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UnknownNCT03775798

Incidence of de Novo Hepatocellular Carcinoma After Antiviral Agents for HCV.

Incidence of de Novo Hepatocellular Carcinoma After Direct-acting Antiviral Agents for HCV: a Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study From Latin America.

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
2,200 (estimated)
Sponsor
Austral University, Argentina · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The main risk factor for development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is cirrhosis of any etiology, with an annual incidence risk between 1-6%; currently the leading cause of death in patients with cirrhosis and the 2nd cause of death by cancer worldwide. Chronic hepatitis C (HCV) is the first single cause associated to cirrhosis and HCC in the Western world. With the advent of new direct antiviral agents (DAA) of chronic HCV infection, virological cure generally exceeds 90% of the cases. Previous studies have shown that the incidence of HCC is lower in patients with virologic cure after treatment with pegINF schemes. However, recently published data, open up more controversy regarding the incidence of HCC after virologic cure with DAA. An increasing incidence of HCC after virologic cure in patients treated with DAA has been observed, opening a paradox yet unexplained. This project proposes to answer the following clinical research question: in patients with HCV cirrhosis treated with DAA, is there a change in the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma? To answer this question a prospective longitudinal cohort study of patients with Child Pugh A-B cirrhosis will be held at 3 years minimum follow-up. A minimum of 210 patients will be included with clinical or histological or non-invasive diagnosis of cirrhosis Child Pugh A or B, with HCV treated with DAA and without hepatocellular carcinoma at the time of enrollment. From this cohort, patients who develop HCC during follow-up will be identified. Routine screening will be done through ultrasound every 6 months in all subjects enrolled and the diagnosis of HCC will be according to recommendations of European and American guidelines.

Detailed description

Name of the study: INCIDENCE OF HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA IN CIRRHOTIC PATIENTS WITH HEPATITIS C INFECTION, TRETAED WITH DIRECT ANTIVIRAL AGENTS IN LATIN AMERICA: A MULTICENTER PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY With the advent of new direct antiviral agents (DAA) of chronic HCV infection, virological cure generally exceeds 90% of the cases. Previous studies have shown that the incidence of HCC is lower in patients with virologic cure after treatment with pegINF schemes. However, recently published data, open up more controversy regarding the incidence of HCC after virologic cure with DAA. An increasing incidence of HCC after virologic cure in patients treated with DAA has been observed, opening a paradox yet unexplained. This project proposes to answer the following clinical research question: in patients with HCV cirrhosis treated with DAA, is there a change in the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma? To answer this question a prospective longitudinal cohort study of patients with Child Pugh A-B cirrhosis will be held at 3 years minimum follow-up. A minimum of 210 patients will be included with clinical or histological or non-invasive diagnosis of cirrhosis Child Pugh A or B, with HCV treated with DAA and without hepatocellular carcinoma at the time of enrollement. From this cohort, patients who develop HCC during follow-up will be identified. Routine screening will be done through ultrasound every 6 months in all subjects enrolled and the diagnosis of HCC will be according to recommendations of European and American guidelines. However, preliminary results presented at the last European Congress of Hepatology in Barcelona, Spain, and early published in Journal of Heaptology, open up more controversy regarding the incidence of HCC after virologic cure post DAA. An unexpected higher incidence and recurrence of HCC after treatment with these new drugs has been observed, opening a paradox yet unexplained. Of particular interest then, is to clarify and find if there is a change in the incidence of HCC in HCV cirrhosis after treatment with DAA in our region. It is relevant on the other hand; that this study would be the first longitudinal cohort study evaluating the development of HCC in patients with cirrhosis in Latin America. It is then expected that the results would be extremely important to the medical science from this region. Clinical Research Question In patients with HCV cirrhosis treated DAA, is there a change in the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma? Primary Objective To evaluate the incidence of HCC after treatment with DAA in patients with Child Pugh A or B cirrhosis and chronic HCV infection. Secondary Objectives Secondary objectives will be related to: * Incidence of HCC between cured and uncured of HCV with DAA. * Impact of routine screening on survival in patients with HCC. * Risk factors for development of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with HCV treated with DAA. * Adverse events and incidence of cirrhosis decompensation after DAA.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGDirect antiviral agents for hepatitis CDirect-acting antivirals for hepatitis C

Timeline

Start date
2016-05-01
Primary completion
2020-12-01
Completion
2021-01-01
First posted
2018-12-14
Last updated
2018-12-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Argentina

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03775798. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.