Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Effectiveness and cost of hepatitis C virus cryoglobulinaemia vasculitis treatment: From interferon-based to direct-acting antivirals era.

BACKGROUND: The net benefits of new hepatitis C virus (HCV) direct-acting antiviral drugs (DAA) in patients with cryoglobulinaemia vasculitis (CryoVas) are unknown.

OBJECTIVE: To analyse the effectiveness and cost of all treatments used for HCV-CryoVas in the DAA vs pre-DAA era.

METHODS: A chart review of all HCV-CryoVas patients who received antivirals from 1993 to 2016 in a tertiary centre was performed. Treatment effectiveness was analysed for clinical, immunological and virological responses. Cost analyses included anti-HCV treatments, non-antiviral drugs, plasmapheresis, dialysis and hospitalizations. We compared main data in the pre-DAA vs DAA period.

RESULTS: About 201 HCV-CryoVas patients were included (women, 53.2%; mean age, 59.2 years; Metavir score F3-F4, 36.7%; genotype 1, 64.2%). Patients in the DAA era (n=27) compared to those in the pre-DAA era (n=174) showed higher rates of clinical (96.3% vs. 78.6%), immunological (89.5% vs. 77.1%), and sustained virological response (75.0% vs. 42.8%). Death rate was 14.8% vs. 24.4% respectively. In the DAA compared to pre-DAA era, mean cost of anti-HCV drugs increased from 11 855 to 57 632 € while mean CryoVas-related cost decreased for both hospitalizations (from 33 510 to 21 347€) and non-antiviral treatments (from 17 347 to 11 397€).

CONCLUSION: Improved antiviral efficacy of HCV drugs in the DAA era led to increased clinical and immunological efficacy and a lower death rate. Use of DAAs was associated to higher costs for HCV drugs while costs related to both hospitalizations and non-antiviral treatments decreased.

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