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急性丙型肝炎感染的药物干预:一项网状Meta分析尝试

Pharmacological interventions for acute hepatitis C infection: an attempted network meta-analysis.

作者信息

Kalafateli Maria, Buzzetti Elena, Thorburn Douglas, Davidson Brian R, Tsochatzis Emmanuel, Gurusamy Kurinchi Selvan

机构信息

Sheila Sherlock Liver Centre, Royal Free Hospital and the UCL Institute of Liver and Digestive Health, London, UK.

Department of Surgery, Royal Free Campus, UCL Medical School, Pond Street, London, UK, NW3 2QG.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Mar 13;3(3):CD011644. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011644.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded RNA (ribonucleic acid) virus that has the potential to cause inflammation of the liver. The traditional definition of acute HCV infection is the first six months following infection with the virus. Another commonly used definition of acute HCV infection is the absence of HCV antibody and subsequent seroconversion (presence of HCV antibody in a person who was previously negative for HCV antibody). Approximately 40% to 95% of people with acute HCV infection develop chronic HCV infection, that is, have persistent HCV RNA in their blood. In 2010, an estimated 160 million people worldwide (2% to 3% of the world's population) had chronic HCV infection. The optimal pharmacological treatment of acute HCV remains controversial. Chronic HCV infection can damage the liver.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the comparative benefits and harms of different pharmacological interventions in the treatment of acute HCV infection through a network meta-analysis and to generate rankings of the available pharmacological treatments according to their safety and efficacy. However, it was not possible to assess whether the potential effect modifiers were similar across different comparisons. Therefore, we did not perform the network meta-analysis, and instead, we assessed the comparative benefits and harms of different interventions versus each other or versus no intervention using standard Cochrane methodology.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, Embase, Science Citation Index Expanded, World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, and randomised controlled trials registers to April 2016 to identify randomised clinical trials on pharmacological interventions for acute HCV infection.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included only randomised clinical trials (irrespective of language, blinding, or publication status) in participants with acute HCV infection. We excluded trials which included previously liver transplanted participants and those with other coexisting viral diseases. We considered any of the various pharmacological interventions compared with placebo or each other.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. We calculated the odds ratio (OR) and rate ratio with 95% confidence intervals (CI) using both fixed-effect and random-effects models based on the available-participant analysis with Review Manager 5. We assessed risk of bias according to Cochrane, controlled risk of random errors with Trial Sequential Analysis, and assessed the quality of the evidence using GRADE.

MAIN RESULTS

We identified 10 randomised clinical trials with 488 randomised participants that met our inclusion criteria. All the trials were at high risk of bias in one or more domains. Overall, the evidence for all the outcomes was very low quality evidence. Nine trials (467 participants) provided information for one or more outcomes. Three trials (99 participants) compared interferon-alpha versus no intervention. Three trials (90 participants) compared interferon-beta versus no intervention. One trial (21 participants) compared pegylated interferon-alpha versus no intervention, but it did not provide any data for analysis. One trial (41 participants) compared MTH-68/B vaccine versus no intervention. Two trials (237 participants) compared pegylated interferon-alpha versus pegylated interferon-alpha plus ribavirin. None of the trials compared direct-acting antivirals versus placebo or other interventions. The mean or median follow-up period in the trials ranged from six to 36 months.There was no short-term mortality (less than one year) in any group in any trial except for one trial where one participant died in the pegylated interferon-alpha plus ribavirin group (1/95: 1.1%). In the trials that reported follow-up beyond one year, there were no further deaths. The number of serious adverse events was higher with pegylated interferon-alpha plus ribavirin than with pegylated interferon-alpha (rate ratio 2.74, 95% CI 1.40 to 5.33; participants = 237; trials = 2; I = 0%). The proportion of people with any adverse events was higher with interferon-alpha and interferon-beta compared with no intervention (OR 203.00, 95% CI 9.01 to 4574.81; participants = 33; trials = 1 and OR 27.88, 95% CI 1.48 to 526.12; participants = 40; trials = 1). None of the trials reported health-related quality of life, liver transplantation, decompensated liver disease, cirrhosis, or hepatocellular carcinoma. The proportion of people with chronic HCV infection as indicated by the lack of sustained virological response was lower in the interferon-alpha group versus no intervention (OR 0.27, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.76; participants = 99; trials = 3; I = 0%). The differences between the groups were imprecise or not estimable (because neither group had any events) for all the remaining comparisons.Four of the 10 trials (40%) received financial or other assistance from pharmaceutical companies who would benefit from the findings of the research; the source of funding was not available in five trials (50%), and one trial (10%) was funded by a hospital.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Very low quality evidence suggests that interferon-alpha may decrease the incidence of chronic HCV infection as measured by sustained virological response. However, the clinical impact such as improvement in health-related quality of life, reduction in cirrhosis, decompensated liver disease, and liver transplantation has not been reported. It is also not clear whether this finding is applicable in the current clinical setting dominated by the use of pegylated interferons and direct-acting antivirals, although we found no evidence to support that pegylated interferons or ribavirin or both are effective in people with acute HCV infection. We could find no randomised trials comparing direct-acting antivirals with placebo or other interventions for acute HCV infection. There is significant uncertainty in the benefits and harms of the interventions, and high-quality randomised clinical trials are required.

摘要

背景

丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)是一种单链RNA(核糖核酸)病毒,有可能引发肝脏炎症。急性HCV感染的传统定义是感染该病毒后的头六个月。急性HCV感染的另一个常用定义是不存在HCV抗体且随后发生血清转化(先前HCV抗体呈阴性的人出现HCV抗体)。约40%至95%的急性HCV感染者会发展为慢性HCV感染,即血液中持续存在HCV RNA。2010年,全球估计有1.6亿人(占世界人口的2%至3%)患有慢性HCV感染。急性HCV的最佳药物治疗仍存在争议。慢性HCV感染会损害肝脏。

目的

通过网络荟萃分析评估不同药物干预措施在治疗急性HCV感染中的相对益处和危害,并根据其安全性和有效性对现有药物治疗进行排名。然而,无法评估不同比较中潜在的效应修饰因素是否相似。因此,我们未进行网络荟萃分析,而是使用标准的Cochrane方法评估不同干预措施相互之间或与不干预相比的相对益处和危害。

检索方法

我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、Embase、科学引文索引扩展版、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台以及截至2016年4月的随机对照试验注册库,以识别关于急性HCV感染药物干预的随机临床试验。

入选标准

我们仅纳入了急性HCV感染参与者的随机临床试验(无论语言、盲法或发表状态如何)。我们排除了包括先前接受肝移植的参与者以及患有其他并存病毒性疾病的试验。我们考虑了与安慰剂或相互比较的任何各种药物干预措施。

数据收集与分析

我们使用了Cochrane预期的标准方法程序。我们使用Review Manager 5基于现有参与者分析,通过固定效应和随机效应模型计算比值比(OR)和率比以及95%置信区间(CI)。我们根据Cochrane评估偏倚风险,使用试验序贯分析控制随机误差风险,并使用GRADE评估证据质量。

主要结果

我们识别出10项随机临床试验,共488名随机参与者符合我们的纳入标准。所有试验在一个或多个领域存在高偏倚风险。总体而言,所有结局的证据质量都非常低。9项试验(467名参与者)提供了一个或多个结局的信息。3项试验(99名参与者)比较了α干扰素与不干预。3项试验(90名参与者)比较了β干扰素与不干预。1项试验(21名参与者)比较了聚乙二醇化α干扰素与不干预,但未提供任何分析数据。1项试验(41名参与者)比较了MTH - 68/B疫苗与不干预。2项试验(237名参与者)比较了聚乙二醇化α干扰素与聚乙二醇化α干扰素加利巴韦林。没有试验比较直接作用抗病毒药物与安慰剂或其他干预措施。试验中的平均或中位随访期为6至36个月。除了一项试验中聚乙二醇化α干扰素加利巴韦林组有1名参与者死亡(1/95:1.1%)外,任何试验中任何组均无短期死亡率(不到一年)。在报告随访超过一年的试验中,没有进一步的死亡病例。聚乙二醇化α干扰素加利巴韦林组的严重不良事件数量高于聚乙二醇化α干扰素组(率比2.74,95% CI 1.40至5.33;参与者 = 237;试验 = 2;I = 0%)。与不干预相比,α干扰素和β干扰素组出现任何不良事件的人群比例更高(OR 203.00,95% CI 9.01至4574.81;参与者 = 33;试验 = 1;以及OR 27.88,95% CI 1.48至526.12;参与者 = 40;试验 = 1)。没有试验报告与健康相关的生活质量、肝移植、失代偿性肝病、肝硬化或肝细胞癌情况。以持续病毒学应答缺乏表示的慢性HCV感染人群比例,α干扰素组低于不干预组(OR 0.27,95% CI 0.09至0.76;参与者 = 99;试验 = 3;I = 0%)。对于所有其余比较,组间差异不精确或无法估计(因为两组均无任何事件)。10项试验中有4项(40%)接受了可能从研究结果中受益的制药公司的资金或其他援助;5项试验(50%)的资金来源不可用,1项试验(10%)由一家医院资助。

作者结论

质量极低的证据表明,以持续病毒学应答衡量,α干扰素可能会降低慢性HCV感染的发生率。然而,尚未报告其对与健康相关的生活质量改善、肝硬化、失代偿性肝病和肝移植减少等方面的临床影响。尽管我们未发现证据支持聚乙二醇化干扰素或利巴韦林或两者对急性HCV感染者有效,但也不清楚这一发现是否适用于当前以聚乙二醇化干扰素和直接作用抗病毒药物为主的临床环境。我们未找到比较直接作用抗病毒药物与安慰剂或其他干预措施治疗急性HCV感染的随机试验。干预措施的益处和危害存在重大不确定性,需要高质量的随机临床试验。

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