Jakobsen Janus C, Nielsen Emil Eik, Feinberg Joshua, Katakam Kiran Kumar, Fobian Kristina, Hauser Goran, Poropat Goran, Djurisic Snezana, Weiss Karl Heinz, Bjelakovic Milica, Bjelakovic Goran, Klingenberg Sarah Louise, Liu Jian Ping, Nikolova Dimitrinka, Koretz Ronald L, Gluud Christian
The Cochrane Hepato-Biliary Group, Copenhagen Trial Unit, Centre for Clinical Intervention Research, Department 7812, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Blegdamsvej 9, Copenhagen, Sjælland, Denmark, DK-2100.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 18;9(9):CD012143. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012143.pub3.
Millions of people worldwide suffer from hepatitis C, which can lead to severe liver disease, liver cancer, and death. Direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), e.g. sofosbuvir, are relatively new and expensive interventions for chronic hepatitis C, and preliminary results suggest that DAAs may eradicate hepatitis C virus (HCV) from the blood (sustained virological response). Sustained virological response (SVR) is used by investigators and regulatory agencies as a surrogate outcome for morbidity and mortality, based solely on observational evidence. However, there have been no randomised trials that have validated that usage.
To assess the benefits and harms of DAAs in people with chronic HCV.
We searched for all published and unpublished trials in The Cochrane Hepato-Biliary Group Controlled Trials Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, Science Citation Index Expanded, LILACS, and BIOSIS; the Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (CBM), China Network Knowledge Information (CNKI), the Chinese Science Journal Database (VIP), Google Scholar, The Turning Research into Practice (TRIP) Database, ClinicalTrials.gov, European Medicines Agency (EMA) (www.ema.europa.eu/ema/), WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (www.who.int/ictrp), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (www.fda.gov), and pharmaceutical company sources for ongoing or unpublished trials. Searches were last run in October 2016.
Randomised clinical trials comparing DAAs versus no intervention or placebo, alone or with co-interventions, in adults with chronic HCV. We included trials irrespective of publication type, publication status, and language.
We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Our primary outcomes were hepatitis C-related morbidity, serious adverse events, and health-related quality of life. Our secondary outcomes were all-cause mortality, ascites, variceal bleeding, hepato-renal syndrome, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatocellular carcinoma, non-serious adverse events (each reported separately), and SVR. We systematically assessed risks of bias, performed Trial Sequential Analysis, and followed an eight-step procedure to assess thresholds for statistical and clinical significance. We evaluated the overall quality of the evidence, using GRADE.
We included a total of 138 trials randomising a total of 25,232 participants. The trials were generally short-term trials and designed primarily to assess the effect of treatment on SVR. The trials evaluated 51 different DAAs. Of these, 128 trials employed matching placebo in the control group. All included trials were at high risk of bias. Eighty-four trials involved DAAs on the market or under development (13,466 participants). Fifty-seven trials administered DAAs that were discontinued or withdrawn from the market. Study populations were treatment-naive in 95 trials, had been exposed to treatment in 17 trials, and comprised both treatment-naive and treatment-experienced individuals in 24 trials. The HCV genotypes were genotype 1 (119 trials), genotype 2 (eight trials), genotype 3 (six trials), genotype 4 (nine trials), and genotype 6 (one trial). We identified two ongoing trials.We could not reliably determine the effect of DAAs on the market or under development on our primary outcome of hepatitis C-related morbidity or all-cause mortality. There were no data on hepatitis C-related morbidity and only limited data on mortality from 11 trials (DAA 15/2377 (0.63%) versus control 1/617 (0.16%); OR 3.72, 95% CI 0.53 to 26.18, very low-quality evidence). We did not perform Trial Sequential Analysis on this outcome.There is very low quality evidence that DAAs on the market or under development do not influence serious adverse events (DAA 5.2% versus control 5.6%; OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.75 to 1.15 , 15,817 participants, 43 trials). The Trial Sequential Analysis showed that there was sufficient information to rule out that DAAs reduce the relative risk of a serious adverse event by 20% when compared with placebo. The only DAA that showed a lower risk of serious adverse events when meta-analysed separately was simeprevir (OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.45 to 0.86). However, Trial Sequential Analysis showed that there was not enough information to confirm or reject a relative risk reduction of 20%, and when one trial with an extreme result was excluded, the meta-analysis result showed no evidence of a difference.DAAs on the market or under development may reduce the risk of no SVR from 54.1% in untreated people to 23.8% in people treated with DAA (RR 0.44, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.52, 6886 participants, 32 trials, low quality evidence). Trial Sequential Analysis confirmed this meta-analysis result.Only 1/84 trials on the market or under development assessed the effects of DAAs on health-related quality of life (SF-36 mental score and SF-36 physical score).There was insufficient evidence from trials on withdrawn or discontinued DAAs to determine their effect on hepatitis C-related morbidity and all-cause mortality (OR 0.64, 95% CI 0.23 to 1.79; 5 trials, very low-quality evidence). However, these DAAs seemed to increase the risk of serious adverse events (OR 1.45, 95% CI 1.22 to 1.73; 29 trials, very low-quality evidence). Trial Sequential Analysis confirmed this meta-analysis result.None of the 138 trials provided useful data to assess the effects of DAAs on the remaining secondary outcomes (ascites, variceal bleeding, hepato-renal syndrome, hepatic encephalopathy, and hepatocellular carcinoma).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The evidence for our main outcomes of interest come from short-term trials, and we are unable to determine the effect of long-term treatment with DAAs. The rates of hepatitis C morbidity and mortality observed in the trials are relatively low and we are uncertain as to how DAAs affect this outcome. Overall, there is very low quality evidence that DAAs on the market or under development do not influence serious adverse events. There is insufficient evidence to judge if DAAs have beneficial or harmful effects on other clinical outcomes for chronic HCV. Simeprevir may have beneficial effects on risk of serious adverse event. In all remaining analyses, we could neither confirm nor reject that DAAs had any clinical effects. DAAs may reduce the number of people with detectable virus in their blood, but we do not have sufficient evidence from randomised trials that enables us to understand how SVR affects long-term clinical outcomes. SVR is still an outcome that needs proper validation in randomised clinical trials.
全球数以百万计的人患有丙型肝炎,这可能导致严重的肝脏疾病、肝癌和死亡。直接抗病毒药物(DAAs),如索磷布韦,是用于慢性丙型肝炎的相对较新且昂贵的干预措施,初步结果表明DAAs可能从血液中清除丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)(持续病毒学应答)。研究者和监管机构仅基于观察性证据,将持续病毒学应答(SVR)用作发病率和死亡率的替代结局。然而,尚无随机试验验证这种用法。
评估DAAs对慢性HCV患者的益处和危害。
我们检索了Cochrane肝胆组对照试验注册库、Cochrane系统评价数据库、MEDLINE、Embase、科学引文索引扩展版、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学数据库以及生物学文摘数据库中所有已发表和未发表的试验;中国生物医学文献数据库(CBM)、中国知网、维普中文科技期刊数据库、谷歌学术、将研究转化为实践(TRIP)数据库、ClinicalTrials.gov、欧洲药品管理局(EMA)(www.ema.europa.eu/ema/)、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(www.who.int/ictrp)、美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)(www.fda.gov)以及制药公司来源,以查找正在进行或未发表的试验。检索最后一次运行于2016年10月。
比较DAAs与无干预或安慰剂,单独或联合其他干预措施,用于慢性HCV成人患者的随机临床试验。我们纳入了不论发表类型、发表状态和语言的试验。
我们采用了Cochrane期望的标准方法程序。我们的主要结局是丙型肝炎相关发病率、严重不良事件和健康相关生活质量。我们的次要结局是全因死亡率、腹水、静脉曲张出血、肝肾综合征、肝性脑病、肝细胞癌、非严重不良事件(分别报告)和SVR。我们系统地评估了偏倚风险,进行了试验序贯分析,并遵循八步程序评估统计和临床意义的阈值。我们使用GRADE评估证据的总体质量。
我们共纳入了138项试验,随机分配了总共25232名参与者。这些试验通常为短期试验,主要设计用于评估治疗对SVR的影响。试验评估了51种不同的DAAs。其中,128项试验在对照组中使用了匹配的安慰剂。所有纳入的试验都存在高偏倚风险。84项试验涉及市场上或正在研发的DAAs(13466名参与者)。57项试验使用了已停产或撤市的DAAs。95项试验中的研究人群为初治患者,17项试验中的研究人群曾接受过治疗,24项试验中的研究人群包括初治和经治个体。HCV基因型为1型(119项试验)、2型(8项试验)、3型(6项试验)、4型(9项试验)和6型(1项试验)。我们确定了两项正在进行的试验。我们无法可靠地确定市场上或正在研发的DAAs对我们的主要结局丙型肝炎相关发病率或全因死亡率的影响。关于丙型肝炎相关发病率没有数据,只有11项试验中有关于死亡率的有限数据(DAA组15/2377(0.63%),对照组1/617(0.16%);OR 3.72,95%CI 0.53至26.18,极低质量证据)。我们未对该结局进行试验序贯分析。有极低质量证据表明市场上或正在研发的DAAs不会影响严重不良事件(DAA组5.2%,对照组5.6%;OR 0.93,95%CI 0.75至1.15,15817名参与者,43项试验)。试验序贯分析表明,有足够的信息排除DAAs与安慰剂相比可将严重不良事件的相对风险降低20%。单独进行Meta分析时,唯一显示严重不良事件风险较低的DAA是simeprevir(OR 0.62,95%CI 0.45至0.86)。然而,试验序贯分析表明,没有足够的信息确认或排除相对风险降低20%,并且当排除一项结果极端的试验时,Meta分析结果显示无差异证据。市场上或正在研发的DAAs可能会将无SVR的风险从未治疗人群中的54.1%降低至接受DAA治疗人群中的23.8%(RR 0.44,95%CI 0.37至0.52,6886名参与者,32项试验,低质量证据)。试验序贯分析证实了该Meta分析结果。市场上或正在研发的DAAs中,只有1/84项试验评估了DAAs对健康相关生活质量的影响(SF - 36心理评分和SF - 36身体评分)。关于已撤市或停产的DAAs的试验,没有足够的证据确定它们对丙型肝炎相关发病率和全因死亡率的影响(OR 0.64,95%CI 0.23至1.79;5项试验,极低质量证据)。然而,这些DAAs似乎会增加严重不良事件的风险(OR 1.45,95%CI 1.2至1.73;29项试验,极低质量证据)。试验序贯分析证实了该Meta分析结果。138项试验中没有一项提供了有用的数据来评估DAAs对其余次要结局(腹水、静脉曲张出血、肝肾综合征、肝性脑病和肝细胞癌)的影响。
我们感兴趣的主要结局的证据来自短期试验,我们无法确定DAAs长期治疗的效果。试验中观察到的丙型肝炎发病率和死亡率相对较低,我们不确定DAAs如何影响这一结局。总体而言,有极低质量证据表明市场上或正在研发的DAAs不会影响严重不良事件。没有足够的证据判断DAAs对慢性HCV的其他临床结局是有益还是有害。Simeprevir可能对严重不良事件风险有有益影响。在所有其余分析中,我们既不能证实也不能排除DAAs有任何临床效果。DAAs可能会减少血液中可检测到病毒的人数,但我们没有来自随机试验的足够证据使我们能够了解SVR如何影响长期临床结局。SVR仍然是一个需要在随机临床试验中进行适当验证的结局。