Doctors at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston say they have
eliminated the risks that came with all 69 hepatitis C-tainted
hearts or lungs they transplanted into patients since March 2017.
They achieved it with four weeks of antiviral therapy given to organ
recipients that began just hours after the transplant surgery.
Transplant recipients already must receive a lot of drugs to prevent
their bodies from rejecting a new organ. Doctors had feared that
adding the hepatitis-C treatment might increase the risks, but they
found no evidence that it added to the burden of recovery.
The virus tried to move from the infected lungs or heart into the
liver, where it thrives, but the antiviral treatment managed to
overwhelm the virus in every case, according to the report on
results with the first 35 patients published in the New England
Journal of Medicine.
"We were surprised that it was a 100 percent success. That was the
part that was very encouraging," lead author Dr. Ann Woolley of the
hospital's division of infectious diseases told Reuters Health in
the telephone interview.
Acting quickly meant the virus "didn't have time to get to the liver
and set up shop and replicate," she said. It also allowed the
doctors to use just four weeks of therapy instead of the usual 12
weeks that adults with hepatitis C receive.
The standard cost of the therapy, which used sofosbuvir and
velpatasvir, is about $75,000. In these cases it was roughly
$25,000.
"We can probably do an even shorter duration of treatment," Woolley
said.
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The patients will continue to be followed to see if long-term side
effects of the treatment appear.
A similar technique already makes it possible to transplant kidneys
and livers from donors who have hepatitis C. A few transplant teams
have also tried giving some version of the treatment to their heart
and lung recipients. But the new study looked at a large group of
patients treated for a short period and followed for several months.
"We needed to see that the survival-at-six-month data were not
different" than for patients who do not receive a hepatitis
C-tainted organ," Woolley said. "That's what the patients care
about."
An estimated 1,000 patients in the United States die each year
because they can't get a heart or lung transplant. Many potential
donors, including the growing number of people who die from a drug
overdose, are not eligible because they're infected with hepatitis
C, which is typically spread by sharing needles.
One reason doctors had been cautious about trying the anti-hepatitis
treatment on heart and lung recipients was that those organs tend to
pack more hepatitis C virus particles than an organ like the kidney.
And if a kidney transplant fails, the risk to a patient is lower
than if the heart or lungs don't survive.
The study, which was not financed by any drug company, was known as
DONATE HCV.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2GM2xra The New England Journal of Medicine,
online April 3, 2019.
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