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Real-life effectiveness and safety of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir in hepatitis C patients with previous DAA failure

Authors :
Elisabetta, Degasperi
Angiola, Spinetti
Andrea, Lombardi
Simona, Landonio
Maria Cristina, Rossi
Luisa, Pasulo
Pietro, Pozzoni
Alessia, Giorgini
Paolo, Fabris
Antonietta, Romano
Lorenzo, Lomonaco
Massimo, Puoti
Maria, Vinci
Federico, Gatti
Giada, Carolo
Alessia, Zoncada
Paolo, Bonfanti
Russo, FRANCESCO PAOLO
Alessio, Aghemo
Alessandro, Soria
Riccardo, Centenaro
Franco, Maggiolo
Pierangelo, Rovere
Francesca, Pasin
Veronica, Paon
Giovanni, Faggiano
Alessandro, Vario
Glenda, Grossi
Roberta, Soffredini
Canio, Carriero
Stefania, Paolucci
Franco, Noventa
Alfredo, Alberti
Pietro, Lampertico
Stefano, Fagiuoli
NAVIGATORE-Lombardia and Veneto Study Groups
Degasperi, E
Spinetti, A
Lombardi, A
Landonio, S
Rossi, M
Pasulo, L
Pozzoni, P
Giorgini, A
Fabris, P
Romano, A
Lomonaco, L
Puoti, M
Vinci, M
Gatti, F
Carolo, G
Zoncada, A
Bonfanti, P
Russo, F
Aghemo, A
Soria, A
Centenaro, R
Maggiolo, F
Rovere, P
Pasin, F
Paon, V
Faggiano, G
Vario, A
Grossi, G
Soffredini, R
Carriero, C
Paolucci, S
Noventa, F
Alberti, A
Lampertico, P
Fagiuoli, S
Source :
Journal of hepatology. 71(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background & Aims Sofosbuvir/velpatasivr/voxilaprevir (SOF/VEL/VOX) is approved for retreatment of patients with HCV and a previous failure on direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), however real-life data are limited. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of SOF/VEL/VOX in a real-life setting. Methods All consecutive patients with HCV receiving SOF/VEL/VOX between May-October 2018 in 27 centers in Northern Italy were enrolled. Bridging fibrosis (F3) and cirrhosis (F4) were diagnosed by liver stiffness measurement: >10 and >13 kPa respectively. Sustained virological response (SVR) was defined as undetectable HCV-RNA 4 (SVR4) or 12 (SVR12) weeks after the end-of-treatment. Results A total of 179 patients were included: median age 57 (18–88) years, 74% males, median HCV-RNA 1,081,817 (482–25,590,000) IU/ml. Fibrosis stage was F0-F2 in 32%, F3 in 21%, F4 in 44%. HCV genotype was 1 in 58% (1b 33%, 1a 24%, 1nc 1%), 2 in 10%, 3 in 23% and 4 in 9%; 82% of patients carried resistance-associated substitutions in the NS3, NS5A or NS5B regions. Patients received SOF/VEL/VOX for 12 weeks, ribavirin was added in 22% of treatment schedules. Undetectable HCV-RNA was achieved by 74% of patients at week 4 and by 99% at week 12. Overall, 162/179 (91%) patients by intention to treat analysis and 162/169 (96%) by per protocol analysis achieved SVR12, respectively; treatment failures included 6 relapsers and 1 virological non-responder. Cirrhosis (p = 0.005) and hepatocellular carcinoma (p = 0.02) were the only predictors of treatment failure. Most frequent adverse events included fatigue (6%), hyperbilirubinemia (6%) and anemia (4%). Conclusions SOF/VEL/VOX is an effective and safe retreatment for patients with HCV who have failed on a previous DAA course in a real-life setting. Lay summary This is the largest European real-life study evaluating effectiveness and safety of sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir (SOF/VEL/VOX) in a large cohort of consecutive patients with hepatitis C virus infection and a prior direct-acting antiviral failure, who were treated within the NAVIGATORE Lombardia and Veneto Networks, in Italy. This study demonstrated excellent effectiveness (98% and 96% sustained virological response rates at week 4 and 12, respectively) and an optimal safety profile of SOF/VEL/VOX. Cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma onset were the only features associated with treatment failure.

Details

ISSN :
16000641
Volume :
71
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of hepatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38ab2d33ae43ef8ae088f230a5fd713c