Reuters Health Information: Hepatitis C virus eradication tied to fewer complications in patients with cirrhosis
Hepatitis C virus eradication tied to fewer complications in patients with cirrhosis
Last Updated: 2016-09-26
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Sustained viral response (SVR)
to hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment is associated with a
reduction in liver and non-liver complications in patients with
compensated cirrhosis, researchers from France report.
"The achievement of HCV eradication strikingly decreases the
risks of liver-related complications, a benefit that was up to
now only suggested by retrospective studies," Dr. Pierre Nahon
from Hôpital Jean Verdier in Bondy, France, told Reuters Health
by email.
"These benefits extend beyond liver-related complications,
in particular for cardiovascular disease and MACE (major adverse
cardiovascular events) as well as bacterial infection," he said.
"These positive effects are translated into survival benefits,
whether considering liver-related or extra-hepatic mortality."
Dr. Nahon and colleagues from 35 clinical centers in France
evaluated the impact of SVR in 1,671 patients, 1,323 of whom had
HCV-related compensated cirrhosis.
After a median follow-up of 58.2 months, 59.5% of patients
had a negative viral load, including 668 patients (51.7%) with
SVR and 119 HCV-negative patients who were still undergoing
antiviral treatment.
Male gender, absence of esophageal varices, and absence of
diabetes were independent predictive factors for SVR, the
researchers report in Gastroenterology, online the September 15.
SVR was associated with a significantly decreased risk of
hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC; hazard ratio, 0.29) and mortality
among patients who had HCC at baseline.
Patients who achieved SVR were also 74% less likely to
develop liver decompensation during follow-up.
Extrahepatic events - including bacterial infections and
cardiovascular events - were less than half as common among
patients who achieved SVR than among others, but SVR had no
apparent effect on the occurrence of extrahepatic malignancies.
SVR independently predicted a lower risk of hepatic and
extrahepatic complications, a finding that was confirmed by a
supporting propensity-matching analysis.
SVR was a protective factor for all-cause mortality (HR,
0.27; p<0.001), as well as a predictive factor for survival
without liver-related or extrahepatic deaths.
"The present report, with the advantage of a longer
follow-up and by studying virological clearance at endpoint as a
time-dependent covariate after interferon- or direct-acting
antivirals (DAA)-based regimen, now clearly shows that achieving
SVR in HCV-infected cirrhotic patients leads to an improved
prognosis," the researchers conclude.
"Overall, the present data are able to specifically
highlight the independent influence of SVR on the incidence of
liver complications, including HCC and mortality and
interestingly a positive impact on the occurrence of
extrahepatic manifestations," they add.
"However," the team notes, "the achievement of SVR in
DAA-treated patients is too recent to draw any definite
conclusion on this point, which will require a longer follow-up
of the CirVir cohort to be adequately addressed."
"Although HCV eradication is achievable in almost all
patients, physicians must be aware of the persisting risk of HCC
occurrence in cirrhotic patients despite viral clearance, in
particular in case of associated metabolic syndrome," Dr. Nahon
cautioned. "These patients must be maintained in liver cancer
surveillance programs."
The study did not have commercial funding. Several authors,
including Dr. Nahon, reported financial ties to Gilead Sciences
and other companies selling drugs for hepatitis C.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2cZI2hO
Gastroenterology 2016.
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