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About
The aim of the study is to determine if treatment for recently acquired hepatitis C infection (with or without HIV coinfection) can be shortened when treating with the interferon-free therapy sofosbuvir/velpatasvir (SOF/VEL).
SOF/VEL is a new treatment for hepatitis C called direct acting antiviral which targets the hepatitis C virus replication cycle and has been shown in phase II studies in chronic HCV to be highly effective (SVR12 >95%) when given for 12 weeks.
Data has shown that treatment can be shortened when treating recently acquired HCV with interferon containing treatments. It is not known whether treatment with SOF/VEL can be shortened.
This study aims to find out if treatment for 6 weeks with open-label SOF/VEL is equivalent to treatment for 12 weeks with SOF/VEL in participants with recently acquired hepatitis C infection. The project is a randomised study where both participants and investigators would not find out the treatment duration of the participants until week 6 of treatment.
Full description
Globally, 3-4 million new HCV infections are estimated to occur annually. People who inject drugs (PWID) represent one of the groups at highest risk of transmitting and acquiring infection with the majority of new (60%) and existing (80%) infections in developed countries occur in this population with HCV antibody prevalence estimated at 67% (60-80%). HIV-positive men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM) are another high risk group for HCV acquisition.
Direct acting antivirals (DAA) has changed the treatment landscape for individuals with chronic HCV infection with interferon-free therapy offering high effectiveness and tolerability, even in "difficult-to-treat" populations.
Given the burden of HCV-related disease among PWID and HIV-positive MSM, strategies to enhance HCV assessment, treatment and prevention in these groups are urgently needed. Much of what is known about the timing of treatment initiation, regimen choice and duration of therapy in acute HCV infection comes from small observational studies and randomized controlled (randomly assigned into one or other of the different treatment groups)trials in selected populations with limited data on treatment in PWID and HIV co-infection. With recent rapid advances in HCV treatments, management strategies for acute HCV will evolve rapidly over the next few years.
The REACT study will compare the efficacy and safety of open-label SOF/VEL administered for 6 or 12 weeks in individuals with recent HCV infection. Participants will be randomised into receiving 6 weeks or 12 weeks treatment. Both investigators and participants will be blinded to the treatment duration until week 6 of treatment. The role and activity of DAA regimens in acute HCV infection requires evaluation, with the potential to be given as highly effective, short course interferon-sparing regimens, maximising acceptability to patients, encouraging uptake of treatment, limiting further transmission and preventing progression to chronic liver disease.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Subjects must meet all of the following inclusion criteria to be eligible to participate in this study:
Recently acquired HCV infection as defined by:
A) i) First anti-HCV Ab or HCV RNA positive within the previous 3 months and ii) Documented anti-HCV Ab negative within the 12 months prior to anti-HCV antibody positive result
OR
B) i) First anti-HCV Ab or HCV RNA positive within the previous 3 months and ii) Acute clinical hepatitis [jaundice or alanine aminotransferase (ALT)] > 10 X ULN) within the previous 6 months prior to first positive HCV antibody or HCV RNA, with no other cause of acute hepatitis identifiable
OR
C) For cases of recent HCV reinfection the following criteria are required:
Documented prior HCV antibody positive with HCV RNA negative on at least 2 occasions 6 months apart AND new HCV RNA positive within the previous 6 months
*Estimated duration of infection based on midpoint between last antibody negative or HCV RNA and first antibody positive or HCV RNA in the case of seroconversion and 6 weeks prior to date of maximum ALT in the case of acute hepatitis.
If co-infection with HIV is documented, the subject must meet the following criteria:
Antiretroviral (ARV) untreated for >8 weeks preceding screening visit with cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4) T cell count >500 cells/mm3 OR
On a stable ARV regimen for >8 weeks prior to screening visit, with CD4 T cell count >200 cells/mm3 and an undetectable plasma HIV RNA level.
Suitable ARV include:
Contraindicated ARV include:
Exclusion criteria
Subjects who meet any of the exclusion criteria are not to be enrolled in this study.
History of any of the following:
Subject shows evidence of significant liver disease in addition to hepatitis C, which may include but is not limited to drug- or alcohol-related cirrhosis, autoimmune hepatitis, hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), or primary biliary cirrhosis
Subject has known cirrhosis
Any of the following lab parameters at screening:
Pregnant or nursing female.
Use of prohibited concomitant medications as described in section 5.2 in the protocol
Chronic use of systemically administered immunosuppressive agents (e.g. prednisone equivalent > 10 mg/day)
Known hypersensitivity to velpatasvir, sofosbuvir or formulation excipients.
Therapy with any anti-neoplastic or immunomodulatory treatment (including supraphysiologic doses of steroids and radiation) ≤6 months prior to the first dose of study drug.
Any investigational drug ≤6 weeks prior to the first dose of study drug.
Previous failure of therapy with sofosbuvir or an non-structural protein 5A (NS5A) inhibitor prior to the first dose of study drug.
Ongoing severe psychiatric disease as judged by the treating physician.
Frequent injecting drug use that is judged by the treating physician to compromise treatment safety.
Inability or unwillingness to provide informed consent or abide by the requirements of the study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
222 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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