Hepatitis C cured in co-infected HIV patients

A multicenter team of researchers report that in a phase III clinical trial, a combination drug therapy cures chronic hepatitis C in the majority of patients co-infected with both HIV and hepatitis C.

“In many settings, hepatitis C is now a leading cause of death among HIV co-infected patients,” says Mark Sulkowski, M.D., medical director of the Johns Hopkins Infectious Disease Center for Viral Hepatitis and professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Approximately one-third of HIV patients in the United States have hepatitis C, with an estimated 7 million co-infected patients worldwide.

Because of poor tolerability to the previous standard of treatments for hepatitis C, including injections of interferon-alpha and medications that can have interactions with anti-retroviral medications used to treat HIV, this population of co-infection patients has been considered difficult to treat. Data from this phase III clinical trial were incorporated into the FDA’s approval of the new drug, sofosbuvir, last December, so treatment with this all-oral regimen - sofosbuvir and ribavirin - is considered on-label.

The trial, paid for by the developers of sofosbuvir, Gilead Sciences, is published in the July 23 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.

Researchers and doctors enrolled study participants from the United States and Puerto Rico through 34 academic, private practice and community health centers. In total, doctors administered sofosbuvir and ribavirin to a total of 223 HIV-1 patients chronically co-infected with hepatitis C (genotypes 1, 2 or 3) either for 12 weeks (for treatment-naive patients with genotype 2 or 3) or for 24 weeks (for treatment-naive patents with genotype 1 or treatment-experienced patents with genotype 2 or 3). Twelve weeks after treatment ended, researchers tested patients again for hepatitis C infection to determine if treatment was effective.

<a rel=Hepatitis C cured in co-infected HIV patients" align="right" /> For treatment-naive patients, 76 percent with genotype 1, 88 percent with genotype 2 and 67 percent with genotype 3 were cured. “We’ve always termed this to be ‘sustained virologic response,’” says Sulkowski, “but we now know that means hepatitis C has been cured.” Treatment-experienced patients had even better cure rates: 92 percent for patients with genotype 2 and 94 percent for patients with genotype 3. Seven patients discontinued treatment because of adverse events, but there were no observed adverse effects on HIV or its treatment.

Hepatitis C and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are two types of viruses that can each become life-threatening without treatment. A person can even have both viruses at once. If you have both types of viruses at the same time, you have a “co-infection.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), about 25 percent of HIV patients also have hepatitis C. While hepatitis C can be problematic for anyone, you should be more aware of its dangers if you have HIV as well.

Understanding Hepatitis C

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) is just one form of hepatitis. HCV is most commonly contracted through the bloodstream. Injected needles, particularly with street drugs, are the most common cause of HCV, but unprotected sex is another possible cause.

If you also have HIV, HCV is particularly dangerous. HIV weakens your immune system, which can result in higher levels of HCV in your blood.

“The likelihood that a patient with chronic, long-standing hepatitis C infection would have spontaneous cure is near zero,” says Sulkowski, “so if these patients had not been treated, none would have been cured.” Because of this, typically the control group of patients in a clinical trial undergoes the standard-of-care treatment, which for hepatitis C is weekly Interferon injections and twice-daily ribavirin orally. However, neither the investigators nor the potential clinical trial participants were willing to accept a therapy that for HIV co-infected patients had both low efficacy and poor tolerability.

In addition, says Sulkowski, “Doctors and patients alike recognize the idea that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to randomize clinical trial participants to an injectable treatment (interferon) that’s linked to many side effects versus an oral treatment (sofosbuvir plus ribavirin).” For these reasons, the clinical trial, named PHOTON-1, was open-label, nonrandomized and uncontrolled. “The PHOTON-1 study represents the first clinical trial to demonstrate that we can cure hepatitis C in patients with HIV co-infection without the use of interferon,” says Sulkowski. “As such, it represents a transformative step in our approach to this therapeutic area.”
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Researchers from Duke University; Quest Clinical Research; Kaiser Permanente; Philadelphia FIGHT; the University of Washington; the University of California, San Francisco; the University of California, Davis; Gilead Sciences; Fundacion De Investigacion; and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai contributed to the study.

Drugs and funding for the study described in this article were provided by Gilead Sciences. Sulkowski also is a paid Scientific Advisory Board member for Gilead Sciences. The terms of this arrangement are being managed by The Johns Hopkins University in accordance with its conflict of interest policies.

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Lauren Nelson
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410-955-8725
Johns Hopkins Medicine

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