From the Journals

Transplanting HCV-infected kidneys in HCV-infected patients showed positive outcomes, costs


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Transplanting a kidney infected with hepatitis C into individuals infected with HCV, followed by treatment, was more effective and less costly than transplanting an uninfected kidney, preceded by HCV treatment, according to Mark H. Eckman, MD, of the University of Cincinnati and his colleagues.

London_England/Thinkstock
The researchers based these conclusions on the results of a computer model developed using demographic data of men and women of various races indicated by the U. S. Renal Data System of HCV-infected patients receiving dialysis. These patients had an average age of 57.8 years and were wait-listed for kidneys from deceased donors. As part of the model, patients were assumed to be HCV treatment naive and to have waited for kidneys not infected with HCV for almost 2.6 years, as compared with roughly 2.1 years for those awaiting HCV-infected kidneys (these were based on actual wait times), according to the report published online in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

Largely because of the longer wait times for uninfected kidneys, a typical patient aged 58 years on hemodialysis would gain an average of 0.5 quality-adjusted life-years at a lifetime cost savings of $41,591 dollars, according to the model.

“In an era of increasing success for kidney transplants and demand that far outstrips supply, deferring antiviral therapy until after transplant of HCV-infected kidneys, when available, should be both cost saving and effective,” the researchers wrote.

The study was funded by grants from Merck Sharpe & Dohme and the National Center for Advancing Translational Science. Several of the authors reported having grants from Merck and grants and personal fees from a variety of other pharmaceutical companies.

SOURCE: Eckman MH et al. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Jul 10. doi: 10.7326/M17-3088.

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Hepatitis C eradication cuts nonliver cancer rate
MDedge Infectious Disease
CDC warns of hepatitis A outbreaks in injection drug users
MDedge Infectious Disease
Insurer denials of DAA therapy for HCV on the rise
MDedge Infectious Disease
HCV and alcohol use disorder – bad news for the liver
MDedge Infectious Disease
HCV incidence is elevated in HIV-positive MSM
MDedge Infectious Disease
High-dose opioid prescribing linked to heroin use risk among U.S. veterans
MDedge Infectious Disease
Cigarette smoking epidemic among HCV-infected individuals
MDedge Infectious Disease
HCV remodels lipid metabolism in infected cells
MDedge Infectious Disease
‘Reverse transitions’ from injecting to noninjecting drug use studied
MDedge Infectious Disease
Antibodies to HCV core protein can be expressed in E. coli and silkworms
MDedge Infectious Disease