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Follow-up of chronic paediatric hepatitis C virus in a low-/middle-income country
被引:4
|作者:
El-Shabrawi, Mortada
[1
]
Baroudy, Sherif
[1
]
Hassanin, Fetouh
[2
]
Behairy, Ahmed Saed
[1
]
Yakoot, Mostafa
[3
]
Ahmed, Ayaat
[4
]
机构:
[1] Cairo Univ, Cairo, Egypt
[2] Misr Int Univ, Cairo, Egypt
[3] Green Clin Res Ctr, Alexandria, Egypt
[4] Minist Hlth & Populat, Beheira, Egypt
关键词:
DAAs;
HCV;
interferon;
paediatrics;
SVR;
GLOBAL EPIDEMIOLOGY;
GENOTYPE;
4;
INTERFERON;
PREVALENCE;
INFECTION;
CHILDREN;
THERAPY;
D O I:
10.1111/apa.15333
中图分类号:
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号:
100202 ;
摘要:
Aim Follow-up of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection following Interferon (IFN) plus Ribavirin (RBV) or direct-acting antiviral (DAA) drug therapy in a cohort of paediatric outpatients as confirmed by a sustained virologic response (SVR). Methods This study included a cohort of 60 patients (6-18 years), divided into 2 groups: Group 1:21 patients who completed treatment with IFN/RBV. Group 2:39 treated with dual DAA therapy: 19 with Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir (SOF/LED) and 20 with Sofosbuvir/Daclatasvir (SOF/DCV). Results Group 1:12 (57.1%) were cured, six were IFN/RBV treatment failure then subsequently treated with DAAs successfully, and three had liver transplants. IFN/RBV side effects were reported in all patients; however, fibrosis regressed in two cured patients. Group 2: all were cured. HCV RNA became negative in all DAAs-treated patients at weeks 2, 4 and 12 of treatment (100%) as well as SVR after 12 weeks (100%). Thirty patients reported no adverse side effects whereas only nine suffered minor side effects. Conclusions In our cohort, SOF/LED therapy and SOF/DCV therapy were extremely safe and effective with 100% SVR and negligible short-term side effects. IFN/RBV therapy was much less effective (SVR 57.1%) and accompanied with short-term side effects. Fibrosis might stop and even regress with successful treatment.
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页码:2699 / 2705
页数:7
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