Background: We aimed to investigate eligibility, reasons for treatment discontinuation and characteristics of chronic hepatitis C patients with treatment failure to peginterferon/ribavirin in clinical practice.
Methods: 1128 chronic hepatitis C patients, from 45 Italian Hepatology centres, were enrolled in this phase-4, prospective, observational study from January 2009 to February 2010.
Results: 687/1118 patients (61.4%) were eligible for antiviral treatment, of which 598 (87.0%) agreed with the physician's decision. Outcome information was available in 500/598 patients, among whom 348 (69.6%) completed treatment. Treatment was discontinued in 152 patients due to: lack of response (28.9%), personal reasons (29.6%), adverse events (38.2%), and decompensation (1.3%). Sustained virological response was obtained in 263/500 (52.6%), 71 (14.2%) relapsed and 61 (12.2%) were non-responders. Treatment outcome was not available in 105 (21%): lost while receiving treatment (33.3%), lost during follow-up (25.7%), withdrawn for adverse events (19.1%) or for administrative reasons (21.9%).
Conclusion: In clinical practice, only 61% of chronic hepatitis C patients are considered eligible for peginterferon/ribavirin. Of these, 13% refuse treatment. Approximately 30% do not complete the scheduled treatment and, despite this, the sustained virological response rate is similar to that of randomized-controlled trials. In the era of new antiviral combinations, these findings have important implications for assessing eligibility and estimating drop-out rates.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00724451.
Keywords: Antiviral therapy; Eligibility; Hepatitis C; Real clinical practice.
Copyright © 2014 Editrice Gastroenterologica Italiana S.r.l. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.