Response guided therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C – Yesterday, today and tomorrow

Abstract The rapidity of viral disappearance on antiviral treatment of chronic hepatitis C with peginterferon/ribavirin correlates with the cure rate. The earlier the virus becomes undetectable, the higher are the response rates. This observation is the basis of response-guided therapy. Viral cleara...

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Veröffentlicht in:Baillière's best practice & research. Clinical gastroenterology 2012-08, Vol.26 (4), p.463-469
1. Verfasser: Ferenci, Peter, MD
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract The rapidity of viral disappearance on antiviral treatment of chronic hepatitis C with peginterferon/ribavirin correlates with the cure rate. The earlier the virus becomes undetectable, the higher are the response rates. This observation is the basis of response-guided therapy. Viral clearance within the first 4 weeks of treatment is called a rapid virologic response (RVR). The rate of RVR varies among various populations, with the highest one observed in Asian patients and the lowest in African-Americans. This can be partly explained by a polymorphism in the region of the 5IL28B gene. In patients infected with genotypes 1 and 4 with RVR treatment with peginterferon/ribavirin can be shortened to just 24 weeks (with SVR rates of >80%). In contrast, patients with a slow decline in viral load (>2 log drop after 12 weeks with still detectable virus) may benefit from treatment extension to 72 weeks. The virologic response criteria were modified for triple therapy (extended RVR; HCV-RNA undetectable: telaprevir week 4 and 12; boceprevir week 8 and 24). Patients with eRVR can be cured by an abbreviated treatment regime. Further modification and unification of response criteria are needed for the currently evaluated interferon-free treatment regimes.
ISSN:1521-6918
1532-1916
DOI:10.1016/j.bpg.2012.09.002