Sustained Virological Response After Early Discontinuation of Hepatitis C Treatment.
Robert FlisiakDorota Zarębska-MichalukEwa JanczewskaAnna Parfieniuk-KowerdaWłodzimierz MazurMarek SitkoJustyna Janocha-LitwinRafał KrygierBeata LorencAnna PiekarskaBarbara Sobala-SzczygiełKrystyna DobrowolskaŁukasz SochaJerzy JaroszewiczPublished in: Journal of viral hepatitis (2024)
To date, the effectiveness of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) discontinued before 4 weeks has not been analysed in routine clinical practice. The study aimed to determine whether such a short therapy will enable achieving a sustained virological response under real-world experience. The study population of 97 patients who discontinued DAA therapy and had data enabling analysis of patient and disease characteristics, and assessment of treatment effectiveness was selected from 16,815 patients registered in the EpiTer-2 database. The most common reason for discontinuation was hepatic decompensation (20.6%) or the patient's personal decision (18.6%). Patients who discontinued treatment were significantly older, more frequently therapy-experienced, more likely to have cirrhosis, a history of decompensation and a Child-Pugh B or C classification than those who completed treatment. SVR was achieved by 93.5% of patients who discontinued treatment after 4 weeks, 60.9% if discontinued at 3 or 4 week and 33.3% at Week 1 or 2. Patients receiving pangenotypic but not genotype-specific treatment who discontinued after 4 weeks were as likely to achieve SVR as those who completed therapy. Patients who responded to treatment that lasted no longer than 2 weeks had a low baseline viral load (<400,000 IU/mL). Despite discontinuation of therapy after Week 4, the chances of SVR are high. Very early discontinuation does not preclude therapeutic success, especially in patients with low baseline viral load.