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Outcomes of early vs late treatment initiation in solid organ transplantation from hepatitis C virus nucleic acid test-positive donors to hepatitis C virus-uninfected recipients: Results from the HCV-TARGET study

Wesam Aleyadeh, Elizabeth C. Verna, Hany Elbeshbeshy, Mark Sulkowski, Coleman I. Smith, Jama M. Darling, Richard K. Sterling, Andrew J. Muir, Lucy Akushevich, Danie La, Norah A. Terrault, Michael Fried, Jordan J. Feld

2023American Journal of Transplantation14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Curative hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy has increased transplantation from HCV-infected nucleic acid test-positive donors to HCV-uninfected recipients (D+/R-). We evaluated outcomes of early and late HCV treatment among D+/R- nonliver organ transplants. Patients received HCV regimens per local standard (n = 10 sites). Outcomes were compared between early and late treatments. Early treatment regimens (ETR) (n = 56) were initiated pretransplantation to day 7 posttransplant. Late treatment regimens (LTRs) (n = 102) began median 31 (range, 8-114) days posttransplant. There were 79 kidney, 50 lung, 23 heart, and 6 mixed transplants, similar between groups. HCV RNA was quantifiable in 98% of LTR versus 44.6% of ETR recipients (P < .001). Mean (range) days on treatment were 28 (7-93) ETR and 81 (51-111) LTR (P < .0001). There were no virological failures with ETR, but relapse (n = 3) and nonresponse (n = 2) in LTR (P = .16), including fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis postrelapse (n = 1). Sustained virological response was 100% (95% confidence interval, 93.4-100.0) in ETR (n = 54) and 94.9% (95% confidence interval, 88.5-98.3) in LTR (n = 98). Acute rejection occurred in 11 (19.6%) ETR and 25 (24.5%) LTR. In total, 11 HCV-unrelated deaths occurred: 8 ETR and 3 LTR. Organ transplantation from HCV-infected nucleic acid test-positive donors to HCV-uninfected recipients was safe. ETR led to fewer virological failures with shorter treatment duration, supporting recommendations to initiate treatment promptly posttransplant.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVirologyNucleic acid testHepatitis C virusTransplantationVirusNucleic acidAntiviral treatmentHepatitis a virusHepatitis virusImmunologyInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)Chronic hepatitisDiseaseCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)BiologyBiochemistryHepatitis C virus researchRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsLiver Disease and Transplantation