If HCV Treatment Relapse Occurs, It Occurs Quickly
- File Under relapse
A number of studies have shown that SVRs are less likely for people coinfected with both HIV and HCV, compared with people infected with only HCV. In people infected with HIV and HCV genotypes 1 or 4—the toughest to treat—the likelihood of success is even lower. What isn’t well characterized, however, are the patterns in HIV- and HCV-coinfected people who relapse after treatment.
A relapse is when someone makes it to the end of treatment with an undetectable HCV level, but then has detectable virus again sometime during the next six months.To describe how often and when relapse occurs, José Medrano, MD, from the Hospital Carlos III in Madrid and his colleagues, examined the medical records of 616 HCV-infected people who received pegylated interferon and ribavirin treatment between 2001 and 2008.
Of the 616 people, 386 were coinfected with HIV and HCV. About 60 percent of those infected with only HCV made it to the end of the year’s worth of treatment with an undetectable HCV viral load, called an end-of-treatment response (ETR). Only 37 percent of coinfected people had an ETR. Of those who had an ETR, 22 percent of those infected with only HCV experienced an HCV relapse. Conversely, 33 percent of the HIV-positive individuals with an ETR experienced a relapse. Not surprisingly, relapse was more common in all those infected with HCV genotypes 1 or 4.


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