Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3369345 Journal of Clinical Virology 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundPredictors of sustained virological response (SVR) to antiviral therapy post-liver transplantation (LT) for chronic hepatitis C are needed. In non-transplanted patients, viral kinetics can predict SVR.ObjectivesTo determine the early viral kinetics in LT recipients with different immunosuppression (tacrolimus – Tac- vs. cyclosporine – CsA-) during treatment with peg-IFN + RBV.Study designProspective pilot study in HCV-1b infected patients: (LT CsA n = 8; Tac n = 8; non-LT n = 4), treated with IFN α-2a vs. α-2b (180 μg or 1.5 μg/kg, respectively) once weekly plus weight-based RBV. Median CsA or Tac baseline trough levels were 141 and 7.70 ng/mL, respectively. HCV-RNA was quantified before treatment and after 3, 6, 12 h; days 1–6; and weeks 4, 12, 24, 48 and 78 (follow-up).ResultsDifferent kinetics were observed: early viral load declines with shoulder phase (n = 12), delayed monophasic without first phase (n = 5, all CsA), and biphasic (n = 1) or flat (n = 1), without influence of IL28B rs12979860 donor/recipient alleles. In LT, median declines (log10 UI/mL) at week 4 were −3.62 and −1.49 for Tac vs. CsA; and −2.10 vs.−1.50 for IFN α-2a vs. α-2b (NS), with a trend for faster declines in Tac patients. Generalized additive models suggested a cut-off for predicting response in LT patients of 30 days for Tac, but beyond day 40 for CsA.ConclusionIn LT, the viral kinetics during peg-IFN + RBV treatment is delayed. HCV-RNA at 48 h. may not be predictive of response, and CsA-immunosupressed patients with delayed monophasic declines may potentially achieve ETVR and SVR despite unfavourable or absent early viral load declines.

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