Tang Lydia Shuk Yee, Masur Jack, Sims Zayani, Nelson Amy, Osinusi Anu, Kohli Anita, Kattakuzhy Sarah, Polis Michael, Kottilil Shyam
Lydia Shuk Yee Tang, Jack Masur, Amy Nelson, Sarah Kattakuzhy, Shyam Kottilil, Institute of Human Virology, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201, United States.
World J Hepatol. 2016 Nov 8;8(31):1318-1326. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v8.i31.1318.
To study impact of baseline mental health disease on hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment; and Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI) changes with sofosbuvir- and interferon-based therapy.
This is a retrospective cohort study of participants from 5 studies enrolled from single center trials conducted at the Clinical Research Center of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States. All participants were adults with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection and naïve to HCV therapy. Two of the studies included HCV mono-infected participants only (SPARE, SYNERGY-A), and 3 included human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/HCV co-infected participants only (ERADICATE, PFINPK, and ALBIN). Patients were treated for HCV with 3 different regimens: Sofosbuvir and ribavirin in the SPARE trial, ledipasvir and sofosbuvir in SYNERGY-A and ERADICATE trials, and pegylated interferon (IFN) and ribavirin for 48 wk in the PIFNPK and ALBIN trials. Participants with baseline mental health disease (MHD) were identified (defined as either a DSM IV diagnosis of major depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, generalized anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder or requiring anti-depressants, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers or psychotropics prescribed by a psychiatrist). For our first aim, we compared sustained virologic response (SVR) and adherence (pill counts, study visits, and in 25 patients, blood levels of the sofosbuvir metabolite, GS-331007) within each study. For our second aim, only patients with HIV coinfection were evaluated. BDI scores were obtained pre-treatment, during treatment, and post-treatment among participants treated with sofosbuvir-based therapy, and compared to scores from participants treated with interferon-based therapy. Statistical differences for both aims were analyzed by Fisher's Exact, and -test with significance defined as a value less than 0.05.
Baseline characteristics did not differ significantly between all participants with and without MHD groups treated with sofosbuvir-based therapy. Among patients treated with sofosbuvir-based therapy, the percentage of patients with MHD who achieved SVR was the same as those without (SPARE: 60.9% of those MHD compared to 67.6% in those without, = 0.78; SYNERGY-A: 100% of both groups; ERADICATE: 100% compared to 97.1%). There was no statistically significant difference in pill counts, adherence to study visits between groups, nor mean serum concentrations of GS-331007 for each group at week 2 of treatment ( = 0.72). Among patients with HIV co-infection, pre-treatment BDI scores were similar among patients treated with sofosbuvir, and those treated with interferon (sofosbuvir-based 5.24, IFN-based 6.96; = 0.14); however, a dichotomous effect on was observed during treatment. Among participants treated with directly acting antiviral (DAA)-based therapy, mean BDI scores decreased from 5.24 (pre-treatment) to 3.28 during treatment (1.96 decrease, = 0.0034) and 2.82 post-treatment. The decrease in mean score from pre- to post-treatment was statistically significant (-2.42, = 0.0012). Among participants treated with IFN-based therapy, mean BDI score increased from 6.96 at pre-treatment to 9.19 during treatment (an increase of 2.46 points, = 0.1), and then decreased back to baseline post-treatment (mean BDI score 6.3, = 0.54). Overall change in mean BDI scores from pre-treatment to during treatment among participants treated with DAA-based and IFN-therapy was statistically significant (-1.96 and +2.23, respectively; = 0.0032). This change remained statistically significant when analysis was restricted to participants who achieved SVR (-2.0 and +4.36, respectively; = 0.0004).
Sofosbuvir-based therapy is safe and well tolerated in patients with MHD. A decline in BDI associated with sofosbuvir-based HCV treatment suggests additional MHD benefits, although the duration of these effects is unknown.
研究基线心理健康疾病对丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)治疗的影响;以及基于索磷布韦和干扰素治疗时贝克抑郁量表(BDI)的变化。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,研究对象来自美国马里兰州贝塞斯达国立卫生研究院临床研究中心进行的5项单中心试验中的参与者。所有参与者均为慢性HCV 1型感染的成年人,且未接受过HCV治疗。其中2项研究仅纳入了HCV单一感染的参与者(SPARE试验、SYNERGY - A试验),3项研究仅纳入了人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)/HCV合并感染的参与者(ERADICATE试验、PFINPK试验和ALBIN试验)。患者采用3种不同方案进行HCV治疗:SPARE试验中使用索磷布韦和利巴韦林,SYNERGY - A试验和ERADICATE试验中使用来迪派韦和索磷布韦,PFINPK试验和ALBIN试验中使用聚乙二醇干扰素(IFN)和利巴韦林治疗48周。确定有基线心理健康疾病(MHD)的参与者(定义为符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版中重度抑郁、双相情感障碍、精神分裂症、广泛性焦虑和创伤后应激障碍的诊断标准,或正在服用精神科医生开具的抗抑郁药、抗精神病药、心境稳定剂或精神药物)。对于我们的第一个目标,我们在每项研究中比较了持续病毒学应答(SVR)和依从性(药丸计数、研究访视,以及在25名患者中检测索磷布韦代谢产物GS - 331007的血药浓度)。对于我们的第二个目标,仅评估了HIV合并感染的患者。在接受基于索磷布韦治疗的参与者中,于治疗前、治疗期间和治疗后获取BDI评分,并与接受基于干扰素治疗的参与者的评分进行比较。两个目标的统计学差异均采用Fisher精确检验和t检验进行分析,显著性定义为P值小于0.05。
接受基于索磷布韦治疗的所有有MHD和无MHD的参与者组之间,基线特征无显著差异。在接受基于索磷布韦治疗的患者中,有MHD且实现SVR的患者百分比与无MHD的患者相同(SPARE试验:有MHD的患者中为60.9%,无MHD的患者中为67.6%,P = 0.78;SYNERGY - A试验:两组均为100%;ERADICATE试验:100%,无MHD的患者为97.1%)。两组之间的药丸计数、研究访视依从性以及治疗第2周时每组GS - 331007的平均血清浓度均无统计学显著差异(P = 0.72)。在HIV合并感染的患者中,接受索磷布韦治疗的患者与接受干扰素治疗的患者治疗前BDI评分相似(基于索磷布韦治疗的患者为5.24,基于干扰素治疗的患者为6.96;P = 0.14);然而,在治疗期间观察到了二分效应。在接受直接抗病毒药物(DAA)治疗的参与者中,平均BDI评分从治疗前的5.24降至治疗期间的3.28(降低1.96,P = 0.0034),治疗后为2.82。治疗前至治疗后的平均评分降低具有统计学显著性(降低2.42,P = 0.0012)。在接受基于干扰素治疗的参与者中,平均BDI评分从治疗前的6.96升至治疗期间的9.19(升高2.46分,P = 0.1),然后治疗后降至基线水平(平均BDI评分为6.3,P = 0.54)。接受基于DAA治疗和基于干扰素治疗的参与者从治疗前至治疗期间BDI平均评分的总体变化具有统计学显著性(分别为降低1.96和升高2.23;P = 0.0032)。当分析仅限于实现SVR的参与者时,这种变化仍具有统计学显著性(分别为降低2.0和升高4.36;P = 0.0004)。
基于索磷布韦的治疗对有MHD的患者安全且耐受性良好。基于索磷布韦的HCV治疗使BDI下降,提示对心理健康疾病有额外益处,尽管这些效应的持续时间尚不清楚。