Abstract

BackgroundClinicians are incorporating patient-reported outcomes in the management of HIV-infected persons co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), but there are no validated inventories to monitor symptoms of patients during HCV therapy.DesignFive-year retrospective cohort analysis of persons living with HIV (PLWH) treated for HCV.MethodsThe HCV symptom-inventory (HCV-SI) was administered before, during, and after HCV treatment. Discriminant validity was assessed, separately, in mixed model linear regression of HCV-SI T-scores on treatment regimens (pegylated-interferon and ribavirin; pegylated-interferon, ribavirin, and telaprevir; and interferon-free antivirals); and side effect-related premature treatment discontinuation (SE-DC).ResultsFrom the 103 patients who completed the HCV-SI, 7% were female, 26% non-white, 32% cirrhotics and 91% had undetectable HIV viral loads. Most had genotype 1 (83%) and were HCV treatment-naïve (78%). We treated 19% of patients with pegylated-interferon and ribavirin, 22% with pegylated-interferon, ribavirin, and telaprevir and 59% received interferon-free antivirals. Overall, 77% achieved a sustained virologic response, and 6% discontinued HCV treatment due to side effects. In the treatment discrimination model, compared to the no treatment period, HCV-SI scores were significantly (p < 0.01) lower for interferon-free antivirals and higher for interferon-containing regimens. In the SE-DC model, the total HCV-SI, somatic and neuropsychiatric scores significantly predicted those patients who prematurely discontinued HCV treatment (P < 0.05).ConclusionsThe HCV-SI effectively differentiated among treatment regimens known to vary by side effect profiles and between patients with and without treatment discontinuation due to side effects. The HCV-SI may have value as a patient-reported outcome instrument predicting the risk of HCV treatment discontinuation.

Highlights

  • Clinicians are incorporating patient-reported outcomes in the management of HIV-infected persons co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), but there are no validated inventories to monitor symptoms of patients during HCV therapy

  • The HCV symptom inventory (HCV-SI) effectively differentiated among treatment regimens known to vary by side effect profiles and between patients with and without treatment discontinuation due to side effects

  • The HCV-SI may have value as a patient-reported outcome instrument predicting the risk of HCV treatment discontinuation

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Summary

Introduction

Clinicians are incorporating patient-reported outcomes in the management of HIV-infected persons co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), but there are no validated inventories to monitor symptoms of patients during HCV therapy. Cachay et al AIDS Res Ther (2017) 14:56 before providers recognize potentially causative issues These potential issues include relapse of substance/alcohol with resultant worsening depression, low perceived self-esteem, and/or poor adherence to HCV or antiretroviral medications [4]. PLWH have a high prevalence of medical comorbidities and ongoing barriers to care such as substance/alcohol use, unstable housing, and neuropsychiatric disease [5]. These factors can unfavorably impact patient medication tolerance, perception and willingness to complete HCV therapy, even when treating their HCV with shorter, better-tolerated, interferon (IFN)-free DAA [6, 7]. The three-factor subscales demonstrated excellent internal consistency, reliability, and predictive validity [8]

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