1. Antiretroviral Therapy and Sustained Virological Response to HCV Therapy are Associated with Slower Liver Fibrosis Progression in HIV–HCV-Coinfected Patients: Study from the Anrs Co 13 Hepavih Cohort
- Author
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Marc-Arthur, Loko, Firouze, Bani-Sadr, Marc-Antoine, Valantin, Caroline, Lascoux-Combe, Hélène, Fontaine, Philippe, Bonnard, Anne, Gervais, Olivier, Bouchaud, Daniel, Garipuy, Yann, Quertainmont, Daniel, Vittecoq, Michka Shoai, Tehrani, Maria, Winnock, François, Dabis, Dominique, Salmon, and M, Winnock
- Subjects
Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Liver fibrosis ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Hcv therapy ,Hepacivirus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Cohort Studies ,Virological response ,Risk Factors ,Liver stiffness ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacology ,Coinfection ,business.industry ,HIV ,Alanine Transaminase ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Antiretroviral therapy ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Logistic Models ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Liver ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background The aim of this study was to describe changes in repeated liver stiffness (LS) measurements and to assess the determinants of increase in LS in HIV– HCV-coinfected patients. Methods HIV–HCV-coinfected adults enrolled in the ANRS CO 13 HEPAVIH cohort, for whom two results of LS, evaluated over ≥24 months, were available. Patients with unreliable LS results were not included. LS was measured at baseline and every year thereafter. Determinants of LS increase were assessed using linear (primary outcome: last LS minus first LS value) and logistic (secondary outcome: ≥30% increase in the initial LS value) regression analyses. Results A total of 313 patients (mean age 45 years, 67.4% male) were included. Overall, 93.9% were receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART). The mean baseline CD4+ T-cell count was 471 cells/mm3 and 72.2% of patients had undetectable plasma HIV RNA. The mean interval between the first and last LS measurements was 33.5 months. No significant difference was found between baseline and follow-up mean LS values ( P=0.39). However, a decrease of ≥30% in LS was observed in 48 (15.3%) patients and an increase of ≥30% in 64 (20.5%) patients. In multivariate linear and logistic analyses, excessive alcohol intake (P coefficient 6.8; P=0.0006) and high HCV viral load (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.1, 2.5; P=0.01) were independently associated with an increase in LS, whereas time on ART>114.5 months (OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.3, 0.9; P=0.03) and achievement of sustained virological response (OR 0.1, 95% CI 0.01, 0.9; P=0.04) were independently associated with no increase in LS. Conclusions Our findings show that long-term ART and achieving sustained virological response in HIV-HCV-coinfected patients are both significantly associated with lack of increase in LS over a 33-month period.
- Published
- 2012
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