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Critical role of ribavirin for the achievement of early virological response to HCV therapy in HCV/HIV-coinfected patients
B. Ramos 1 , M. Núñez 1 , A. Rendón 1 , M. A. Berdún 2 , E. Losada 3 , I. Santos 4 , S. Echevarría 5 , A. Ocampo 6 , C. Miralles 6 , P. Arazo 7 , P. Barreiro 1 , M. Romero 8 , P. Labarga 1 , J. M. Guardiola 8 , J. Garcia-Samaniego 9 and V. Soriano 1
  1 Department of Infectious Diseases, Hospital Carlos III, Madrid ;   2 Hospital San Jorge, Huesca ;   3 Hospital Universitario, Santiago de Compostela ;   4 Hospital La Princesa, Madrid ;   5 Hospital Marqués de Valdecilla, Santander ;   6 Hospital Xeral Cíes, Vigo ;   7 Hospital Miguel Servet, Zaragoza ;   8 Hospital de Sant Pau, Barcelona ; and   9 Hepatology Unit, Hospital Carlos III, Madrid, Spain
Correspondence to Dr Vincent Soriano, Department of Infectious Diseases, Hospital Carlos III, Calle Sinesio Delgado 10, 28029 Madrid, Spain. E-mail: vsoriano@dragonet.es
Copyright 2007 The Authors Journal compilation 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
hepatitis C • human immunodeficiency virus • liver • ribavirin

ABSTRACT

Summary. The response to hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy seems to be lower in HCV/HIV-coinfected patients than in HCV-monoinfected individuals. Given that most pivotal trials conducted in coinfected patients have used the combination of pegylated interferon (pegIFN) along with fixed low doses (800 mg/day) of ribavirin (RBV), it is unclear whether HIV itself and/or suboptimal RBV exposure could explain this poorer outcome. Two well-defined end points of early virological response were evaluated in Peginterferon Ribavirina España Coinfección (PRESCO), a multicentre trial in which the combination of pegIFN plus RBV (1000 mg if body weight <75 kg and 1200 mg if >75 kg) was prescribed to coinfected patients. For comparisons, we used unpublished data from early kinetics in two other large trials, one performed in HIV-negative patients [Pegasys International Study Group (PISG)] in which RBV 1000–1200 mg/day was used and another [AIDS Pegasys Ribavirin Coinfection Trial (APRICOT)] in which HIV-positive patients received fixed low RBV doses (800 mg/day). A total of 348 HCV/HIV-coinfected patients from the PRESCO trial were analysed as well as all patients treated with pegIFN plus RBV, who completed 12 weeks of therapy in the comparative studies (435 in PISG and 268 in APRICOT). Negative serum HCV-RNA at week 4 (which has the highest positive predictive value of sustained virological response, SVR) was attained in 33.3%, 31.2% and 13% of treated patients with HCV genotype 1, respectively, in PRESCO, PISG and APRICOT. For HCV genotypes 2/3, responses were 83.7%, 84.2% and 37%, respectively. A decline lower than 2 log10 at week 12 (which has the highest negative predictive value of SVR) was seen in 25.5%, 19.5% and 37% of HCV genotype-1-infected patients, and in 2.1%, 2.9% and 12% of genotypes-2/3-infected patients, respectively. Prescription of high RBV doses enhances the early virological response to HCV therapy in HCV/HIV-coinfected patients, with results approaching those seen in HCV-monoinfected patients.


Received May 2006; accepted for publication July 2006

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-2893.2006.00806.x About DOI

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