The Real-World Efficacy and Safety of Direct-Acting Antivirals for Chronic Hepatitis C in Patients Active Malignancies
Maria Dąbrowska, Jerzy Jaroszewicz, Marek Sitko, Justyna Janocha-Litwin, Dorota Zarębska-Michaluk, Ewa Janczewska, Beata Lorenc, Magdalena Tudrujek-Zdunek, Anna Parfieniuk-Kowerda, Jakub Klapaczyński, Hanna Berak, Łukasz Socha, Beata Dobracka, Dorota Dybowska, Włodzimierz Mazur

TL;DR
This study shows that direct-acting antivirals are effective and safe for treating hepatitis C in cancer patients, except for those with liver cancer.
Contribution
The study provides real-world evidence on DAA efficacy and safety in patients with active malignancies, a scarcely described group.
Findings
DAA treatment was highly effective in patients with solid tumors and hematological diseases.
HCC patients had lower sustained virologic response rates and higher treatment discontinuations due to liver disease progression.
Extrahepatic symptoms and liver enzyme levels varied significantly among different cancer groups.
Abstract
In the era of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) agents, chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection has become a curable disease. Eradication of the virus remains a major goal for the World Health Organization (WHO) by 2030. Main obstacles seem to be the lack of national screenings and shortage of knowledge among patients and healthcare professionals. There also remain, scarcely described in the literature, specific groups of patients who, due to their comorbidities such as malignant tumors, may not be considered as candidates eligible for DAA treatment. In our study, we aimed to characterize and present treatment efficacy in individuals with chronic hepatitis C and an active malignancy treated in Poland in years 2015–2020 with DAAs and compare their outcomes with a treated population with no active malignancy. The obtained results indicate high effectiveness and a low number of premature…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis C virus research · Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Hepatitis B Virus Studies
