BMC Infectious Diseases (Apr 2019)

Safety and efficacy of the combination simeprevir-sofosbuvir in HCV genotype 1- and 4-mono-infected patients from the French ANRS CO22 hepather cohort

  • Anne Laurain,
  • Sophie Metivier,
  • Georges Haour,
  • Dominique Larrey,
  • Céline Dorival,
  • Christophe Hezode,
  • Fabien Zoulim,
  • Patrick Marcellin,
  • Marc Bourliere,
  • Jean-Pierre Zarski,
  • Dominique Thabut,
  • Laurent Alric,
  • Nathalie Ganne-Carrie,
  • Paul Cales,
  • Jean-Pierre Bronowicki,
  • Ghassan Riachi,
  • Claire Geist,
  • Xavier Causse,
  • Armand Abergel,
  • Olivier Chazouilleres,
  • Philippe Mathurin,
  • Dominique Guyader,
  • Didier Samuel,
  • Albert Tran,
  • Véronique Loustaud-Ratti,
  • Ventzislava Petrov-Sanchez,
  • Alpha Diallo,
  • Clovis Luzivika-Nzinga,
  • Hélène Fontaine,
  • Fabrice Carrat,
  • Stanislas Pol,
  • on behalf of the ANRS/AFEF HEPATHER study group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-3923-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Although real-life results of sofosbuvir/simeprevir have been extensively reported from the United States, data from other geographical areas are limited. In the French observational cohort, ANRS CO22 HEPATHER, 9432 patients were given the new oral antivirals from December 2013 to June 30, 2018. We report the results of sofosbuvir/simeprevir in genotypes 1- and 4-infected patients. Methods Demographics and history of liver disease were collected at entry in the cohort. Clinical, adverse events, and virological data were collected throughout treatment and post-treatment follow-up. The choice of treatment duration or addition of ribavirin was left up to the physician. Results Five hundred ninety-nine HCV (467 genotype 1 and 132 genotype 4) mono-infected, naïve for all oral-DAAs regimen patients were given sofosbuvir/simeprevir with (n = 63) or without ribavirin (n = 536) for 12 or 24 weeks; 56% had cirrhosis (4% decompensated) and 71% had prior treatment failure to interferon-based regimen. 7 patients (1.16%) were lost to follow-up. The overall SVR12 rate was 92.6%. The SVR12 was 90% in GT1a, 94.2% in GT1b and 91.6% in GT4 with no significant difference for genotype, treatment duration or ribavirin addition. Severity of liver disease was not associated with a lower SVR12 rate on multivariate analysis but was associated with a higher rate of severe side effects. Early treatment discontinuations were rare; no new safety signals were reported. Conclusion In this real life, observational, prospective cohort study, the 12-week sofosbuvir/simeprevir+/−ribavirin combination appears to be efficient and safe. Trial registration Trial registration with ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01953458.

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