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The CUPIC algorithm: an accurate model for the prediction of sustained viral response under telaprevir or boceprevir triple therapy in cirrhotic patients
Author(s) -
Boursier J.,
Ducancelle A.,
Vergniol J.,
Veillon P.,
Moal V.,
Dufour C.,
Bronowicki J.P.,
Larrey D.,
Hézode C.,
Zoulim F.,
Fontaine H.,
Canva V.,
Poynard T.,
Allam S.,
De Lédinghen V.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of viral hepatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.329
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1365-2893
pISSN - 1352-0504
DOI - 10.1111/jvh.12433
Subject(s) - boceprevir , telaprevir , medicine , viral load , ribavirin , algorithm , population , gastroenterology , cohort , immunology , chronic hepatitis , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , virus , environmental health , computer science
Summary Triple therapy using boceprevir or telaprevir remains the reference treatment for genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C in countries where new interferon‐free regimens have not yet become available. Antiviral treatment is highly required in cirrhotic patients, but they represent a difficult‐to‐treat population. We aimed to develop a simple algorithm for the prediction of sustained viral response ( SVR ) in cirrhotic patients treated with triple therapy. A total of 484 cirrhotic patients from the ANRS CO 20 CUPIC cohort treated with triple therapy were randomly distributed into derivation and validation sets. A total of 52.1% of patients achieved SVR . In the derivation set, a D0 score for the prediction of SVR before treatment initiation included the following independent predictors collected at day 0: prior treatment response, gamma‐ GT , platelets, telaprevir treatment, viral load. To refine the prediction at the early phase of the treatment, a W4 score included as additional parameter the viral load collected at week 4. The D0 and W4 scores were combined in the CUPIC algorithm defining three subgroups: ‘no treatment initiation or early stop at week 4’, ‘undetermined’ and ‘ SVR highly probable’. In the validation set, the rates of SVR in these three subgroups were, respectively, 11.1%, 50.0% and 82.2% ( P < 0.001). By replacing the variable ‘prior treatment response’ with ‘ IL 28B genotype’, another algorithm was derived for treatment‐naïve patients with similar results. The CUPIC algorithm is an easy‐to‐use tool that helps physicians weigh their decision between immediately treating cirrhotic patients using boceprevir/telaprevir triple therapy or waiting for new drugs to become available in their country.