AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed the effectiveness and safety of all-oral antiviral therapy using daclatasvir (DCV) in 275 patients, primarily with hepatitis C, participating in an Italian compassionate-use program, showing a sustained virological response (SVR) rate of 87.3%.
  • - Patients were treated with various combinations of DCV, sofosbuvir (SOF), and other medications, with significantly higher SVR rates observed in those treated with the DCV + SOF combination compared to other combinations.
  • - Improvements in liver function were noted, and the therapy was well tolerated, particularly benefiting patients with difficult-to-treat hepatitis C genotypes, while combinations of DCV with other protease inhibitors showed lower

Article Abstract

We reported the efficacy and safety data for daclatasvir (DCV)-based all-oral antiviral therapy in patients treated in the Italian compassionate-use program. 275 patients were included (202 male-73.5%, mean age: 57.4 years, 62 HIV-coinfected, 94 with recurrence of hepatitis C post-OLT). Forty-nine patients (17.8%) had Child-Pugh B, Genotype(G) distribution was: G1a:72 patients (26.2%), G1b:137 (49.8%); G3:40 (14.5%) and G4:26 (9.5%). Patients received DCV with sofosbuvir(SOF) (n = 221, 129 with ribavirin(RBV) or with simeprevir (SMV) or asunaprevir (ASU) (n = 54, 19 with RBV) for up to 24 weeks. Logistic regression was used to identify baseline characteristics associated with sustained virological response at week 12 post-treatment (SVR12). Liver function changes between baseline and follow up were assessed in 228 patients. 240 patients achieved SVR12 (87.3%), post transplant and HIV co-infected patients were equally distributed among SVR and no SVR (35% vs 34.3%; p = 0.56 and 24.2% vs 11.4%, p = 0.13, respectively). SVR rate was significantly higher with the combination DCV + SOF compared with DCV + SIM or ASU (93.2% vs 63.0%, p < 0.0001). Bilirubin value (OR: 0.69, CI95%: 0.54-0.87, p = 0.002) and regimen containing SOF (OR: 9.99, CI95%: 4.09-24.40; p < 0.001) were independently related with SVR. Mean albumin and bilirubin values significantly improved between baseline and follow-up week 12. DCV-based antiviral therapy was well tolerated and resulted in a high SVR when combined with SOF either in pre-transplant and in OLT patients and in "difficult to treat" HCV genotypes. Regimens containing DCV in combination with NS3 protease inhibitors obtained suboptimal results.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6345835PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-36734-0DOI Listing

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