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Population impact of direct-acting antiviral treatment on new presentations of hepatitis C-related decompensated cirrhosis: a national record-linkage study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study analyzed the effects of interferon-free direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies on HCV-related decompensated cirrhosis (DC) in Scotland using population-based data.
  • Between 2010 and 2018, around 11,000 patients were treated, leading to a 2.3-fold increase in those achieving a sustained viral response (SVR), and a significant decrease in new HCV-related DC presentations by 51% in 2018 compared to the pre-DAA era.
  • The findings suggest that scaling up DAA treatments can considerably reduce cases of HCV-related DC, indicating that similar strategies could be beneficial in other countries

Article Abstract

Objective: Population-based studies demonstrating the clinical impact of interferon-free direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies are lacking. We examined the impact of the introduction of DAAs on HCV-related decompensated cirrhosis (DC) through analysis of population-based data from Scotland.

Design: Through analysis of national surveillance data (involving linkage of HCV diagnosis and clinical databases to hospital and deaths registers), we determined i) the scale-up in the number of patients treated and achieving a sustained viral response (SVR), and ii) the change in the trend of new presentations with HCV-related DC, with the introduction of DAAs.

Results: Approximately 11 000 patients had been treated in Scotland over the 8-year period 2010/11 to 2017/18. The scale-up in the number of patients achieving SVR between the pre-DAA and DAA eras was 2.3-fold overall and 5.9-fold among those with compensated cirrhosis (the group at immediate risk of developing DC). In the pre-DAA era, the annual number of HCV-related DC presentations increased 4.6-fold between 2000 (30) and 2014 (142). In the DAA era, presentations decreased by 51% to 69 in 2018 (and by 67% among those with chronic infection at presentation), representing a significant change in trend (rate ratio 0.88, 95% CI 0.85 to 0.90). With the introduction of DAAs, an estimated 330 DC cases had been averted during 2015-18.

Conclusions: National scale-up in interferon-free DAA treatment is associated with the rapid downturn in presentations of HCV-related DC at the population-level. Major progress in averting HCV-related DC in the short-term is feasible, and thus other countries should strive to achieve the same.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2019-320007DOI Listing

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