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Reprint requests Address requests for reprints to: Aymin Delgado-Borrego, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Pediatric Clinical Research and Pediatric Gastroenterology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Batchelor Children's Research Institute, 1580 NW 10th Avenue, Room 523, Miami, Florida 33136
published online 20 December 2010.
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Significant progress has been made in the management of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection over the last decade. Combination treatment with pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) plus ribavirin (RBV) represents the standard of care for the adult patient infected with chronic hepatitis C, producing sustained virologic response (SVR) in about half of persons treated.
What is known about the management of HCV infection in children?
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ETR, end-of-treatment response; EVR, early virologic response; SAE, serious adverse events; SVR, sustained virologic response.
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However, none of these investigations evaluated whether combination therapy is superior to PEG-IFN monotherapy in the treatment of HCV infected children. This is an important question, because RBV, as the authors argue, has been found to be teratogenic13 and embryotoxic14 in animals. In this issue of Gastroenterology, Schwarz et al15 address this question by performing the only randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety and efficacy of PEG-IFN with and without RBV in children and adolescents with chronic hepatitis C, and did so in the largest pediatric treatment cohort published to date (PEDS-C). But perhaps even more significant is the fact that Schwartz et al explicitly ask whether children should be treated in the same manner as adults, highlighting the importance of potential differences and similarities in these 2 groups.
Schwarz et al compared children with chronic HCV infection, 5–18 years of age, who were randomly assigned for treatment with PEG-IFN alfa-2a (180 μg/1.73 m2 subcutaneously each week) and RBV (15 mg/kg per day in 2 divided doses) or PEG-IFN alfa-2a and placebo for 48 weeks. Most study participants had mild to moderate liver disease, 4% had bridging fibrosis, and 2% had cirrhosis. SVR was achieved in 59% of children treated with combination therapy versus 21% of those in the PEG-IFN alfa-2a plus placebo group.
During the 2-year study period in PEDS-C, response proved to be durable. Durability of virologic response was 100% among the 82%–86% of SVR subjects who completed the 2-year follow-up evaluations. Interestingly, few children achieved viral clearance at 4 weeks of treatment, but all patients who did achieved SVR. There were 3 subjects who did not achieve viral clearance at week 12 of treatment (early virologic response), but did achieve SVR, in contrast with observations from the adult literature.17, 18 Dose reductions were necessary in about one third of the entire cohort, and somewhat more frequently in the combination therapy arm. Overall, therapy was well tolerated and there were few serious adverse events.
As eluded to by Schwarz et al, children are not small adults. Most new cases of pediatric HCV infection are the result of maternal-to-infant transmission. What it means for a developing fetus or for a newborn to acquire HCV infection remains largely unknown. There are some suggestions that this mode of acquisition may be associated with more aggressive disease.19 Schwarz et al's study showed infection acquired in this manner was a strong negative predictor of response. However, more studies are needed to learn the differences between this and other modes of HCV acquisition in pediatric populations.
Understanding the differences between children and adults with respect to hepatitis C infection is not only relevant to pediatricians. Results of studies from HCV-infected adults are often confounded by comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes, alcoholic liver disease, cardiovascular diseases, and others. Children, on the other hand, most often lack these comorbidities. They represent a natural cohort that can help to elucidate our understanding of the pathogenesis of hepatitis C through assessment of direct viral effects, which in turn may inform the adult literature. Thus, knowledge about pediatric hepatitis C infection is not only essential for the proper management of affected children, but can also serve the HCV-infected community at large.
Unfortunately, evidence on the subject of HCV infection in children is limited for the moment. Important, well-established concepts in the treatment of adults with HCV infection have not been documented in the pediatric literature. The negative associations between African-American race and advanced hepatic fibrosis with SVR were not observed by Schwarz et al and have not been reported in pediatric studies, likely as a result of insufficient power among available investigations to answer these questions.
Schwarz et al's investigation is an important step toward an improved understanding of pediatric HCV infection and its management, because it exemplifies the scientifically rigorous evidence that is much needed in the field. However, more work needs to be done. The fact that the only randomized, placebo-controlled trial of PEG-IFN and RBV in children is published a decade after this became the standard of care for adults speaks for itself. Upcoming advances in the management of adult HCV infection that are currently under investigation should provide an impetus for equivalent research in sufficiently large pediatric cohorts now rather than later. The notion by some that treatment should be delayed or postponed in HCV infected children is predicated more on opinion than fact.
In conclusion, PEDS-C is a well-designed, randomized, placebo-controlled trial that demonstrates superior SVR rates for PEG-IFN alfa-2a with RBV as compared with PEG-IFN alfa-2a alone for the treatment of children infected with hepatitis C. The other important contribution of this study is that it highlights the uniqueness of the pediatric patient. So, are children the same as adults? “Yes,” in that they benefit from combined therapy for HCV. “No,” in some ways, including altered viral kinetics. “We don't know” in most ways. Efforts to accelerate trials in children will be essential to understand the key host differences between children and adults.
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