1 / 26

Treatment of HCV infection among active IDUs

Jason Grebely, PhD Lecturer Viral Hepatitis Clinical Research Program National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research University of New South Wales. Treatment of HCV infection among active IDUs. Hepatitis C treatment. Sustained virologic response. ?. PEG-IFN+RBV

maris-bauer
Download Presentation

Treatment of HCV infection among active IDUs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jason Grebely, PhD Lecturer Viral Hepatitis Clinical Research Program National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research University of New South Wales Treatment of HCV infection among active IDUs

  2. Hepatitis C treatment Sustained virologic response ? PEG-IFN+RBV 24-48 weeks 61%-65% IFN-α2b+RBV 48 weeks 41% PEG-IFN48 weeks 25%-29% IFN-α2b 48 weeks 15%-22% IFN-α2b24 weeks 8%-12% 10 years

  3. Management of Hepatitis C • 1997 NIH Consensus Development Conference Statement: “treatment of patients who are drinking significant amounts of alcohol or who are actively using illicit drugs should be delayed until these habits are discontinued for at least 6 months” National Institutes Of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement. March 24-26, 1997. Available at: http://consensus.nih.gov/1997/1997HepatitisC105html.htm Accessed September 19, 2009.

  4. Treatment of HCV in IDUs • Treatment initiated during opiate detoxification treatment (n=50) • IFN alfa-2a (n=34) • IFN alfa-2a + RBV (n=16) • Drug use: • ICD-10 opiate dependency • 36% cocaine (>weekly) • Treatment completion: 46% • Overall SVR: 36% • 80% relapsed to drug use • SVR: 24% vs 53% 100 90 80 P<0.05 70 60 SVR (%) 45% 50 40 30 20 6% 10 0 >2/3 Appointments <2/3 Appointments Backmund et al. Hepatology 2001.

  5. Treatment of HCV in IDUs • Treatment of HCV during methadone maintenance therapy (interim analysis) • IFN alfa-2b + RBV (n=50) • Mean age 50, 62% psych history, 62% markers of advanced disease, 52% genotype 1 • 78% completed HCV treatment 100 P>0.05 80 70% 60 54% 51% ETR (%) 36% 40 20 0 Poynard 1998 McHutchison 1998 G1 Non-G1 Overall Sylvestre D, et al. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2002.

  6. NIH Revises Recommendations • 2002 NIH Consensus Statement: • Management of HCV is enhanced by linking to drug-treatment programs • Methadone is not a contraindication to HCV treatment • HCV treatment of active IDUs should be considered on a case-by-case basis • Active IDU in and of itself should not exclude such patients from antiviral therapy NIH Management of Hepatitis C Consensus Conference Statement. June 10-12, 2002. Available at: http://consensus.nih.gov/2002/2002HepatitisC2002116html. Accessed September 19, 2009.

  7. Treatment uptake among IDUs is still low Grebely J, et al. J Viral Hepatitis 2009. Mehta S, et al J Community Health 2008. National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research 2008.

  8. IDUs demonstrate high HCV treatment willingness Stein MD, et al. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2001. Walley AY, et al. J Substance Abuse Treatment 2005. Doab A, et al. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2005. Fischer B, et al. Presse Med 2005. Strathdee S, et al Clinical Infectious Diseases 2005. Grebely J, et al. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2008.

  9. Barriers to seeking treatment for HCV infection • The major reasons for not having sought treatment were: • Lack of information/did not know that treatment was available (23%) • Absence of symptoms (20%) • Perceived side effects of treatment (14%) • Mild liver disease (10%) • Other medical co-morbidities (8%) • Lack of interest in treatment (3%) Self-reported current HCV positive status (n=188) Never sought treatment for HCV infection (n=107, 57%) Grebely J, et al. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2008.

  10. Barriers to HCV treatment uptake are multi-factorial • Barriers to HCV treatment access may relate to: • lack of knowledge and low prioritisation among patients • limited HCV treatment infrastructure, particularly in settings of drug dependency treatment • lack of treatment consideration or active discrimination by clinicians

  11. Remains a reluctance to treat IDUs for HCV • Concerns of: • Adherence • Ongoing drug use • Relapse to substance use • Risk of exacerbation of co-morbid psychiatric disease • Perceived risk of HCV reinfection following successful treatment

  12. Treatment of HCV in IDUs • Median SVR • Regardless of treatment regimen: 40.6% • Peg-IFN alfa + RBV: 54.3% Hellard M, et al. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009.

  13. Impact of adherence on SVR • Methadone maintenance (n=71) • IFN alfa-2b+RBV • Adherence: 80/80/80 • 59% used illicit drugs during treatment • 35% used heroin, cocaine, or methamphetamine • 68% (n=48) were adherent 100 90 80 70 P=0.001 60 SVR (%) 50 42% 40 30 20 4% 10 0 Adherent Nonadherent Sylvestre D, et al. European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2007.

  14. Impact of ongoing drug use on adherence Sylvestre D, et al. European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2007.

  15. Discontinuation occurs early in therapy • Observational study of MMT (n=50) vs. controls (n=50) • SVR was 42% in MMT vs. 56% in controls • No significant increase in methadone dose during therapy Methadone - All Methadone - Noncompliance Controls - All Controls - Noncompliance Mauss S, et al. Hepatology 2004.

  16. Treatment completion • Median completion overall: 70.7% • Only 1 of 5 evaluable studies demonstrated a difference in treatment completion rates in IDUs vs. non-IDUs Hellard M, et al. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009.

  17. Adherence • Poor data on adherence • Varying definitions of adherence makes it difficult to compare studies Hellard M, et al. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009.

  18. Adherence failure…. A “bad patient?” or … ... our failure to design a treatment program which works for that individual

  19. Directly observed therapy for HCV Interferon alfa-2b 3 MIU 3x/week + Ribavirin 800-1200 mg/day (n = 12) Peginterferon alfa-2b 1.5 µg/kg/week + Ribavirin 800-1200 mg/day (n = 28) • Study Design: • Open label, prospective, observational trial • Primary Endpoint: • Proportion with undetectable HCV RNA 6 months after treatment (SVR) Week 48 for genotype 1; Week 24 for genotypes 2/3 N = 40 • Medication administration: • IFN (3x week) and PEG-IFN (1x week) were administered as DOT • RBV self-administered Grebely J, et al. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2007.

  20. Directly observed therapy for HCV • Mean age 43, 83% male, 55% genotype 2/3 • Early discontinuation - 11 patients (28%) • 35% used illicit drugs in the last 6 months • 48% used illicit drugs during treatment Grebely J, et al. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2007.

  21. Impact of prior and ongoing IDU on SVR • 35% used illicit drugs in the last 6 months • 48% used illicit drugs during treatment • “frequent” – greater than weekly Grebely J, et al. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2007.

  22. Impact of prior and ongoing IDU on SVR • IFN alfa-2b + RBV during methadone maintenance (n=76) • 36% used illicit drugs during treatment • “frequent” - everyday or every other day for a min of 1 month Sylvestre D, et al. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 2005.

  23. Impact of IDU and adherence on SVR • Australian Trial in Acute Hepatitis C Study (n=109), 74 HCV Dore G, et al. Gastroenterology 2010.

  24. Enhancing HCV treatment through peer support • From March 2005 to 2008, HCV-infected individuals were referred to a weekly peer-support group and assessed for HCV infection (n=204 accepted referral). • Assessment for HCV in 53% • The first 4 weeks of support group attendance predicted successful HCV assessment (OR: 6.03, 95% CI:3.27–11.12, P<0.001) • Treatment for HCV was initiated in 28% (n=57) Grebely J, et al. J European Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2009 (In Press).

  25. Conclusions • Treatment of HCV among current and former IDUs is effective • Studies to date are limited by small sample size and absence of prospective, longitudinal data collection • Treatment completion/adherence • Comparable rates of treatment completion between IDUs and non-IDUs • Adherence has an impact on SVR • Drug use during treatment • Drug use prior to treatment is not associated with reduced SVR • Frequent drug use may be associated with reduced response to therapy • Cannot predetermine who will discontinue due to drug use prior to initiation of treatment • Must evaluate patients on a case by case basis

  26. There is still much to learn.... • Current uptake of assessment and treatment among IDUs is still unacceptably low • Why are IDUs assessed for HCV infection not receiving treatment? • Treatment is effective • What factors are associated with response? • Treatment completion/adherence • Evaluation of strategies to enhance adherence (e.g. Individualized treatment, DOT) • Drug use prior to and during treatment • What is the impact of drug use on treatment for HCV infection? • There is still concern about HCV reinfection following HCV treatment • Factors associated with reinfection?

More Related