HIV/HCV
Coinfected Women More Likely than Men to Modify or Discontinue
Hepatitis C Treatment
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SUMMARY:
HIV positive women with chronic hepatitis C virus
(HCV) coinfection experienced side effects of interferon-based
therapy that were similar to those of coinfected men,
but women developed these side effects sooner and
were more likely to discontinue anti-HCV therapy or
lower their doses for this reason, according to a
study described in the October
1, 2010 Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.
Researchers also found that use of specific antiretroviral
drugs can help predict adverse events during hepatitis
C treatment.
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By
Liz Highleyman
People
with HIV/HCV coinfection
tend to experience more rapid liver disease progression and
respond less well to interferon-based hepatitis C treatment
compared to patients with HCV alone.
Some research also suggests that coinfected individuals may
experience worse side effects, due to drug interactions or other
reasons. In various studies adverse events accounted for approximately
10% to 40% of hepatitis C treatment discontinuations. But the
influence of sex on these side effects has not been extensively
studied.
Debika Bhattacharya from the University of California at Los
Angeles and colleagues performed a meta-analysis of prior clinical
trials to assess the effects of sex and other predictors of
adverse events during hepatitis C treatment in coinfected patients.
The meta-analysis included data from 3 key randomized trials
of conventional or pegylated
interferon (Pegasys or PegIntron), with or without ribavirin:
APRICOT,
ACTG 5071, and ANRSHCO2-RIBAVIC. The primary endpoints assessed
were adverse events requiring treatment discontinuation or interferon
or ribavirin dose modification.
Together, the analysis included 1376 study participants, 21%
of whom were women. Nearly two-thirds (61%) were on antiretroviral
therapy (ART) and had undetectable HIV viral load, while 14%
were antiretroviral treatment-naive. The combined median CD4
cell count was 485 cells/mm3.
Results
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17%
of participants in the 3 trials discontinued hepatitis C
treatment due to adverse events. |
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50%
of patients modified their interferon or ribavirin doses
due to adverse events. |
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Women
in these studies experienced more adverse events requiring
treatment discontinuation compared with men (24% vs 16%;
P = 0.003). |
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Women
also experienced more adverse events leading to dose modification
(61% vs 48%, respectively; P < 0.0001). |
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Types
of adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation or
dose modification were similar in women and men. |
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However,
these types of adverse events occurred earlier in women. |
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74%
of adverse events requiring treatment discontinuation and
49% of events leading to dose modification involved constitutional
symptoms. |
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Depression
accounted for 18% of adverse events requiring treatment
discontinuation. |
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Neutropenia
(low white blood cell count) accounted for 26% of adverse
events leading to dose modification. |
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Looking
at events requiring treatment discontinuation, there were
significant interactions between sex and body mass index
(BMI) and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
(NNRTI) use: |
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More
adverse events among men with lower BMI; |
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More events among women taking NNRTIs. |
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The
following factors were significantly associated with adverse
events leading to dose modification: |
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Use
of pegylated interferon: odds ratio (OR) 2.07, or
about double the risk; |
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Older
age: OR 1.48 per 10 years; |
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Advanced
liver fibrosis or cirrhosis (Ishak score F5-F6): OR
1.42; |
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HCV
genotypes 1 or 4: OR 1.31; |
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Lower
hemoglobin level (an indicator of anemia): OR 1.23
per g/dL; |
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Lower
BMI: OR 1.04 per kg/m; |
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Lower
absolute neutrophil count (an indicator of neutropenia):
OR 1.04 per 500 cells/mm. |
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For
adverse events requiring dose modification, there were significant
interactions between sex and being antiretroviral-naive
and use of zidovudine
(AZT; Retrovir): |
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More
events among antiretroviral-naive women; |
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More
events among antiretroviral-experienced men; |
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More
events among women who took zidovudine, which can
cause anemia. |
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Based
on these findings, the study authors concluded, "Although
there was no difference in type of adverse events, adverse events
requiring treatment discontinuation and adverse events requiring
first dose modification were more frequent and occurred earlier
in women."
"In women, antiretroviral regimen may be an important predictor
of adverse events requiring treatment discontinuation during
HCV therapy and should be explored as a predictor of adverse
events in HIV/HCV coinfection trials," they recommended.
Investigator affiliations: University of California, Los Angeles,
CA; Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; UMR-S 707,
UPMC-Paris 6 and INSERM, Paris, France; Saint-Antoine Hospital,
APHP, Paris, France; Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard
University School of Medicine, Boston, MA; University of California,
San Francisco, CA; University of California, San Diego, CA.
10/22/10
Reference
D
Bhattacharya, T Umbleja, F Carrat, and others. Women experience
higher rates of adverse events during hepatitis C virus therapy
in HIV infection: a meta-analysis. Journal of Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndromes 55(2): 170-175 (Abstract).
October 1, 2010.