Equal treatment efficacy of direct-acting antivirals in patients with chronic hepatitis C and hepatocellular carcinoma? A prospective cohort study

Author:

Huang Chung-Feng,Yeh Ming-Lun,Huang Ching-I,Liang Po-Cheng,Lin Yi-Hung,Hsieh Ming-Yen,Wei Yu-Ju,Lin Zu-Yau,Chen Shinn-Cherng,Huang Jee-Fu,Dai Chia-Yen,Chuang Wan-Long,Yu Ming-Lung

Abstract

ObjectiveThe treatment outcome of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) in chronic hepatitis C patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is controversial. The current study aimed to address the treatment efficacy and safety of DAAs in patients with curative or active HCC, compared with those of patients without HCC.DesignA prospective cohort studySettingA medical centre and two regional hospitals in TaiwanParticipantsA total of 713 Taiwanese patients (601 non-HCC, 74 curative HCC and 38 active HCC patients) who received standard-of-care DAAs were consecutively enrolled in the study.Main outcome measurementThe primary objective was to determine treatment efficacy, defined as undetectable hepatitis C virus RNA throughout 12 weeks of the post-treatment follow-up period (sustained virological response 12 [SVR12]).ResultsThe overall SVR12 rate was 96.9%. The SVR12 rate was similar between the patients with HCC and those without HCC (95.5% vs 97.2%, p=0.37). The HCC patients were divided into two groups, those with curative HCC and those with viable HCC; a substantially but not significantly lower SVR rate, 92.1% (35/38), was observed in the patients with viable HCC compared with the SVR rate, 97.3% (72/74), in those with curative HCC (p=0.33). Compared with the patients with curative HCC, the patients with viable HCC had a significantly higher proportion of serious adverse events (10.5% vs 1.0%, p=0.002), early treatment discontinuation (10.5% vs 2.8%, p=0.03) and mortality (5.3% vs 0.1%, p=0.008).ConclusionsAn equivalently high SVR rate was observed in patients with either past or active HCC compared with those without HCC. The safety concerns in the HCC patients did not compromise treatment efficacy.

Funder

Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital

Kaohsiung Medical University

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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