Virological characterization of treatment failures and retreatment outcomes in patients infected with "unusual" HCV genotype 1 subtypes

Suboptimal rates of sustained virological response have been reported in patients infected with an "unusual," non-1a/1b HCV genotype 1 subtype. The objectives of this study were to assess the proportion of non-1a/1b genotype 1 subtypes in a population of HCV-infected patients who failed to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) Md.), 2023-08, Vol.78 (2), p.607-620
Hauptverfasser: Vo-Quang, Erwan, Soulier, Alexandre, Ndebi, Mélissa, Rodriguez, Christophe, Chevaliez, Stéphane, Leroy, Vincent, Fourati, Slim, Pawlotsky, Jean-Michel
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container_end_page 620
container_issue 2
container_start_page 607
container_title Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.)
container_volume 78
creator Vo-Quang, Erwan
Soulier, Alexandre
Ndebi, Mélissa
Rodriguez, Christophe
Chevaliez, Stéphane
Leroy, Vincent
Fourati, Slim
Pawlotsky, Jean-Michel
description Suboptimal rates of sustained virological response have been reported in patients infected with an "unusual," non-1a/1b HCV genotype 1 subtype. The objectives of this study were to assess the proportion of non-1a/1b genotype 1 subtypes in a population of HCV-infected patients who failed to achieve sustained virological response after first-line direct-acting antiviral treatment, to virologically characterize their failures and to assess their outcomes on retreatment. Samples addressed between January 2015 and December 2021 to the French National Reference Center for Viral Hepatitis B, C, and D were prospectively analyzed by means of Sanger and deep sequencing. Among 640 failures, 47 (7.3%) occurred in patients infected with an "unusual" genotype 1 subtype. Samples were available in 43 of them; 92.5% of these patients were born in Africa. Our results show the presence at baseline and at treatment failure of NS3 protease and/or NS5A polymorphisms conferring inherent reduced susceptibility to direct-acting antivirals in these patients, together with the presence at failure of additional resistance-associated substitutions not naturally present as dominant species, but jointly selected by first-line therapy. Patients infected with "unusual" HCV genotype 1 subtypes are over-represented among direct-acting antiviral treatment failures. Most of them were born and likely infected in sub-Saharan Africa. "Unusual" HCV genotype 1 subtypes naturally carry polymorphisms that confer reduced susceptibility to the drugs currently used to cure hepatitis C, in particular the NS5A inhibitors. Retreatment with sofosbuvir plus an NS3 protease and an NS5A inhibitor is generally efficacious.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/HEP.0000000000000379
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title Virological characterization of treatment failures and retreatment outcomes in patients infected with "unusual" HCV genotype 1 subtypes
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