An open‐safety study of dual antiviral therapy in real‐world patients with chronic hepatitis C
- 16 September 2010
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety
- Vol. 19 (11) , 1113-1123
- https://doi.org/10.1002/pds.2025
Abstract
Purpose: Treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C with alpha‐interferon and ribavirin usually produces adverse events within the first 3 months. We aimed to assess safety and predictors of discontinuation or dose modification of these drugs.Methods: Observational study of 312 patients with predominantly genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C treated openly along 5 years in a clinical practice setting.Results: Eighty‐four percent of patients experienced at least one adverse event (853 events in total, 3.3 per patient on average). Incidence rate was higher during the first 90 days and decreased thereafter (<5%). Discontinuation rates at 30 and 90 days and at end of treatment were 2, 4 and 8%, respectively. Seventy percent of discontinuation cases were due to adverse events rather than to laboratory abnormalities. Serious adverse events were rare (<1%). Dose modifications were made in 158 patients (51%) on 237 occasions. After adjusting for covariates, older age was a predictor of early discontinuation, whereas HCV genotypes 1–4 and daily ribavirin dose of 1000 mg or more were predictors of dose modification.Conclusions: The majority of real‐world patients with chronic hepatitis C tolerate acceptably dual therapy and very few discontinue it. Subjective decisions on dose reduction of either compound appears to have a major impact on adherence of patients. There is a need to better define, collect and analyse clinical features which may predict adverse events and safety‐related decisions during therapy of chronic hepatitis C. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diagnosis, management, and treatment of hepatitis C: An update # † ‡Hepatology, 2009
- Pegylated interferons for chronic hepatitis C virus infection: an indirect analysis of randomized trialsJournal of Viral Hepatitis, 2008
- Effectiveness of pegylated interferon/ribavirin combination in ‘real world’ patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infectionAlimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2008
- Safety, tolerability and efficacy of peginterferon alpha‐2a and ribavirin in chronic hepatitis C in clinical practice: The German Open Safety TrialJournal of Viral Hepatitis, 2007
- Cochrane systematic review: pegylated interferon plus ribavirin vs. interferon plus ribavirin for chronic hepatitis CAlimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 2007
- Depression, anemia and health-related quality of life in chronic hepatitis CJournal of Hepatology, 2005
- Peginterferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin for naïve patients with genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C: a randomized controlled trialJournal of Hepatology, 2004
- Early Virologic Response to Treatment With Peginterferon Alfa–2B Plus Ribavirin in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis CHepatology, 2003
- When should an effective treatment be used?: Derivation of the threshold number needed to treat and the minimum event rate for treatmentJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2001
- Pretreatment symptoms and dosing regimen predict side-effects of interferon therapy for hepatitis CJournal of Viral Hepatitis, 2000