Hepatitis
C Treatment in Prisons Is Feasible and Produces Good Outcomes By
Liz Highleyman
Hepatitis
C virus (HCV) infection is common in prisons, largely due to its association
with injection drug use. It is estimated
that more than one-third of people in the U.S. with hepatitis C pass through the
correctional system each year. Some practitioners are hesitant to offer interferon-based
treatment to prisoners, however, viewing them as a challenging or "difficult
to treat" population.
To shed further light on the validity of this
assumption, D.S. Maru from Yale University School of Medicine and colleagues studied
hepatitis C treatment outcomes in a correctional setting; results were published
in the October 1, 2008 issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases.
Between
2000 and 2006, the investigators analyzed chronic hepatitis C patients in the
Connecticut Department of Correction who were treated with pegylated interferon
plus ribavirin. They assessed rates of sustained virological response (SVR, or
continued undetectable HCV RNA 6 months after completion of therapy), hospitalization,
and use of medications to manage psychiatric disorders and anemia.
Results
Of 138 treatment-naive patients referred for treatment, 68 (49%) were approved.
The overall SVR rate was 47.1%:
43.1% for patients with HCV genotype 1;
58.8% for those with genotypes 2 or 3.
Only 9 individuals (13%) discontinued treatment due to adverse effects.
Multiple regression analysis revealed that not achieving SVR was correlated with
genotype 1 infection plus cirrhosis (adjusted odds ratio 12.9) and major depression
at the start of treatment (adjusted odds ratio 3.4).
However, SVR was not significantly associated with HIV coinfection, high baseline
HCV RNA (? 400,000 IU/mL), or black race.
Compared with baseline, more patients were prescribed a new mood stabilizer (2.2
vs 0.8 prescriptions per person-year) or an opioid (1.8 vs 0.5 prescriptions per
person-year) during anti-HCV treatment.
There was no change, however, in the rate of prescription of benzodiazepines or
antipsychotic medications.
In
conclusion, the study authors wrote, "These results support the feasibility
and clinical effectiveness of [pegylated interferon plus ribavirin] for the treatment
of chronic HCV infection in correctional facilities."
The SVR rates
observed in this study were somewhat lower than those seen in non-prison populations,
especially for genotypes 2/3, but still a large proportion of patients achieved
sustained response.
It is unexplained, however, why HIV coinfection, high
pre-treatment HCV viral load, and black race did not seem to significantly influence
outcomes in this analysis, since all 3 factors have been linked to poor response
in other studies
10/07/08
 Reference DS
Maru, RD Bruce, S Basu, and others. clinical outcomes of hepatitis C treatment
in a prison setting: feasibility and effectiveness for challenging treatment populations.
Clinical Infectious Diseases 47(7): 952-961. October 1, 2008. (Abstract). |