All-oral Direct-acting Antiviral Regimens in HIV/Hepatitis C Virus–coinfected Patients With Cirrhosis Are Efficient and Safe: Real-life Results From the Prospective ANRS CO13–HEPAVIH Cohort

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Sogni, Philippe | Gilbert, Camille | Lacombe, Karine | Piroth, Lionel | Rosenthal, Eric | Miailhes, Patrick | Gervais, Anne | Esterle, Laure | Chas, Julie | Poizot-Martin, Isabelle | Domínguez, Stéphanie | Simon, Anne | Morlat, Philippe | Neau, Didier | Zucman, David | Bouchaud, Olivier | Lascoux-Combe, Caroline | Bani-Sadr, Firouze | Alric, Laurent | Goujard, Cécile | Vittecoq, Daniel | Billaud, Eric | Aumaitre, Hugues | Boue, François | Valantin, Marc-Antoine | Dabis, François | Salmon, Dominique | Wittkop, Linda

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

International audience. BACKGROUND:Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/hepatitis C virus (HCV)-coinfected patients with cirrhosis have long been considered to be difficult to treat, and real-life efficacy and tolerance data with all-oral direct-acting antiviral (DAA) combinations in these patients are scarce.METHODS:Cirrhotic HIV/HCV-coinfected patients enrolled in the French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (ANRS) CO13 HEPAVIH cohort initiating an all-oral DAA regimen were consecutively included. A negative HCV RNA result at 12 weeks of follow-up or thereafter was assumed as a sustained virologic response (SVR12). Adjusted exact logistic regression was used to study factors associated with treatment outcome.RESULTS:We included 189 patients who initiated an all-oral DAA regimen with the following characteristics: median age 53.2 years; 74.6% male; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention classification A/B/C: 37%/31%/32%; Child-Pugh class A/B/C: 91%/8%/1%; 87% with HIV RNA <50 copies/mL; 99% on antiretrovirals; median CD4 count: 489 cells/µL; HCV treatment naive 29%; HCV genotype 1/2/3/4: 58%/4%/17%/21%. Sofosbuvir (SOF) + daclatasvir ± ribavirin (RBV) was used in 123 patients, SOF + RBV in 30, SOF + simeprevir in 11, and SOF + ledipasvir in 23. An SVR12 was reported in 93.1% of the patients (95% confidence interval, 88.5%-96.3%). In adjusted analyses, no difference was found between 12 or 24 weeks of treatment, in patients receiving RBV or not, and in treatment-naive vs experienced patients. Premature stop of DAA was reported for 8 patients. One patient died during treatment (unknown cause), and 12 other patients developed liver-related events.CONCLUSIONS:In this prospective real-life cohort, all-oral DAA regimens were well tolerated and associated with a high virologic efficacy in cirrhotic HIV/HCV-coinfected patients. This should not alleviate the surveillance for liver-related events in these patients.

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