Sofosbuvir-based treatment regimens: real life results of 14 409 chronic HCV genotype 4 patients in Egypt.
Elsharkawy, A.; Fouad, R.; El Akel, W.; El Raziky, M.; Hassany, M.; Shiha, G.; Said, M.; Motawea, I.; El Demerdash, T.; Seif, S.; Gaballah, A.; El Shazly, Y.; Makhlouf, M. A. M.; Waked, I.; Abdelaziz, A. O.; Yosry, A.; El Serafy, M.; Thursz, M.; Doss, W.; Esmat, G.
[Article]
Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics.
45(5):681-687, March 2017.
(Format: HTML, PDF)
Background: Chronic hepatitis C virus infection is one of the most important health problems in Egypt. The Ministry of Health's National Treatment Programme introduced sofosbuvir-based therapy in October 2014.
Aim: To assess the clinical effectiveness and predictors of response to SOF-based treatment regimens, either dual therapy, with SOF/ribavirin (RBV) for 6 months or triple therapy with SOF/peg-IFN-alfa-2a/RBV for 3 months, in a cohort of patients treated in National Treatment Programme affiliated centres in Egypt.
Methods: Between October 2014 and end of 2014, patients who were eligible for treatment were classified according to their eligibility for interferon therapy: Group 1 (interferon eligible) were treated with triple therapy for 12 weeks and Group 2 (interferon ineligible) were treated with dual therapy for 24 weeks. Difficult to treat patients included those with F3-F4 on Metavir score, Fib-4 >3.25, albumin <=3.5, total Bilirubin >1.2 mg/dL, INR >1.2 and platelet count <150 000 mm3.
Results: Twelve weeks post-treatment data were available on 14 409 patients; 8742 in group 1 and 5667 in group 2. In group 1, the sustained virological response at week 12 (SVR12) was 94% and in group 2 the SVR12 was 78.7%. Multivariate logistic regression analysis in which treatment failure is the dependent variable was done. Male gender, being a difficult to treat patient and previous interferon therapy were significant predictors of nonresponse in both treatment groups.
Conclusion: Results of sofosbuvir-based therapies in Egypt achieved similar rates of SVR12 as seen in phase III efficacy studies.
(C) 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd