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Direct-Acting Antivirals as Primary Treatment for Hepatitis C Virus-Associated Indolent Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas: The BArT Study of the Fondazione Italiana Linfomi

Authors :
Michele, Merli
Sara, Rattotti
Michele, Spina
Francesca, Re
Marina, Motta
Piazza, Francesco
Lorella, Orsucci
Andrés J, M Ferreri
Omar, Perbellini
Anna, Dodero
Daniele, Vallisa
Alessandro, Pulsoni
Armando, Santoro
Paolo, Sacchi
Valentina, Zuccaro
Emanuela, Chimienti
Filomena, Russo
Carlo, Visco
Anna Linda Zignego
Luigi, Marcheselli
Francesco, Passamonti
Stefano, Luminari
Marco, Paulli
Raffaele, Bruno
Luca, Arcaini
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

PURPOSE We prospectively treated patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)–associated indolent lymphomas with genotype-appropriate direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) with the aim to evaluate virologic and hematologic outcomes. No prospective studies in this setting have been published so far. METHODS FIL_BArT is a prospective, multicenter, phase II trial that evaluated genotype-appropriate DAAs in untreated HCV-positive patients with indolent lymphomas without criteria for immediate conventional antilymphoma treatment. The primary objective was sustained virologic response, whereas the main secondary objectives were overall response rate of lymphoma and progression-free survival. RESULTS Forty patients were enrolled, including 27 with marginal zone lymphoma. Median age was 68 years. Extranodal sites were involved in 14 cases (35%). Main genotypes were 1 in 16 patients and 2 in 21 patients. All patients received genotype-guided DAAs: 17 ledipasvir/sofosbuvir, eight sofosbuvir plus ribavirin, and 15 sofosbuvir/velpatasvir. All patients achieved sustained virologic response (100%). DAAs were well tolerated, with only two grade 3-4 adverse events. Overall response rate of lymphoma was 45%, including eight patients (20%) achieving complete response and 10 (25%) partial response, whereas 16 exhibited stable disease and six progressed. With a median follow-up of 37 months, two patients died (3-year overall survival 93%; 95% CI, 74 to 98) and three additional patients progressed, with a 3-year progression-free survival of 76% (95% CI, 57 to 87). CONCLUSION HCV eradication by DAAs was achieved in 100% of HCV-positive patients with indolent lymphomas not requiring immediate conventional treatment and resulted in non-negligible rate of lymphoma responses. Treatment with DAAs should be considered as the first-line therapy in this setting.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18032b2a4fcc718cde79f66d748ea790