention: Vaccination and screening

A trivalent HBV vaccine is superior to monovalent vaccine, according to results from the double-blind, randomized, controlled, phase 3 PROTECT study presented here at the meeting (Abstract LP13). Known as Sci-B-Vac, the mammalian cell-derived trivalent vaccine had higher response rates versus the recombinant monovalent vaccine Engerix-B in difficult-to-vaccinate populations, according to Dr. Ghany.

A separate report based on a national health insurance cohort study in Korea demonstrated that regular follow-up, that is to say, every 3-6 months, significantly reduced liver cancer–related mortality (Abstract 0159). Patients compliant with screening in the study not only had a 44% reduction in risk of death from HCC, but also were more likely to receive curative treatments (23.1% versus 15.1%). “Notwithstanding the limitations or cohort studies, I think these data reinforce the need to screen patients with chronic hepatitis B,” Dr. Ghany said.

He provided no disclosures in his presentation.

– Some of the most notable abstracts presented here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases dealt with key topics including the natural history of hepatitis B virus, novel treatment approaches, and prevention, according to Marc Ghany, MD.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Marc Ghany

During a special hepatitis debriefing session held on the last day of the conference, Dr. Ghany reviewed his key selections in hepatitis B virus (HBV) research, including the following:
 

Natural history

Steatohepatitis may worsen HBV-related liver injury, according to results of an analysis of liver biopsies from adult patients enrolled in a North American cohort study (Abstract 162). Investigators found that steatohepatitis was associated with a 1.6-fold increased risk of advanced fibrosis.

“For all patients with hepatitis B, I think it’s important to screen and manage metabolic abnormalities to prevent liver disease progression,” said Dr. Ghany, who is with the Liver Diseases Branch of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.

Risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with chronic hepatitis B was evaluated in two notable studies, Dr. Ghany said, including one that found no difference in risk of HCC development among white patients who received long-term entecavir versus those who received long-term tenofovir (Abstract 454). This stands in contrast to a previous and controversial finding, according to investigators, that HCC incidence was lower in Asian patients treated with tenofovir versus those treated with entecavir.

In the other study, investigators found that dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) was associated with a lower risk of HCC versus aspirin monotherapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B (Abstract 934). Antiplatelet therapy was associated with a near 20% reduction in HCC risk, while DAPT as compared with aspirin monotherapy was linked to a near 30% reduction. “These are very provocative findings,” Dr. Ghany said. “Of course they need to be confirmed, but if so, may open new avenues of HCC chemoprevention.”
 

Novel therapies

Several new and promising drugs are undergoing clinical trials, including JNJ-64530440 (JNJ-0440), a novel class N capsid assembly modulator. In phase 1a data presented here at The Liver Meeting, the treatment was safe, well tolerated, and resulted in potent inhibition of viral replication (Abstract 0089). “We await further studies on its effect on functional cure,” Dr. Ghany told attendees.

Another treatment to watch is GSK3389404 (GSK404), a liver-targeted antisense oligonucleotide; in a phase 2 placebo-controlled study in patients with chronic hepatitis B on stable nucleos(t)ide therapy, this treatment had acceptable safety and produced dose-dependent declines in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), according to investigators (Abstract 0695). Dr. Ghany said this constitutes “proof of principle” that antisense oligonucleotides can decrease HBsAg levels.

In a phase 2 randomized, placebo-controlled study in virally suppressed adults with chronic hepatitis B, the toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8) agonist GS-9688 was safe and well tolerated, and resulted in dose-dependent pharmacodynamic changes, with 5% of patients experiencing a 1 log10 IU/mL or greater decline in HBsAg levels or an HBsAg loss by week 24 (Abstract 0697). This is a “promising approach” that merits further study, according to Dr. Ghany.
 

 

 

Prevention: Vaccination and screening

A trivalent HBV vaccine is superior to monovalent vaccine, according to results from the double-blind, randomized, controlled, phase 3 PROTECT study presented here at the meeting (Abstract LP13). Known as Sci-B-Vac, the mammalian cell-derived trivalent vaccine had higher response rates versus the recombinant monovalent vaccine Engerix-B in difficult-to-vaccinate populations, according to Dr. Ghany.

A separate report based on a national health insurance cohort study in Korea demonstrated that regular follow-up, that is to say, every 3-6 months, significantly reduced liver cancer–related mortality (Abstract 0159). Patients compliant with screening in the study not only had a 44% reduction in risk of death from HCC, but also were more likely to receive curative treatments (23.1% versus 15.1%). “Notwithstanding the limitations or cohort studies, I think these data reinforce the need to screen patients with chronic hepatitis B,” Dr. Ghany said.

He provided no disclosures in his presentation.

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REPORTING FROM THE LIVER MEETING 2019

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HVPG predicts clinical benefit after sustained virologic response

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Tue, 12/17/2019 - 15:29

 

– For patients with hepatitis C virus infection who achieve sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapy, changes in hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) predict clinical benefit, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Mattias Mandorfer

This finding will allow investigators to use HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for etiologic therapies, which could accelerate future research, reported lead author Mattias Mandorfer, MD, PhD, of the Medical University of Vienna and colleagues.

“Sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapies ameliorates portal hypertension,” Dr. Mandorfer said during a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “[Previous research has shown that] nearly two-thirds of patients with pretreatment clinically significant portal hypertension had an HVPG decrease above or equal to 10%, which denotes a clinically meaningful change according to current recommendations. However, evidence is limited to studies evaluating the impact of HVPG response to nonselective beta-blockers, and nonselective beta-blockers have a completely different mode of action than etiological therapies. Accordingly, it is unclear whether a decrease in HVPG after the cure of hepatitis C translates into the same clinical benefit.”

To find out, the investigators enrolled 90 patients with hepatitis C virus who had an elevated HVPG of 6 mm Hg or higher prior to sustained virologic response. Before and after interferon-free therapy, patients underwent paired HVPG measurement. In addition, to evaluate noninvasive methods of HVPG assessment, transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio testing were performed.

Analysis showed that HVPG measurements after, but not before, interferon-free therapy predicted liver decompensation. Specifically, HVPG was associated with an 18% increased risk of hepatic decompensation per mm Hg. After 3 years, 40.1% of patients with posttherapy HVPG measurements of 16 mm Hg or more developed hepatic decompensation, an event that occurred in none of the patients with a posttherapy HVPG of 9 mm Hg or less. Among patients who had a baseline HVPG of 10 mm Hg or more, which is considered a clinically significant level of portal hypertension, a decrease in HVPG of least 10% after therapy was associated with a similar level of protection against decompensation, compared with those who had no such decrease (2.5% vs. 31.8%).

While the two noninvasive methods (transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio) were able to detect clinically significant portal hypertension (at least 10 mm Hg), they were not accurate enough to detect the protective 10% drop in HVPG.

“These results support the concept of applying HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for interventions that primarily aim at decreasing intrahepatic resistance (e.g., etiological therapies),” the investigators concluded in their abstract.

Jaime Bosch, MD, PhD, of the University of Barcelona provided some expert insight into the findings.

“The significance of the work is very important,” Dr. Bosch said in a public comment. “This provides, for the first time, firm evidence that HVPG can be taken as a surrogate endpoint ... for studies involving portal hypertension and cirrhosis in general.”

In an interview, Dr. Bosch elaborated on this statement. “The problem is, it takes a long time to get rid of cirrhosis [after sustained virologic response], and meanwhile, as long as portal hypertension remains, there is a risk for decompensation, so the patients cannot be said to be cured. They are cured of the infection, of the consequences of the infection, but it may take 10 years or more [to resolve cirrhosis], so the patient needs clinical surveillance and treatment after curing the cause of the disease.

“An academic consequence of these findings is that they’ve proved that decreasing HVPG by means of achieving sustained virologic response is followed by an improvement in prognosis. ... And when you can influence prognosis, and the influence in prognosis is reflected by a measurement independent from the way that we achieve this effect on the measurement, it means that this measurement is robust and now has to be used as a surrogate marker of resolution of cirrhosis.”

The study was funded by the Medical Scientific Fund of the city of Vienna. The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Gilead, and others.

SOURCE: Mandorfer M et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 146.

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– For patients with hepatitis C virus infection who achieve sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapy, changes in hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) predict clinical benefit, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Mattias Mandorfer

This finding will allow investigators to use HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for etiologic therapies, which could accelerate future research, reported lead author Mattias Mandorfer, MD, PhD, of the Medical University of Vienna and colleagues.

“Sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapies ameliorates portal hypertension,” Dr. Mandorfer said during a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “[Previous research has shown that] nearly two-thirds of patients with pretreatment clinically significant portal hypertension had an HVPG decrease above or equal to 10%, which denotes a clinically meaningful change according to current recommendations. However, evidence is limited to studies evaluating the impact of HVPG response to nonselective beta-blockers, and nonselective beta-blockers have a completely different mode of action than etiological therapies. Accordingly, it is unclear whether a decrease in HVPG after the cure of hepatitis C translates into the same clinical benefit.”

To find out, the investigators enrolled 90 patients with hepatitis C virus who had an elevated HVPG of 6 mm Hg or higher prior to sustained virologic response. Before and after interferon-free therapy, patients underwent paired HVPG measurement. In addition, to evaluate noninvasive methods of HVPG assessment, transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio testing were performed.

Analysis showed that HVPG measurements after, but not before, interferon-free therapy predicted liver decompensation. Specifically, HVPG was associated with an 18% increased risk of hepatic decompensation per mm Hg. After 3 years, 40.1% of patients with posttherapy HVPG measurements of 16 mm Hg or more developed hepatic decompensation, an event that occurred in none of the patients with a posttherapy HVPG of 9 mm Hg or less. Among patients who had a baseline HVPG of 10 mm Hg or more, which is considered a clinically significant level of portal hypertension, a decrease in HVPG of least 10% after therapy was associated with a similar level of protection against decompensation, compared with those who had no such decrease (2.5% vs. 31.8%).

While the two noninvasive methods (transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio) were able to detect clinically significant portal hypertension (at least 10 mm Hg), they were not accurate enough to detect the protective 10% drop in HVPG.

“These results support the concept of applying HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for interventions that primarily aim at decreasing intrahepatic resistance (e.g., etiological therapies),” the investigators concluded in their abstract.

Jaime Bosch, MD, PhD, of the University of Barcelona provided some expert insight into the findings.

“The significance of the work is very important,” Dr. Bosch said in a public comment. “This provides, for the first time, firm evidence that HVPG can be taken as a surrogate endpoint ... for studies involving portal hypertension and cirrhosis in general.”

In an interview, Dr. Bosch elaborated on this statement. “The problem is, it takes a long time to get rid of cirrhosis [after sustained virologic response], and meanwhile, as long as portal hypertension remains, there is a risk for decompensation, so the patients cannot be said to be cured. They are cured of the infection, of the consequences of the infection, but it may take 10 years or more [to resolve cirrhosis], so the patient needs clinical surveillance and treatment after curing the cause of the disease.

“An academic consequence of these findings is that they’ve proved that decreasing HVPG by means of achieving sustained virologic response is followed by an improvement in prognosis. ... And when you can influence prognosis, and the influence in prognosis is reflected by a measurement independent from the way that we achieve this effect on the measurement, it means that this measurement is robust and now has to be used as a surrogate marker of resolution of cirrhosis.”

The study was funded by the Medical Scientific Fund of the city of Vienna. The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Gilead, and others.

SOURCE: Mandorfer M et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 146.

 

– For patients with hepatitis C virus infection who achieve sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapy, changes in hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) predict clinical benefit, according to investigators.

Will Pass/MDedge News
Dr. Mattias Mandorfer

This finding will allow investigators to use HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for etiologic therapies, which could accelerate future research, reported lead author Mattias Mandorfer, MD, PhD, of the Medical University of Vienna and colleagues.

“Sustained virologic response to interferon-free therapies ameliorates portal hypertension,” Dr. Mandorfer said during a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. “[Previous research has shown that] nearly two-thirds of patients with pretreatment clinically significant portal hypertension had an HVPG decrease above or equal to 10%, which denotes a clinically meaningful change according to current recommendations. However, evidence is limited to studies evaluating the impact of HVPG response to nonselective beta-blockers, and nonselective beta-blockers have a completely different mode of action than etiological therapies. Accordingly, it is unclear whether a decrease in HVPG after the cure of hepatitis C translates into the same clinical benefit.”

To find out, the investigators enrolled 90 patients with hepatitis C virus who had an elevated HVPG of 6 mm Hg or higher prior to sustained virologic response. Before and after interferon-free therapy, patients underwent paired HVPG measurement. In addition, to evaluate noninvasive methods of HVPG assessment, transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio testing were performed.

Analysis showed that HVPG measurements after, but not before, interferon-free therapy predicted liver decompensation. Specifically, HVPG was associated with an 18% increased risk of hepatic decompensation per mm Hg. After 3 years, 40.1% of patients with posttherapy HVPG measurements of 16 mm Hg or more developed hepatic decompensation, an event that occurred in none of the patients with a posttherapy HVPG of 9 mm Hg or less. Among patients who had a baseline HVPG of 10 mm Hg or more, which is considered a clinically significant level of portal hypertension, a decrease in HVPG of least 10% after therapy was associated with a similar level of protection against decompensation, compared with those who had no such decrease (2.5% vs. 31.8%).

While the two noninvasive methods (transient elastography and von Willebrand factor to platelet count ratio) were able to detect clinically significant portal hypertension (at least 10 mm Hg), they were not accurate enough to detect the protective 10% drop in HVPG.

“These results support the concept of applying HVPG as a surrogate endpoint for interventions that primarily aim at decreasing intrahepatic resistance (e.g., etiological therapies),” the investigators concluded in their abstract.

Jaime Bosch, MD, PhD, of the University of Barcelona provided some expert insight into the findings.

“The significance of the work is very important,” Dr. Bosch said in a public comment. “This provides, for the first time, firm evidence that HVPG can be taken as a surrogate endpoint ... for studies involving portal hypertension and cirrhosis in general.”

In an interview, Dr. Bosch elaborated on this statement. “The problem is, it takes a long time to get rid of cirrhosis [after sustained virologic response], and meanwhile, as long as portal hypertension remains, there is a risk for decompensation, so the patients cannot be said to be cured. They are cured of the infection, of the consequences of the infection, but it may take 10 years or more [to resolve cirrhosis], so the patient needs clinical surveillance and treatment after curing the cause of the disease.

“An academic consequence of these findings is that they’ve proved that decreasing HVPG by means of achieving sustained virologic response is followed by an improvement in prognosis. ... And when you can influence prognosis, and the influence in prognosis is reflected by a measurement independent from the way that we achieve this effect on the measurement, it means that this measurement is robust and now has to be used as a surrogate marker of resolution of cirrhosis.”

The study was funded by the Medical Scientific Fund of the city of Vienna. The investigators disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Gilead, and others.

SOURCE: Mandorfer M et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 146.

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Short-course DAA therapy may prevent hepatitis transmission in transplant patients

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Tue, 11/19/2019 - 10:29

– A short course of direct-acting antiviral therapy combined with ezetimibe prevented or rapidly cured hepatitis C virus infection in transplant recipients receiving organs from infected donors, results of a recent study show.

The regimen, given right before transplantation and for 7 days afterward, reduced the cost of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy and allowed patients to complete hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy before hospital discharge, according to authors of the study, which was presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

If confirmed in subsequent studies, this regimen could become the standard of care for donor-positive, recipient-negative transplantation, said lead study author Jordan J. Feld, MD, R. Phelan Chair in translational liver disease research at the University of Toronto and research director at the Toronto Centre for Liver Disease.

“Transplant recipients are understandably nervous about accepting organs from people with HCV infection,” said Dr. Feld in a press release. “This very short therapy allows them to leave hospital free of HCV, which is a huge benefit. Not only is it cheaper and likely safer, but the patients really prefer not having to worry about HCV with all of the other challenges after a transplant.”

Results of this study come at a time when the proportion of overdose death organ donors is on the rise, from just 1% in 2000 to 15% in 2016, according to Dr. Feld. Overdose deaths account for the largest percentage of HCV-infected donors, most of whom are young and often otherwise healthy, he added.

Recipients of HCV-infected organs can be cured after transplant as a number of studies have previously shown. However, preventing transmission would be better than cure, Dr. Feld said, in part because of issues with drug-drug interactions, potential for relapse, and issues with procuring the drugs after transplant.

Accordingly, Dr. Feld and colleagues sought to evaluate “preemptive” treatment with DAA therapy combined with ezetimibe, which they said has been shown to inhibit HCV entry blockers. The recipients, who were listed for heart, lung, kidney, or kidney-pancreas transplant, were given glecaprevir/pibrentasvir plus ezetimibe starting 6-12 hours prior to transplantation, and then daily for 7 days.

The median age was 36 years for the 16 donors reported, and 61 years for the 25 recipients. Most recipients (12 patients) had a lung transplant, while 8 had a heart transplant, 4 had a kidney transplant, and 1 had a kidney-pancreas transplant.

There were no virologic failures, according to the investigators, with sustained virologic response (SVR) after 6 weeks in 7 patients, and SVR after 12 weeks in the remaining 18. Three recipients did have detectable HCV RNA, though all cleared and had SVR at 6 weeks in one case, and SVR at 12 weeks in the other two, according to the investigators’ report.

Of 22 serious adverse events noted in the study, 1 was considered treatment related, according to the report, and there were 2 deaths among lung transplant patients, caused by sepsis in 1 case to sepsis and subarachnoid hemorrhage in another.

It’s not clear whether ezetimibe is needed in this short-duration regimen, but in any case, it is well tolerated and inexpensive, and so there is “minimal downside” to include it, Dr. Feld and coinvestigators wrote in their report.

Dr. Feld reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Abbott, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Feld JJ et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 38.

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– A short course of direct-acting antiviral therapy combined with ezetimibe prevented or rapidly cured hepatitis C virus infection in transplant recipients receiving organs from infected donors, results of a recent study show.

The regimen, given right before transplantation and for 7 days afterward, reduced the cost of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy and allowed patients to complete hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy before hospital discharge, according to authors of the study, which was presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

If confirmed in subsequent studies, this regimen could become the standard of care for donor-positive, recipient-negative transplantation, said lead study author Jordan J. Feld, MD, R. Phelan Chair in translational liver disease research at the University of Toronto and research director at the Toronto Centre for Liver Disease.

“Transplant recipients are understandably nervous about accepting organs from people with HCV infection,” said Dr. Feld in a press release. “This very short therapy allows them to leave hospital free of HCV, which is a huge benefit. Not only is it cheaper and likely safer, but the patients really prefer not having to worry about HCV with all of the other challenges after a transplant.”

Results of this study come at a time when the proportion of overdose death organ donors is on the rise, from just 1% in 2000 to 15% in 2016, according to Dr. Feld. Overdose deaths account for the largest percentage of HCV-infected donors, most of whom are young and often otherwise healthy, he added.

Recipients of HCV-infected organs can be cured after transplant as a number of studies have previously shown. However, preventing transmission would be better than cure, Dr. Feld said, in part because of issues with drug-drug interactions, potential for relapse, and issues with procuring the drugs after transplant.

Accordingly, Dr. Feld and colleagues sought to evaluate “preemptive” treatment with DAA therapy combined with ezetimibe, which they said has been shown to inhibit HCV entry blockers. The recipients, who were listed for heart, lung, kidney, or kidney-pancreas transplant, were given glecaprevir/pibrentasvir plus ezetimibe starting 6-12 hours prior to transplantation, and then daily for 7 days.

The median age was 36 years for the 16 donors reported, and 61 years for the 25 recipients. Most recipients (12 patients) had a lung transplant, while 8 had a heart transplant, 4 had a kidney transplant, and 1 had a kidney-pancreas transplant.

There were no virologic failures, according to the investigators, with sustained virologic response (SVR) after 6 weeks in 7 patients, and SVR after 12 weeks in the remaining 18. Three recipients did have detectable HCV RNA, though all cleared and had SVR at 6 weeks in one case, and SVR at 12 weeks in the other two, according to the investigators’ report.

Of 22 serious adverse events noted in the study, 1 was considered treatment related, according to the report, and there were 2 deaths among lung transplant patients, caused by sepsis in 1 case to sepsis and subarachnoid hemorrhage in another.

It’s not clear whether ezetimibe is needed in this short-duration regimen, but in any case, it is well tolerated and inexpensive, and so there is “minimal downside” to include it, Dr. Feld and coinvestigators wrote in their report.

Dr. Feld reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Abbott, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Feld JJ et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 38.

– A short course of direct-acting antiviral therapy combined with ezetimibe prevented or rapidly cured hepatitis C virus infection in transplant recipients receiving organs from infected donors, results of a recent study show.

The regimen, given right before transplantation and for 7 days afterward, reduced the cost of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy and allowed patients to complete hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy before hospital discharge, according to authors of the study, which was presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

If confirmed in subsequent studies, this regimen could become the standard of care for donor-positive, recipient-negative transplantation, said lead study author Jordan J. Feld, MD, R. Phelan Chair in translational liver disease research at the University of Toronto and research director at the Toronto Centre for Liver Disease.

“Transplant recipients are understandably nervous about accepting organs from people with HCV infection,” said Dr. Feld in a press release. “This very short therapy allows them to leave hospital free of HCV, which is a huge benefit. Not only is it cheaper and likely safer, but the patients really prefer not having to worry about HCV with all of the other challenges after a transplant.”

Results of this study come at a time when the proportion of overdose death organ donors is on the rise, from just 1% in 2000 to 15% in 2016, according to Dr. Feld. Overdose deaths account for the largest percentage of HCV-infected donors, most of whom are young and often otherwise healthy, he added.

Recipients of HCV-infected organs can be cured after transplant as a number of studies have previously shown. However, preventing transmission would be better than cure, Dr. Feld said, in part because of issues with drug-drug interactions, potential for relapse, and issues with procuring the drugs after transplant.

Accordingly, Dr. Feld and colleagues sought to evaluate “preemptive” treatment with DAA therapy combined with ezetimibe, which they said has been shown to inhibit HCV entry blockers. The recipients, who were listed for heart, lung, kidney, or kidney-pancreas transplant, were given glecaprevir/pibrentasvir plus ezetimibe starting 6-12 hours prior to transplantation, and then daily for 7 days.

The median age was 36 years for the 16 donors reported, and 61 years for the 25 recipients. Most recipients (12 patients) had a lung transplant, while 8 had a heart transplant, 4 had a kidney transplant, and 1 had a kidney-pancreas transplant.

There were no virologic failures, according to the investigators, with sustained virologic response (SVR) after 6 weeks in 7 patients, and SVR after 12 weeks in the remaining 18. Three recipients did have detectable HCV RNA, though all cleared and had SVR at 6 weeks in one case, and SVR at 12 weeks in the other two, according to the investigators’ report.

Of 22 serious adverse events noted in the study, 1 was considered treatment related, according to the report, and there were 2 deaths among lung transplant patients, caused by sepsis in 1 case to sepsis and subarachnoid hemorrhage in another.

It’s not clear whether ezetimibe is needed in this short-duration regimen, but in any case, it is well tolerated and inexpensive, and so there is “minimal downside” to include it, Dr. Feld and coinvestigators wrote in their report.

Dr. Feld reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Abbott, Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Feld JJ et al. The Liver Meeting 2019, Abstract 38.

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Level of hepatitis B core–related antigen is risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma

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Tue, 12/03/2019 - 08:31

A high level of hepatitis B core–related antigen (HBcrAg) was a complementary risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma, according to the results of a retrospective cohort study of more than 2,600 noncirrhotic adults with untreated hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection with a median of 16 years of follow-up.

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

“Patients with an intermediate viral load and high levels of HBcrAg had a risk for hepatocellular carcinoma that did not differ significantly from that of patients with a high viral load. [An] HBcrAg of 10 KU/mL may serve as a novel biomarker for the management of patients with intermediate viral load in our clinical practice,” wrote Tai-Chung Tseng, MD, PhD, of National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei and associates in Gastroenterology.

Deciding whether to start antiviral therapy is controversial for some patients with HBV infection. Typically, monitoring without treatment is recommended for patients who have both low hepatitis B surface antigen levels (less than 1,000 IU/mL) and low levels of HBV DNA (less than 2,000 IU/mL), and early antiviral therapy is recommended for patients who have high levels of HBV DNA (20,000 IU/mL or more). However, there is no clear evidence that early antiviral therapy benefits patients who have intermediate levels of HBV DNA (2,000-19,999 IU/mL) and are negative for hepatitis B e antigen. Biomarkers for risk-stratifying these patients also are lacking, the researchers noted.

Therefore, they studied a cohort of 2,666 adults who had tested positive for hepatitis B surface antigen and were followed at National Taiwan University Hospital from 1985 through 2000. No patient had cirrhosis at baseline. In all, 209 patients developed hepatocellular carcinoma, yielding an incidence rate of 4.91 cases per 1,000 person-years.

Hepatitis B core–related antigen level remained an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma after accounting for age, sex, serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level, FIB-4 index, hepatitis B e antigen status, hepatitis B genotype (B, C, or undetermined), and HBV DNA level. Compared with patients whose HBcrAg level was less than 10 KU, a level of 10-99 KU/mL was associated with a nearly threefold increase in risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 2.93; 95% CI, 1.67-4.80), and this risk rose even further as HBcrAg levels increased.

In the subgroup of patients who tested negative for hepatitis B e antigen, had an intermediate HBV DNA load (2,000-19,999 IU/mL), and had a normal baseline ALT level (less than 40 U/L), a high HBcrAg level (10 KU/mL or more) was tied to a nearly fivefold greater risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 4.89; 95% CI, 2.18-10.93). This approximated the risk that is observed with high viral load (20,000 IU/mL), the researchers noted. In contrast, a low HBcrAg level was associated with a risk similar to that of minimal risk carriers (annual incidence rate, 0.10%; 95% CI, 0.04%-0.24%).

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to report HBcrAg level as an independent viral biomarker to stratify hepatocellular risks in a large number of patients with intermediate viral load,” the researchers commented. Among the study limitations, 412 patients received antiviral therapy during follow-up. “This is a retrospective cohort study including Asian HBV patients with genotype B or C infection,” the investigators added. “It is unclear whether this finding could be extrapolated to populations with other HBV genotype infections. Nonetheless, we had a sound cohort, as several HBsAg-related clinical findings based on our cohort have already been validated by other prospective cohort studies, implying that our data were unlikely to be biased by the study design.”

Funders included National Taiwan University Hospital, the Ministry of Science and Technology, Executive Yuan in Taiwan, and National Health Research Institutes. The researchers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Tseng T-C et al. Gastroenterology. 2019 Aug 27. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.08.028.

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A high level of hepatitis B core–related antigen (HBcrAg) was a complementary risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma, according to the results of a retrospective cohort study of more than 2,600 noncirrhotic adults with untreated hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection with a median of 16 years of follow-up.

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

“Patients with an intermediate viral load and high levels of HBcrAg had a risk for hepatocellular carcinoma that did not differ significantly from that of patients with a high viral load. [An] HBcrAg of 10 KU/mL may serve as a novel biomarker for the management of patients with intermediate viral load in our clinical practice,” wrote Tai-Chung Tseng, MD, PhD, of National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei and associates in Gastroenterology.

Deciding whether to start antiviral therapy is controversial for some patients with HBV infection. Typically, monitoring without treatment is recommended for patients who have both low hepatitis B surface antigen levels (less than 1,000 IU/mL) and low levels of HBV DNA (less than 2,000 IU/mL), and early antiviral therapy is recommended for patients who have high levels of HBV DNA (20,000 IU/mL or more). However, there is no clear evidence that early antiviral therapy benefits patients who have intermediate levels of HBV DNA (2,000-19,999 IU/mL) and are negative for hepatitis B e antigen. Biomarkers for risk-stratifying these patients also are lacking, the researchers noted.

Therefore, they studied a cohort of 2,666 adults who had tested positive for hepatitis B surface antigen and were followed at National Taiwan University Hospital from 1985 through 2000. No patient had cirrhosis at baseline. In all, 209 patients developed hepatocellular carcinoma, yielding an incidence rate of 4.91 cases per 1,000 person-years.

Hepatitis B core–related antigen level remained an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma after accounting for age, sex, serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level, FIB-4 index, hepatitis B e antigen status, hepatitis B genotype (B, C, or undetermined), and HBV DNA level. Compared with patients whose HBcrAg level was less than 10 KU, a level of 10-99 KU/mL was associated with a nearly threefold increase in risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 2.93; 95% CI, 1.67-4.80), and this risk rose even further as HBcrAg levels increased.

In the subgroup of patients who tested negative for hepatitis B e antigen, had an intermediate HBV DNA load (2,000-19,999 IU/mL), and had a normal baseline ALT level (less than 40 U/L), a high HBcrAg level (10 KU/mL or more) was tied to a nearly fivefold greater risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 4.89; 95% CI, 2.18-10.93). This approximated the risk that is observed with high viral load (20,000 IU/mL), the researchers noted. In contrast, a low HBcrAg level was associated with a risk similar to that of minimal risk carriers (annual incidence rate, 0.10%; 95% CI, 0.04%-0.24%).

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to report HBcrAg level as an independent viral biomarker to stratify hepatocellular risks in a large number of patients with intermediate viral load,” the researchers commented. Among the study limitations, 412 patients received antiviral therapy during follow-up. “This is a retrospective cohort study including Asian HBV patients with genotype B or C infection,” the investigators added. “It is unclear whether this finding could be extrapolated to populations with other HBV genotype infections. Nonetheless, we had a sound cohort, as several HBsAg-related clinical findings based on our cohort have already been validated by other prospective cohort studies, implying that our data were unlikely to be biased by the study design.”

Funders included National Taiwan University Hospital, the Ministry of Science and Technology, Executive Yuan in Taiwan, and National Health Research Institutes. The researchers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Tseng T-C et al. Gastroenterology. 2019 Aug 27. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.08.028.

A high level of hepatitis B core–related antigen (HBcrAg) was a complementary risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma, according to the results of a retrospective cohort study of more than 2,600 noncirrhotic adults with untreated hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection with a median of 16 years of follow-up.

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

“Patients with an intermediate viral load and high levels of HBcrAg had a risk for hepatocellular carcinoma that did not differ significantly from that of patients with a high viral load. [An] HBcrAg of 10 KU/mL may serve as a novel biomarker for the management of patients with intermediate viral load in our clinical practice,” wrote Tai-Chung Tseng, MD, PhD, of National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei and associates in Gastroenterology.

Deciding whether to start antiviral therapy is controversial for some patients with HBV infection. Typically, monitoring without treatment is recommended for patients who have both low hepatitis B surface antigen levels (less than 1,000 IU/mL) and low levels of HBV DNA (less than 2,000 IU/mL), and early antiviral therapy is recommended for patients who have high levels of HBV DNA (20,000 IU/mL or more). However, there is no clear evidence that early antiviral therapy benefits patients who have intermediate levels of HBV DNA (2,000-19,999 IU/mL) and are negative for hepatitis B e antigen. Biomarkers for risk-stratifying these patients also are lacking, the researchers noted.

Therefore, they studied a cohort of 2,666 adults who had tested positive for hepatitis B surface antigen and were followed at National Taiwan University Hospital from 1985 through 2000. No patient had cirrhosis at baseline. In all, 209 patients developed hepatocellular carcinoma, yielding an incidence rate of 4.91 cases per 1,000 person-years.

Hepatitis B core–related antigen level remained an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma after accounting for age, sex, serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level, FIB-4 index, hepatitis B e antigen status, hepatitis B genotype (B, C, or undetermined), and HBV DNA level. Compared with patients whose HBcrAg level was less than 10 KU, a level of 10-99 KU/mL was associated with a nearly threefold increase in risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 2.93; 95% CI, 1.67-4.80), and this risk rose even further as HBcrAg levels increased.

In the subgroup of patients who tested negative for hepatitis B e antigen, had an intermediate HBV DNA load (2,000-19,999 IU/mL), and had a normal baseline ALT level (less than 40 U/L), a high HBcrAg level (10 KU/mL or more) was tied to a nearly fivefold greater risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HR, 4.89; 95% CI, 2.18-10.93). This approximated the risk that is observed with high viral load (20,000 IU/mL), the researchers noted. In contrast, a low HBcrAg level was associated with a risk similar to that of minimal risk carriers (annual incidence rate, 0.10%; 95% CI, 0.04%-0.24%).

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to report HBcrAg level as an independent viral biomarker to stratify hepatocellular risks in a large number of patients with intermediate viral load,” the researchers commented. Among the study limitations, 412 patients received antiviral therapy during follow-up. “This is a retrospective cohort study including Asian HBV patients with genotype B or C infection,” the investigators added. “It is unclear whether this finding could be extrapolated to populations with other HBV genotype infections. Nonetheless, we had a sound cohort, as several HBsAg-related clinical findings based on our cohort have already been validated by other prospective cohort studies, implying that our data were unlikely to be biased by the study design.”

Funders included National Taiwan University Hospital, the Ministry of Science and Technology, Executive Yuan in Taiwan, and National Health Research Institutes. The researchers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Tseng T-C et al. Gastroenterology. 2019 Aug 27. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.08.028.

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HDV combo therapy reduces viral loads

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Fri, 11/08/2019 - 11:24

– For most patients with chronic hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection, combination therapy with lonafarnib, ritonavir, and peginterferon may significantly decrease viral loads, based on interim results from the phase IIa LIFT trial.

After 6 months of therapy, more than one-third of evaluable patients (37%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA in serum, according to lead author Christopher Koh, MD, of the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health and colleagues.

The open-label LIFT trial, which is ongoing, initially recruited 26 patients with HDV RNA who had serum levels of at least 40 IU/mL (lower limit of quantification). After starting tenofovir or entecavir, patients began a combination regimen of twice-daily oral lonafarnib (50 mg) and ritonavir (100 mg) plus weekly subcutaneous injections of Peginterferon Lambda-1a (180 mcg).

The median patient age was 40 years, with a slightly higher proportion of male participants (60%). Approximately half of the patients were of Asian descent (52%), followed by patients who were white (32%), or African (16%). The investigators reported median baseline measurements of modified histology activity index (9) and Ishak fibrosis stage (3), as well as serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (64 IU/mL), aspartate aminotransferase (47 IU/mL), hepatitis B virus DNA (less than 21 IU/mL), and log HDV RNA (4.74 IU/mL), with this latter measurement serving as a key determinant of efficacy.

After 12 weeks of therapy, the median decrease in HDV RNA among 21 evaluable patients was 3.6 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.6 to 4.2 (P less than .0001). Of these patients, 5 (24%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA, while another 5 tested below the lower limit of quantification.

Following an additional 12 weeks of therapy, 19 patients remained evaluable, among whom the median decrease in HDV RNA was 3.4 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.9 to 4.5 (P less than .0001). Seven of these patients (37%) achieved undetectable HDV RNA, whereas 3 others fell below the lower limit of quantification. Furthermore, 18 out of 19 of these patients (95%) experienced a decline in HDV RNA of more than 2 log IU/mL.

According to the investigators, the trial regimen was safe and well tolerated. Adverse events were mild to moderate; most common were anemia, hyperbilirubinemia, weight loss, and gastrointestinal issues. Doses were reduced in three patients while four others discontinued therapy prematurely.

“These interim results support continued exploration of this therapeutic combination in HDV,” the investigators concluded.

The above findings will be presented in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The investigators disclosed relationships with I-Cubed Therapeutics, Eiger BioPharmaceuticals, Riboscience, and others.

SOURCE: Koh C et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LO8.

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– For most patients with chronic hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection, combination therapy with lonafarnib, ritonavir, and peginterferon may significantly decrease viral loads, based on interim results from the phase IIa LIFT trial.

After 6 months of therapy, more than one-third of evaluable patients (37%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA in serum, according to lead author Christopher Koh, MD, of the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health and colleagues.

The open-label LIFT trial, which is ongoing, initially recruited 26 patients with HDV RNA who had serum levels of at least 40 IU/mL (lower limit of quantification). After starting tenofovir or entecavir, patients began a combination regimen of twice-daily oral lonafarnib (50 mg) and ritonavir (100 mg) plus weekly subcutaneous injections of Peginterferon Lambda-1a (180 mcg).

The median patient age was 40 years, with a slightly higher proportion of male participants (60%). Approximately half of the patients were of Asian descent (52%), followed by patients who were white (32%), or African (16%). The investigators reported median baseline measurements of modified histology activity index (9) and Ishak fibrosis stage (3), as well as serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (64 IU/mL), aspartate aminotransferase (47 IU/mL), hepatitis B virus DNA (less than 21 IU/mL), and log HDV RNA (4.74 IU/mL), with this latter measurement serving as a key determinant of efficacy.

After 12 weeks of therapy, the median decrease in HDV RNA among 21 evaluable patients was 3.6 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.6 to 4.2 (P less than .0001). Of these patients, 5 (24%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA, while another 5 tested below the lower limit of quantification.

Following an additional 12 weeks of therapy, 19 patients remained evaluable, among whom the median decrease in HDV RNA was 3.4 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.9 to 4.5 (P less than .0001). Seven of these patients (37%) achieved undetectable HDV RNA, whereas 3 others fell below the lower limit of quantification. Furthermore, 18 out of 19 of these patients (95%) experienced a decline in HDV RNA of more than 2 log IU/mL.

According to the investigators, the trial regimen was safe and well tolerated. Adverse events were mild to moderate; most common were anemia, hyperbilirubinemia, weight loss, and gastrointestinal issues. Doses were reduced in three patients while four others discontinued therapy prematurely.

“These interim results support continued exploration of this therapeutic combination in HDV,” the investigators concluded.

The above findings will be presented in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The investigators disclosed relationships with I-Cubed Therapeutics, Eiger BioPharmaceuticals, Riboscience, and others.

SOURCE: Koh C et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LO8.

– For most patients with chronic hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection, combination therapy with lonafarnib, ritonavir, and peginterferon may significantly decrease viral loads, based on interim results from the phase IIa LIFT trial.

After 6 months of therapy, more than one-third of evaluable patients (37%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA in serum, according to lead author Christopher Koh, MD, of the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the National Institutes of Health and colleagues.

The open-label LIFT trial, which is ongoing, initially recruited 26 patients with HDV RNA who had serum levels of at least 40 IU/mL (lower limit of quantification). After starting tenofovir or entecavir, patients began a combination regimen of twice-daily oral lonafarnib (50 mg) and ritonavir (100 mg) plus weekly subcutaneous injections of Peginterferon Lambda-1a (180 mcg).

The median patient age was 40 years, with a slightly higher proportion of male participants (60%). Approximately half of the patients were of Asian descent (52%), followed by patients who were white (32%), or African (16%). The investigators reported median baseline measurements of modified histology activity index (9) and Ishak fibrosis stage (3), as well as serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (64 IU/mL), aspartate aminotransferase (47 IU/mL), hepatitis B virus DNA (less than 21 IU/mL), and log HDV RNA (4.74 IU/mL), with this latter measurement serving as a key determinant of efficacy.

After 12 weeks of therapy, the median decrease in HDV RNA among 21 evaluable patients was 3.6 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.6 to 4.2 (P less than .0001). Of these patients, 5 (24%) achieved undetectable levels of HDV RNA, while another 5 tested below the lower limit of quantification.

Following an additional 12 weeks of therapy, 19 patients remained evaluable, among whom the median decrease in HDV RNA was 3.4 log IU/mL with an interquartile range from 2.9 to 4.5 (P less than .0001). Seven of these patients (37%) achieved undetectable HDV RNA, whereas 3 others fell below the lower limit of quantification. Furthermore, 18 out of 19 of these patients (95%) experienced a decline in HDV RNA of more than 2 log IU/mL.

According to the investigators, the trial regimen was safe and well tolerated. Adverse events were mild to moderate; most common were anemia, hyperbilirubinemia, weight loss, and gastrointestinal issues. Doses were reduced in three patients while four others discontinued therapy prematurely.

“These interim results support continued exploration of this therapeutic combination in HDV,” the investigators concluded.

The above findings will be presented in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The investigators disclosed relationships with I-Cubed Therapeutics, Eiger BioPharmaceuticals, Riboscience, and others.

SOURCE: Koh C et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LO8.

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REPORTING FROM THE LIVER MEETING 2019

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Key clinical point: For most patients with chronic hepatitis D virus infection, combination therapy with lonafarnib, ritonavir, and peginterferon may significantly decrease viral loads.

Major finding: After 6 months of therapy, 37% of evaluable patients achieved undetectable levels of hepatitis D virus RNA.

Study details: The phase IIa open-label LIFT trial involving 26 patients with chronic hepatitis delta virus (HDV).

Disclosures: The investigators disclosed relationships with I-Cubed Therapeutics, Eiger BioPharmaceuticals, Riboscience, and others.

Source: Koh C et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LO8.

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Hepatitis C vaccine alters viral trajectory, but fails in chronic infection protection

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Fri, 11/08/2019 - 15:24

 

– A prime-boost hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine regimen did not protect against chronic infection, but it did evoke immune responses and differences in viral trajectory, according to investigators in what is believed to be the first randomized, placebo-controlled efficacy trial in this setting.

copyright wildpixel/Thinkstock

There were no apparent safety concerns with the vaccine according to investigators, led by Kimberly Page, PhD, MPH, of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.

“A safe and effective vaccine to prevent chronic hepatitis C virus infection is essential to reduce transmission,” Dr. Page and coauthors said in a late-breaking abstract of the study results, which will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The phase 1/2 trial described by Dr. Page and colleagues included 455 adults at risk of HCV infection because of injection drug use. They were randomized to vaccine, which consisted of a recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus-3 vectored vaccine prime plus a recombinant Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara boost, or to two doses of placebo at days 0 and 56 of the study.

There was no difference in chronic HCV infection at 6 months, the primary endpoint of the study. There were 14 chronically infected participants in the vaccine group, as well as 14 in the placebo group, for an overall incidence of infection of 13.0/100 person-years, Dr. Page and coauthors reported in the abstract.

However, there were significant differences in HCV RNA geometric mean peak at 1 month, which was 193,795 IU/L in the vaccine group and 1,078,092 IU/L in the placebo group, according to investigators. Similarly, geometric mean fold rise after infection was 0.2 in the vaccine group and 13.5 in the placebo group.

A total of 78% of vaccinated individuals had T-cell responses to at least one vaccine antigen pool, investigators said, adding that the vaccine was safe, well tolerated, and not associated with any serious adverse events.

Dr. Page had no disclosures related to the abstract.

SOURCE: Page K et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LP17.

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– A prime-boost hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine regimen did not protect against chronic infection, but it did evoke immune responses and differences in viral trajectory, according to investigators in what is believed to be the first randomized, placebo-controlled efficacy trial in this setting.

copyright wildpixel/Thinkstock

There were no apparent safety concerns with the vaccine according to investigators, led by Kimberly Page, PhD, MPH, of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.

“A safe and effective vaccine to prevent chronic hepatitis C virus infection is essential to reduce transmission,” Dr. Page and coauthors said in a late-breaking abstract of the study results, which will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The phase 1/2 trial described by Dr. Page and colleagues included 455 adults at risk of HCV infection because of injection drug use. They were randomized to vaccine, which consisted of a recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus-3 vectored vaccine prime plus a recombinant Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara boost, or to two doses of placebo at days 0 and 56 of the study.

There was no difference in chronic HCV infection at 6 months, the primary endpoint of the study. There were 14 chronically infected participants in the vaccine group, as well as 14 in the placebo group, for an overall incidence of infection of 13.0/100 person-years, Dr. Page and coauthors reported in the abstract.

However, there were significant differences in HCV RNA geometric mean peak at 1 month, which was 193,795 IU/L in the vaccine group and 1,078,092 IU/L in the placebo group, according to investigators. Similarly, geometric mean fold rise after infection was 0.2 in the vaccine group and 13.5 in the placebo group.

A total of 78% of vaccinated individuals had T-cell responses to at least one vaccine antigen pool, investigators said, adding that the vaccine was safe, well tolerated, and not associated with any serious adverse events.

Dr. Page had no disclosures related to the abstract.

SOURCE: Page K et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LP17.

 

– A prime-boost hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine regimen did not protect against chronic infection, but it did evoke immune responses and differences in viral trajectory, according to investigators in what is believed to be the first randomized, placebo-controlled efficacy trial in this setting.

copyright wildpixel/Thinkstock

There were no apparent safety concerns with the vaccine according to investigators, led by Kimberly Page, PhD, MPH, of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.

“A safe and effective vaccine to prevent chronic hepatitis C virus infection is essential to reduce transmission,” Dr. Page and coauthors said in a late-breaking abstract of the study results, which will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

The phase 1/2 trial described by Dr. Page and colleagues included 455 adults at risk of HCV infection because of injection drug use. They were randomized to vaccine, which consisted of a recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus-3 vectored vaccine prime plus a recombinant Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara boost, or to two doses of placebo at days 0 and 56 of the study.

There was no difference in chronic HCV infection at 6 months, the primary endpoint of the study. There were 14 chronically infected participants in the vaccine group, as well as 14 in the placebo group, for an overall incidence of infection of 13.0/100 person-years, Dr. Page and coauthors reported in the abstract.

However, there were significant differences in HCV RNA geometric mean peak at 1 month, which was 193,795 IU/L in the vaccine group and 1,078,092 IU/L in the placebo group, according to investigators. Similarly, geometric mean fold rise after infection was 0.2 in the vaccine group and 13.5 in the placebo group.

A total of 78% of vaccinated individuals had T-cell responses to at least one vaccine antigen pool, investigators said, adding that the vaccine was safe, well tolerated, and not associated with any serious adverse events.

Dr. Page had no disclosures related to the abstract.

SOURCE: Page K et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LP17.

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Key clinical point: A prime-boost HCV vaccine altered viral trajectory but did not protect against chronic infection.

Major finding: At 6 months after vaccination, there were 14 chronically infected participants in the vaccine group, and 14 in the placebo group.

Study details: A randomized, placebo controlled phase 1/2 trial including 455 adults at risk of HCV infection.

Disclosures: The first author reported no disclosures.

Source: Page K et al. The Liver Meeting 2019. Abstract LP17.

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More evidence that statins reduce HCC risk

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Wed, 11/06/2019 - 15:05

 

– The evidence that statin therapy reduces the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma, while not rising to the highest-level 1A strata, is nonetheless sufficiently persuasive at this point that consideration should be given to prescribing a statin in all patients with risk factors for the malignancy, regardless of their cardiovascular risk profile, Muhammad Talal Sarmini, MD, asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.

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Dr. Muhammad Talal Sarmini

This includes individuals with hepatitis B or C virus infection as well as those with cirrhosis. The jury is still out as to whether nonalcoholic steatohepatitis is a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), observed Dr. Sarmini of the Cleveland Clinic.

He presented a new meta-analysis, which concluded that patients on statin therapy had a 43% lower risk of new-onset HCC than persons not taking a statin. This meta-analysis – the largest ever addressing the issue – included 20 studies totaling more than 2.6 million patients and 24,341 cases of new-onset HCC. There were 11 retrospective case-control studies, 6 cohort studies, and 3 randomized trials. Five studies were from the United States, nine from Asia, and six were European.

In subgroup analyses aimed at assessing the consistency of the study results across various domains, there was a 45% reduction in the risk of HCC in association with statin therapy in the three studies of patients with hepatitis B virus, and significant reductions as well in Asia, Europe, and the United States when those participants were evaluated separately. The reduction was significant in both the case-control and cohort studies, but not when the three randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) were analyzed collectively. However, Dr. Sarmini shrugged off the neutral RCT results.



“It’s worth noting that the RCTs reported data from patients who were on statins with 4-5 years of follow-up. They were not at high risk for HCC. Given the nature of the disease and the relatively short period of follow-up, these studies only reported 81 cases of HCC. So they were very limited,” he said.

Audience members were eager to learn if Dr. Sarmini had found a differential preventive effect for lipophilic statins, such as atorvastatin or simvastatin, versus hydrophilic statins. He replied that, unfortunately, the published study results don’t allow for such an analysis. However, a large, propensity-matched cohort study published too recently for inclusion in his meta-analysis shed light on this matter. This Swedish national registry study included 16,668 propensity score–matched adults with chronic hepatitis B or C infection, of whom 6,554 initiated lipophilic statin therapy, 1,780 began treatment with a hydrophilic statin, and the rest were statin nonusers. The lipophilic statin users had an adjusted 44% reduction in 10-year HCC risk, compared with nonusers, while hydrophilic statins weren’t associated with a significant preventive effect (Ann Intern Med. 2019 Sep 3;171[5]:318-27).

Dr. Sarmini said that the meta-analysis results, together with the Swedish registry findings, highlight the need for additional well-designed cohort studies and RCTs of statins in populations at high risk for HCC in order to verify the existence of an HCC preventive effect and pinpoint which statins are effective at what dosages.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer-related mortality globally, accounting for 800,000 deaths annually. And the incidence is rising on a year-by-year basis.

Dr. Sarmini reported having no financial conflicts regarding his study, which was conducted free of commercial support.

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– The evidence that statin therapy reduces the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma, while not rising to the highest-level 1A strata, is nonetheless sufficiently persuasive at this point that consideration should be given to prescribing a statin in all patients with risk factors for the malignancy, regardless of their cardiovascular risk profile, Muhammad Talal Sarmini, MD, asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.

Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Muhammad Talal Sarmini

This includes individuals with hepatitis B or C virus infection as well as those with cirrhosis. The jury is still out as to whether nonalcoholic steatohepatitis is a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), observed Dr. Sarmini of the Cleveland Clinic.

He presented a new meta-analysis, which concluded that patients on statin therapy had a 43% lower risk of new-onset HCC than persons not taking a statin. This meta-analysis – the largest ever addressing the issue – included 20 studies totaling more than 2.6 million patients and 24,341 cases of new-onset HCC. There were 11 retrospective case-control studies, 6 cohort studies, and 3 randomized trials. Five studies were from the United States, nine from Asia, and six were European.

In subgroup analyses aimed at assessing the consistency of the study results across various domains, there was a 45% reduction in the risk of HCC in association with statin therapy in the three studies of patients with hepatitis B virus, and significant reductions as well in Asia, Europe, and the United States when those participants were evaluated separately. The reduction was significant in both the case-control and cohort studies, but not when the three randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) were analyzed collectively. However, Dr. Sarmini shrugged off the neutral RCT results.



“It’s worth noting that the RCTs reported data from patients who were on statins with 4-5 years of follow-up. They were not at high risk for HCC. Given the nature of the disease and the relatively short period of follow-up, these studies only reported 81 cases of HCC. So they were very limited,” he said.

Audience members were eager to learn if Dr. Sarmini had found a differential preventive effect for lipophilic statins, such as atorvastatin or simvastatin, versus hydrophilic statins. He replied that, unfortunately, the published study results don’t allow for such an analysis. However, a large, propensity-matched cohort study published too recently for inclusion in his meta-analysis shed light on this matter. This Swedish national registry study included 16,668 propensity score–matched adults with chronic hepatitis B or C infection, of whom 6,554 initiated lipophilic statin therapy, 1,780 began treatment with a hydrophilic statin, and the rest were statin nonusers. The lipophilic statin users had an adjusted 44% reduction in 10-year HCC risk, compared with nonusers, while hydrophilic statins weren’t associated with a significant preventive effect (Ann Intern Med. 2019 Sep 3;171[5]:318-27).

Dr. Sarmini said that the meta-analysis results, together with the Swedish registry findings, highlight the need for additional well-designed cohort studies and RCTs of statins in populations at high risk for HCC in order to verify the existence of an HCC preventive effect and pinpoint which statins are effective at what dosages.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer-related mortality globally, accounting for 800,000 deaths annually. And the incidence is rising on a year-by-year basis.

Dr. Sarmini reported having no financial conflicts regarding his study, which was conducted free of commercial support.

 

– The evidence that statin therapy reduces the risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma, while not rising to the highest-level 1A strata, is nonetheless sufficiently persuasive at this point that consideration should be given to prescribing a statin in all patients with risk factors for the malignancy, regardless of their cardiovascular risk profile, Muhammad Talal Sarmini, MD, asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.

Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Muhammad Talal Sarmini

This includes individuals with hepatitis B or C virus infection as well as those with cirrhosis. The jury is still out as to whether nonalcoholic steatohepatitis is a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), observed Dr. Sarmini of the Cleveland Clinic.

He presented a new meta-analysis, which concluded that patients on statin therapy had a 43% lower risk of new-onset HCC than persons not taking a statin. This meta-analysis – the largest ever addressing the issue – included 20 studies totaling more than 2.6 million patients and 24,341 cases of new-onset HCC. There were 11 retrospective case-control studies, 6 cohort studies, and 3 randomized trials. Five studies were from the United States, nine from Asia, and six were European.

In subgroup analyses aimed at assessing the consistency of the study results across various domains, there was a 45% reduction in the risk of HCC in association with statin therapy in the three studies of patients with hepatitis B virus, and significant reductions as well in Asia, Europe, and the United States when those participants were evaluated separately. The reduction was significant in both the case-control and cohort studies, but not when the three randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) were analyzed collectively. However, Dr. Sarmini shrugged off the neutral RCT results.



“It’s worth noting that the RCTs reported data from patients who were on statins with 4-5 years of follow-up. They were not at high risk for HCC. Given the nature of the disease and the relatively short period of follow-up, these studies only reported 81 cases of HCC. So they were very limited,” he said.

Audience members were eager to learn if Dr. Sarmini had found a differential preventive effect for lipophilic statins, such as atorvastatin or simvastatin, versus hydrophilic statins. He replied that, unfortunately, the published study results don’t allow for such an analysis. However, a large, propensity-matched cohort study published too recently for inclusion in his meta-analysis shed light on this matter. This Swedish national registry study included 16,668 propensity score–matched adults with chronic hepatitis B or C infection, of whom 6,554 initiated lipophilic statin therapy, 1,780 began treatment with a hydrophilic statin, and the rest were statin nonusers. The lipophilic statin users had an adjusted 44% reduction in 10-year HCC risk, compared with nonusers, while hydrophilic statins weren’t associated with a significant preventive effect (Ann Intern Med. 2019 Sep 3;171[5]:318-27).

Dr. Sarmini said that the meta-analysis results, together with the Swedish registry findings, highlight the need for additional well-designed cohort studies and RCTs of statins in populations at high risk for HCC in order to verify the existence of an HCC preventive effect and pinpoint which statins are effective at what dosages.

HCC is the fourth-leading cause of cancer-related mortality globally, accounting for 800,000 deaths annually. And the incidence is rising on a year-by-year basis.

Dr. Sarmini reported having no financial conflicts regarding his study, which was conducted free of commercial support.

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HCV testing/awareness successful as part of HIV integrated care

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Hepatitis C virus testing should be combined with HIV integrated care services among people who inject drugs (PWID), according to researchers reporting on a multisite randomized trial of nearly 12,000 HIV-infected individuals in India.

Courtesy NIH

HCV antibody prevalence at these sites ranged from 7.2%-76.6%. Across six integrated care centers (ICCs), 5,263 clients underwent HCV testing, of whom 2,278 were newly diagnosed. At evaluation, PWID in ICC clusters were nearly four times more likely to report being tested for HCV than those in usual care clusters (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR]: 3.69), according to the report by Sunil Suhas Solomon, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

PWID in ICC clusters were also seven times more likely to be aware of their HCV status (aPR: 7.11; 95% confidence interval: 1.14, 44.3) and significantly more likely to initiate treatment, (aPR: 9.86; 95% CI: 1.52, 63.8), than individuals in usual care, the authors stated in their report published online ahead of press in the Journal of Hepatology.

“These data provide among the first empirical support of the benefits of integrating HCV testing with HIV prevention and treatment services for PWID. Over a short duration, we observed significant impact on community-level HCV testing and awareness of HCV status among PWID. While additional strategies might be required to improve population awareness levels, integration of HCV testing with HIV programs for PWID particularly given the high burden of HIV/HCV coinfection represents a critical first step,” the researchers concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The authors reported that they had no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Solomon, SS et al. J Hepatol. 2019. doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2019.09.022.

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Hepatitis C virus testing should be combined with HIV integrated care services among people who inject drugs (PWID), according to researchers reporting on a multisite randomized trial of nearly 12,000 HIV-infected individuals in India.

Courtesy NIH

HCV antibody prevalence at these sites ranged from 7.2%-76.6%. Across six integrated care centers (ICCs), 5,263 clients underwent HCV testing, of whom 2,278 were newly diagnosed. At evaluation, PWID in ICC clusters were nearly four times more likely to report being tested for HCV than those in usual care clusters (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR]: 3.69), according to the report by Sunil Suhas Solomon, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

PWID in ICC clusters were also seven times more likely to be aware of their HCV status (aPR: 7.11; 95% confidence interval: 1.14, 44.3) and significantly more likely to initiate treatment, (aPR: 9.86; 95% CI: 1.52, 63.8), than individuals in usual care, the authors stated in their report published online ahead of press in the Journal of Hepatology.

“These data provide among the first empirical support of the benefits of integrating HCV testing with HIV prevention and treatment services for PWID. Over a short duration, we observed significant impact on community-level HCV testing and awareness of HCV status among PWID. While additional strategies might be required to improve population awareness levels, integration of HCV testing with HIV programs for PWID particularly given the high burden of HIV/HCV coinfection represents a critical first step,” the researchers concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The authors reported that they had no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Solomon, SS et al. J Hepatol. 2019. doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2019.09.022.

 

Hepatitis C virus testing should be combined with HIV integrated care services among people who inject drugs (PWID), according to researchers reporting on a multisite randomized trial of nearly 12,000 HIV-infected individuals in India.

Courtesy NIH

HCV antibody prevalence at these sites ranged from 7.2%-76.6%. Across six integrated care centers (ICCs), 5,263 clients underwent HCV testing, of whom 2,278 were newly diagnosed. At evaluation, PWID in ICC clusters were nearly four times more likely to report being tested for HCV than those in usual care clusters (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR]: 3.69), according to the report by Sunil Suhas Solomon, MD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues.

PWID in ICC clusters were also seven times more likely to be aware of their HCV status (aPR: 7.11; 95% confidence interval: 1.14, 44.3) and significantly more likely to initiate treatment, (aPR: 9.86; 95% CI: 1.52, 63.8), than individuals in usual care, the authors stated in their report published online ahead of press in the Journal of Hepatology.

“These data provide among the first empirical support of the benefits of integrating HCV testing with HIV prevention and treatment services for PWID. Over a short duration, we observed significant impact on community-level HCV testing and awareness of HCV status among PWID. While additional strategies might be required to improve population awareness levels, integration of HCV testing with HIV programs for PWID particularly given the high burden of HIV/HCV coinfection represents a critical first step,” the researchers concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The authors reported that they had no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Solomon, SS et al. J Hepatol. 2019. doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2019.09.022.

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