HCV cure for everyone or which challenges remain?

Author List
Jürgen Rockstroh

Abstract

Following the approval of the first direct-acting antiviral in 2011, an unforeseen revolution in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C has taken place. Sustained virological response rates have risen to 90–95% in clinical trials. Will these results be reproduced in clinical practice? Will more difficult-to-treat patient populations continue to exist in the era of all-oral direct-acting antiviral therapy?

HCV cure for everyone or which challenges remain?

Following the approval of the first HCV direct-acting antiviral (DAA) in 2011, an unforeseen revolution in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C has taken place. In 2015 several all-oral DAA regimens, combining agents from different families (NS5B nucleotide inhibitors, NS5B non-nucleoside inhibitors, NS5A replication complex inhibitors and NS3/4A protease inhibitors) are now commercially available. In clinical trials, these regimens result in an increase in sustained virological response (SVR) rates to above 90–95% and reduce the duration of treatment to 12 weeks or less. As these new all-oral therapies are easy to take, with some already available as simple fixed-dose combinations, and are associated with minimal adverse events, increasing numbers of HCV patients appear treatable with these modern regimens. Nevertheless, the questions remain on how far the spectacular treatment trial results can be reproduced in clinical practice and whether more challenging patient populations, including previous non-responders and patients with advanced cirrhosis, will continue to exist even in the era of all-oral DAA therapy.

Article Category

Hepatitis C (HCV)

Article Type

Reviews

Posted Date

17-03-2015

File Name
1427901308hcv-cure-for-everyone-or-which-challenges-remain.pdf

HCV cure for everyone or which challenges remain?

Tables & Figures

File Name

1428660828p55.jpg
Back to top