6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268565

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Triple therapy in treatment-experienced patients with HCV-cirrhosis in a multicentre cohort of the French Early Access Programme (ANRS CO20-CUPIC) – NCT01514890

Stanislas PolThierry PoynardIsabelle RosaArmand AbergelValérie CanvaLawrence SerfatyVéronique Loustaud-rattiJean-pierre ZarskiCyrille FerayXavier CaussePatrick HillonJ.-j. RaabeFabien ZoulimChristophe HézodePierre AttaliDominique GuyaderHélène FontainePierre-henri BernardPatrice CacoubLaurent AlricDidier SamuelDominique LarreyCéline DorivalAlbert TranVentzislava Petrov-sanchezMarc BourlièreGhassan RiachiJean-michel PawlotskyPatrick MarcellinFabrice CarratVéronique Grando-lemaireSophie MetivierDamien LucidarmeVincent Di MartinoVictor De LédinghenThong DaoJean-pierre BronowickiYoann Barthe

subject

Liver CirrhosisMaleCirrhosisBlood transfusionmedicine.medical_treatment[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Chronic hepatitis CGastroenterologyTelaprevirTelaprevirCohort Studieschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinePegylated interferonMedicineProspective StudiesAged 80 and overBoceprevirMiddle AgedViral Load3. Good healthTreatment OutcomeCirrhosis030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohort030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyDrug Therapy CombinationFemaleFranceSafetyOligopeptidesmedicine.drugAdultmedicine.medical_specialtySerine Proteinase InhibitorsProlineAntiviral Agents03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineBoceprevirRibavirinHumansAdverse effectAgedHepatologybusiness.industryRibavirinInterferon-alphaHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.diseaseSurgeryTreatmentchemistrybusiness

description

International audience; Background & AimsIn phase III trials, the safety profile of triple therapy (pegylated interferon/ribavirin with boceprevir or telaprevir) seems to be similar in HCV treatment-experienced cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients, but few cirrhotics were included. We report the week 16 safety and efficacy analysis in a cohort of compensated cirrhotics treated in the French Early Access Programme.Methods674 genotype 1 patients, prospectively included, received 48 weeks of triple therapy. The analysis is restricted to 497 patients reaching week 16.ResultsA high incidence of serious adverse events (40.0%), and of death and severe complications (severe infection or hepatic decompensation) (6.4%), and a difficult management of anaemia (erythropoietin and transfusion use in 50.7% and 12.1%) were observed. Independent predictors of anaemia <8 g/dl or blood transfusion were: female gender (OR 2.19, 95% CI 1.11–4.33, p = 0.024), no lead-in phase (OR 2.25, 95% CI 1.15–4.39, p = 0.018), age ⩾65 years (OR 3.04, 95% CI 1.54–6.02, p = 0.0014), haemoglobin level (⩽12 g/dl for females, ⩽13 g/dl for males) (OR 5.30, 95% CI 2.49–11.5, p = 0.0001). Death or severe complications were related to platelets count ⩽100,000/mm3 (OR 3.11, 95% CI 1.30–7.41, p = 0.0105) and albumin <35 g/dl (OR 6.33, 95% CI 2.66–15.07, p = 0.0001), with a risk of 44.1% in patients with both. However, the on-treatment virological response was high.ConclusionsThe safety profile was poor and patients with platelet count ⩽100,000/mm3 and serum albumin <35 g/L should not be treated with the triple therapy.

10.1016/j.jhep.2013.04.035https://hal.univ-lorraine.fr/hal-01708037