2018
DOI: 10.1111/jvh.12973
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Past history of hepatocellular carcinoma is an independent risk factor of treatment failure in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection receiving direct‐acting antivirals

Abstract: Direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment can achieve a high sustained virological response (SVR) rate in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection regardless of a history of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC [+]). We examined 838 patients (370 men, median age: 69 years) who were treated with DAAs for comparisons of clinical findings between 79 HCC (+) (9.4%) and 759 HCC (-) (90.6%) patients and associations with treatment outcome. Male frequency was significantly higher in the HCC (+) group (60.8% vs 42.4%, P… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Most recently, history of HCC was reported to be an independent factor of treatment failure in patients receiving DAAs . However, the present study failed to find significant independence: the SVR rate in patients who previously received treatment for HCC (91.1% [214/235]) was numerically lower than in patients without any treatment for HCC (93.2% [1767/1896]), although not with statistical significance ( P = 0.224).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 90%
“…Most recently, history of HCC was reported to be an independent factor of treatment failure in patients receiving DAAs . However, the present study failed to find significant independence: the SVR rate in patients who previously received treatment for HCC (91.1% [214/235]) was numerically lower than in patients without any treatment for HCC (93.2% [1767/1896]), although not with statistical significance ( P = 0.224).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 90%
“…It was noteworthy that eight patients receiving hemodialysis achieved an SVR under G/P, which supported previous reports that even individuals with accompanying conditions could achieve an SVR safely and effectively by a G/P regimen [17]. We very recently described that a history of HCC was an independent risk factor of DAA treatment failure [18]. However, all 10 patients (6.2%) with prior HCC in our cohort achieved an SVR to further highlight the broad utility of G/P.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…The P32 deletion has also been strongly linked to G/P therapy ineffectiveness by previous clinical reports [23,24], but we were unable to conclude a relationship with G/P failure as there was only one P32 deletion patient in our cohort who had acquired the mutation after DCV/ASV failure and did not receive G/P due to prior identification of the deletion. Regarding the administration of DCV + ASV, if patients harbored the NS5A-Y93H RAS and could no longer postpone treatment due to age, disease progression, or other clinical reasons, they commenced the regimen instead of waiting for next-generation DAAs, which could achieve a high SVR rate of 91.7% as reported previously [18]. The relatively low frequency of the P32 deletion in our cohort was presumably due to the above strategy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…Study characteristics were summarised in Tables and . Fifty‐six studies were included, with a total of 5522 patients with HCC, while 27 studies enrolled non‐HCC patients as control groups. Fifty‐three (95%) studies were observational cohorts (45 retrospective and eight prospective) and three studies were clinical trials.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%