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Strategic treatment optimization for HCV (STOPHCV1): a randomised controlled trial of ultrashort duration therapy for chronic hepatitis C [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]

Authors :
Graham S. Cooke
Sarah Pett
Leanne McCabe
Chris Jones
Richard Gilson
Sumita Verma
Stephen D. Ryder
Jane D. Collier
Stephen T. Barclay
Aftab Ala
Sanjay Bhagani
Mark Nelson
Chinlye Ch'Ng
Ben Stone
Martin Wiselka
Daniel Forton
Stuart McPherson
Rachel Halford
Dung Nguyen
David Smith
Azim Ansari
Emily Dennis
Fleur Hudson
Eleanor J. Barnes
Ann Sarah Walker
Source :
Wellcome Open Research, Vol 6 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wellcome, 2021.

Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified the need for a better understanding of which patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) can be cured with ultrashort course HCV therapy. Methods: A total of 202 individuals with chronic HCV were randomised to fixed-duration shortened therapy (8 weeks) vs variable-duration ultrashort strategies (VUS1/2). Participants not cured following first-line treatment were retreated with 12 weeks’ sofosbuvir/ledipasvir/ribavirin. The primary outcome was sustained virological response 12 weeks (SVR12) after first-line treatment and retreatment. Participants were factorially randomised to receive ribavirin with first-line treatment. Results: All evaluable participants achieved SVR12 overall (197/197, 100% [95% CI 98-100]) demonstrating non-inferiority between fixed-duration and variable-duration strategies (difference 0% [95% CI -3.8%, +3.7%], 4% pre-specified non-inferiority margin). First-line SVR12 was 91% [86%-97%] (92/101) for fixed-duration vs 48% [39%-57%] (47/98) for variable-duration, but was significantly higher for VUS2 (72% [56%-87%] (23/32)) than VUS1 (36% [25%-48%] (24/66)). Overall, first-line SVR12 was 72% [65%-78%] (70/101) without ribavirin and 68% [61%-76%] (69/98) with ribavirin (p=0.48). At treatment failure, the emergence of viral resistance was lower with ribavirin (12% [2%-30%] (3/26)) than without (38% [21%-58%] (11/29), p=0.01). Conclusions: Unsuccessful first-line short-course therapy did not compromise retreatment with sofosbuvir/ledipasvir/ribavirin (100% SVR12). SVR12 rates were significantly increased when ultrashort treatment varied between 4-7 weeks rather than 4-6 weeks. Ribavirin significantly reduced resistance emergence in those failing first-line therapy. ISRCTN Registration: 37915093 (11/04/2016).

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2398502X
Volume :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Wellcome Open Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.98e57eb6ba4e538514aabff8a3a5a6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.16594.2