hepatitis c co-infection. hepatitis c (hcv) = rna virus worldwide prevalence of approx 150million...

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HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION

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Page 1: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION

Page 2: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS• Worldwide prevalence of

Approx 150million

• Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks

• Ongoing improvements in treatment options

• Can be ‘cured’

2

Page 3: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

• Only approx. 20% clear the virus spontaneously

• Chronic hepatitis C can remain asymptomatic for 30+yrs

• Prevalence higher than 50% in IVDU’s in Europe

• Adequate treatment can clear the virus fully – no DNA integration or viral reserve

Page 4: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Hepatitis C and HIV progression

www.thebody.comNatural History of Hepatitis C

Page 5: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Virology of HCV• First identified in 1989 • Prior to that known as non A non B Hepatitis • A small (50nm) enveloped single stranded RNA virus • Replicates within the hepatocytes of the liver but

also found in most other organs • 6 major genotypes (1-6) with subtypes• Initial infection often asymptomatic • Antibodies provide no protection against re-

infection and there is no vaccine

Page 6: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Transmission Routes• Drug use

• Blood Transfusions

• Vertical Transmission

• High Risk sexual activity (MSM)

• Contaminated medical equipment

Page 7: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Signs & Symptoms• Majority report little or no symptoms of early infection

• If any symptoms are present, usually non specific e.g. lethargy, nausea, muscle aches & pains

• Rarely jaundice

• Raised Alanine Transaminase (ALT) or transaminitis due to immune response

• High ALT often sign of likely self clearance

Page 8: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Diagnosis & Serology

• Diagnostic bloods • Raised ALT • HCV Ab • HCV PCR (viral load)

• General rule ALT 2.5 >normal ?HCV • Detectable by viral load within 1 – 3 weeks

• Detectable by Antibody can take up to 24 weeks

Page 9: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

HCV/HIV• Approx 25% of HIV+ patients are

infected with HCV worldwide

• EuroSIDA 33.9%

• Southern Europe nearly 50%

• US 16% - 25%

• Increasing incidence of acute HCV infection in young men (MSM)

• Interactions between Viruses

Page 10: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Effect of HCV on HIVControversial

• Swiss cohort – some effect• HCV increases AIDS/death• Failure to increase CD4 with

ARVs• No effect on HIV VL

suppression

• EUROSIDA – no effect on HIV disease

• However – data in studies is often difficult to interperate:

• HCV acquired first in studies• Now more likely to be

caught later Law et al AIDS 2004Stebbing J. CID 2005Sullivan P. AIDS 2006

Page 11: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Effect of HIV on HCV

• Definitely accelerates progress:

• Median time to cirrhosis 23 v 32 years

• Higher HCV viraemia in co infected

Clifford G. AIDS 2008Mohsen A. Gut 2003

Smit C. AIDS 2006

Page 12: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

What does progression look like?

30+ years mono-infected

10-15 years HIV co-infection

Page 13: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Stages of fibrosis

Page 14: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Treatment options

Page 15: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Adapted from the US Food and Drug Administration, Antiviral Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting, April 27-28, 2011, Silver Spring, MD.

SV

R (

%)

IFN6 mos

PegIFN/ RBV

IFN12 mos

IFN/RBV12 mos

PegIFN12 mos

2001

1998

2011

StandardIFN

RBV

PegIFN

1991

DAAs

Peg/RBV/DAA

IFN/RBV6 mos

6

16

3442 39

55

70+

0

20

40

60

80

100

DAA’s

90+

2014

The Good News

Page 16: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Traditional Therapies

• Pegylated interferon & Ribivirin

• Low Cure Rates

• Side Effects

• Toxicity Management

Page 17: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

• Therapy ‘response guided’ – Null responders– Partial responders– Relapsers

• High drop-out rate due to side effects

• Different genotypes have different cure rates

Page 18: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Managing Side Effects

Pegylated Interferon

• Lowers Hb• Fatigue• Neutropenia• Flu-like symptoms• Depression• Psychosis• Lowers Platelets• Weight Loss

Ribivirin

• Lowers Hb• Flu-like symptoms• Rash

Page 19: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

• Fatigue Management• Check Bloods regularly and dose reduce drug• Encourage small regular exercise

• Flu-like Symptoms• Regular Paracetamol• Dose Interferon at Night

• Rash• Emollients!• Anti-histimines

Page 20: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

• Anxiety/Depression

• Psychiatry input• Anti-depressants (watch for interactions)• Counselling

Ultimately its about encouraging patients to Continue on therapy for as long as possible

Page 21: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

HCV Life Cycle and DAA Targets

Adapted from Manns MP, et al. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2007;6:991-1000.

Receptor bindingand endocytosis

Fusion and

uncoating

Transportand release

(+) RNATranslation

andpolyprotein processing

RNA replication

Virionassembly

Membranousweb

ER lumen

LD

LDER lumen

LD

NS3/4 protease inhibitors

NS5B polymerase inhibitors

Nucleoside/nucleotide

Nonnucleoside

Block replication complex formation, assembly

NS5A inhibitors

RNA replication

Page 22: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

So what does this mean?

• Different classes of drugs developed

• Protease Inhibitors• NS5B Polymerase inhibitors• NS5A Replication Assembly Complex inhibitors

Page 23: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

A Major Advance: The first PI’s for Hep C

0

20

40

60

80

100S

VR

(%

)

PegIFN/RBVBOC or TVR + PegIFN/RBV

38-44

63-75

Poordad F, et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;364:1195-1206.

Jacobson IM et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;364:2405-2416.

Page 24: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

No Free Lunch

Page 25: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Upcoming Agents• Polymerase Inhibitors

– Sofosbuvir– ABT-072– ABT-333– BMS-791325

• CypA Inhibitors– Alisporivir

• PIs - Simeprevir- Faldaprevir- Asunaprevir- ABT-450- MK5172- Danoprevir- GS-9451

• NS5A inhibitors- Daclatasvir- Ledipasvir- ABT-267

Page 26: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

How do we decide who to treat now and who can wait?

Waiting game?

Page 27: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

• Stage of liver damage

• Availability of drugs

• Prior treatment response

• Cost !!!

Page 28: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

96

Example of Nuc Backbone + PI in Trt-Naive Pts and Nulls (COSMOS)

SVR1

2 (%

)

F0-F2 Fibrosis

100

80

60

40

20

0

96 93

26/27

13/14

SMV (PI) + SOF (Nuc) + RBV 12 wks SMV (PI) + SOF (Nuc) 12 wks

SVR4

(%)

F3/F4 Fibrosis

100

26/27

14/14

78% GT1a

50% Q80K

94% non-CC

All nulls

78% GT1a

40% Q80K

79% non-CC

47% F4

54% Null

Jacobson I, et al. AASLD 2013. Abstract LB-3.

Page 29: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing

Summary

• Viral Hepatitis shares many transmission routes with HIV

• Treatment options are available for both B & C however only C can be cured

• Side effects of current treatments require good nursing management

• New therapies are coming but are expensive

Page 30: HEPATITIS C CO-INFECTION. Hepatitis C (HCV) = RNA VIRUS Worldwide prevalence of Approx 150million Able to survive outside the body for up to 3 weeks Ongoing