Naggie Susanna, Marks Kristen M, Hughes Michael, Fierer Daniel S, Macbrayne Christine, Kim Arthur, Hollabaugh Kimberly, Roa Jhoanna, Symonds Bill, Brainard Diana M, McHutchison John G, Peters Marion G, Kiser Jennifer J, Chung Raymond
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Weill Cornell, New York, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2017 Apr 15;64(8):1035-1042. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix025.
Historically, acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection was treated with shorter durations of interferon-containing therapies. In the era of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), it is unclear whether the efficacy of treatment achieved in chronic infection can be maintained with abbreviated courses of therapy during the acute phase.
The sofosbuvir-containing regimens without interferon for treatment of acute HCV in HIV-1 infected individuals (SWIFT-C) is an open-label, 2-cohort clinical trial in which the first cohort assessed for the safety and efficacy of 12 weeks of sofosbuvir plus ribavirin for the treatment of acute HCV infection in participants with chronic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. This is a preplanned analysis of the first cohort, which had a planned accrual of 17 participants.
Seventeen men (11 Hispanic, 6 white, median age 45 years) were enrolled. Most (88%) had HCV genotype-1 infection and few (24%) had the favorable IL28B CC genotype. Median baseline HCV RNA was 2 280 000 IU/mL (interquartile range, 272 000-4 230 000). Ten participants (59%) achieved the primary outcome of SVR12 (90% confidence interval, 36%-78%), failing to establish noninferiority. All treatment failures were due to viral relapse (41%). There were no premature treatment discontinuations. The only factor that differed between participants who achieved SVR vs those who relapsed was ribavirin concentration at the end of treatment.
Sofosbuvir-ribavirin for 12 weeks for the treatment of acute HCV genotype-1 infection in HIV-1-infected persons results in a high relapse rate. Preliminary studies of DAA combination therapies suggest improved response rates, although the adequate duration of therapy remains unclear.
NCT02128217.
在历史上,急性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染采用含干扰素的治疗疗程较短。在直接抗病毒药物(DAA)时代,尚不清楚在急性期缩短疗程的治疗能否维持慢性感染时所达到的治疗效果。
在HIV-1感染个体中使用不含干扰素的索磷布韦方案治疗急性HCV(SWIFT-C)是一项开放标签的双队列临床试验,其中第一个队列评估索磷布韦加利巴韦林治疗12周对慢性1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染参与者急性HCV感染的安全性和疗效。这是对第一个队列的预先计划分析,计划招募17名参与者。
共纳入17名男性(11名西班牙裔、6名白人,中位年龄45岁)。大多数(88%)为HCV 1型感染,少数(24%)具有有利的IL28B CC基因型。基线HCV RNA中位数为2 两百八十万IU/mL(四分位间距,272 000 - 4 两百三十万)。10名参与者(59%)达到了SVR12的主要结局(90%置信区间,36% - 78%),未能确立非劣效性。所有治疗失败均因病毒复发(41%)。没有提前终止治疗的情况。实现SVR的参与者与复发者之间唯一不同的因素是治疗结束时的利巴韦林浓度。
索磷布韦 - 利巴韦林治疗HIV-1感染患者的急性HCV 1型感染12周导致高复发率。DAA联合疗法的初步研究表明缓解率有所提高,尽管治疗的适当疗程仍不清楚。
NCT02128217