AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and cirrhosis often show significant impairment in patient-reported outcomes (PROs) prior to treatment but see substantial improvements after achieving sustained virologic response (SVR).
  • In a study of 854 cirrhotic patients, those with decompensated cirrhosis (DCC) reported worse baseline PROs compared to those with compensated cirrhosis (CC), but both groups showed positive changes after SVR.
  • PRO improvements persisted for up to 3.5 years in CC patients, while DCC patients experienced a decline in enhancements after 2 years, highlighting the varying long-term outcomes based on cirrhosis severity.

Article Abstract

Background & Aims: Achieving sustained virologic response (SVR) among patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) leads to patient reported outcome (PRO) improvement. We aimed to assess the long-term post-SVR PRO trends in HCV patients with cirrhosis.

Methods: Patients with HCV and cirrhosis treated in clinical trials with direct acting antiviral agents (DAAs) who achieved SVR-12 were prospectively enrolled in a long-term registry (clinicaltrials.gov #NCT02292706). PROs were collected every 24 weeks using the Short Form-36v2 (SF-36), CLDQ-HCV, and WPAI-HCV.

Results: Pre-treatment baseline data were available for 854 cirrhotic patients who achieved SVR after DAAs. Of these, 730 had compensated (CC) and 124 had decompensated cirrhosis (DCC) before treatment- patients with DCC reported severe impairment in their PROs in comparison to CC patients (by mean -5% to -16% of a PRO range size; p < .05 for 16 out of 20 studied PROs]. After achieving SVR and registry enrollment, significant PRO improvements were noted from pre-treatment levels in 11/20 domains for those with DCC (+4% to +21%) and 19/20 PRO domains in patients with CC (+3% to +17%). Patients with baseline DCC had higher rates of hepatocellular carcinoma and mortality (P < .05). In patients with CC, the PRO gains persisted up to 168 weeks (3.5 years) of registry follow-up. In patients with DCC, the improvements lasted for at least 96 weeks but a declining trend after year 2.

Conclusions: Patients with HCV cirrhosis experience severe PRO impairment at baseline with sustainable improvement after SVR. Though those with DCC experience improvement, there is a decline after 2 years.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cgh.2021.01.026DOI Listing

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