Abstract

The clinical usefulness of detecting telaprevir-resistant variants is unclear. Two hundred fifty-two Japanese patients infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1b received triple therapy with telaprevir-peginterferon (PEG-IFN)-ribavirin and were evaluated for telaprevir-resistant variants by direct sequencing at baseline and at the time of reelevation of the viral load. An analysis of the entire group indicated that 76% achieved a sustained virological response. Multivariate analysis identified a PEG-IFN dose of <1.3 μg/kg of body weight, an IL28B rs8099917 genotype (genotype non-TT), detection of telaprevir-resistant variants of amino acid (aa) 54 at baseline, nonresponse to prior treatment, and a leukocyte count of <5,000/mm(3) as significant pretreatment factors for detection of telaprevir-resistant variants at the time of reelevation of the viral load. In 63 patients who showed nonresponse to prior treatment, a higher proportion of patients with no detected telaprevir-resistant variants at baseline (54%) achieved a sustained virological response than did patients with detected telaprevir-resistant variants at baseline (0%). Furthermore, 2 patients who did not have a sustained virological response from the first course of triple therapy with telaprevir received a second course of triple therapy with telaprevir. These patients achieved a sustained virological response by the second course despite the persistence of very-high-frequency variants (98.1% for V36C) or a history of the emergence of variants (0.2% for R155Q and 0.2% for A156T) by ultradeep sequencing. In conclusion, this study indicates that the presence of telaprevir-resistant variants at the time of reelevation of viral load can be predicted by a combination of host, viral, and treatment factors. The presence of resistant variants at baseline might partly affect treatment efficacy, especially in those with nonresponse to prior treatment.

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