By 
Liz Highleyman
In the face of a rising incidence of acute 
hepatitis C among HIV positive people -- including an ongoing outbreak of 
apparently sexually transmitted HCV among gay and bisexual men in several cities 
in Europe, Australia, and the U.S. -- the optimal therapy for acute HCV in coinfected 
patients is unclear.
Standard 
treatment for chronic hepatitis C for both HIV 
positive and HIV negative people is pegylated interferon administered with 
ribavirin, which reduces the risk of post-treatment relapse. Numerous studies 
of HIV negative patients have demonstrated that pegylated interferon alone produces 
a high rate of sustained virological 
response (SVR; undetectable HCV RNA 6 months after completion of therapy). 
Based 
on a previous 
study showing good outcomes, the investigators advocated pegylated interferon 
monotherapy for acute hepatitis C in HIV-HCV coinfected patients. "[W]e believe 
that, at present, there is not enough evidence to firmly support combination therapy 
with peginterferon and ribavirin for the treatment of acute HCV infection in HIV 
positive patients," they wrote at the time.
In 
the study presented at ICAAC, the researchers conducted further analysis of pegylated 
interferon monotherapy in 12 coinfected patients. Acute HCV infection was diagnosed 
on the basis of HCV antibodies and HCV RNA (viral load), along with clinical signs 
or elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT). Infection was considered acute if 
patients had a negative serology test within 1 year prior to the positive test. 
All 
but 1 of the patients were men, the median age was 45 years, 8 had hard-to-treat 
HCV genotype 1, and 4 had genotype 4. Overall, the group had well-controlled HIV 
disease; half had undetectable HIV viral load on antiretroviral therapy (ART) 
and the median CD4 count was 517 cells/mm3. 
 
The patients were observed 
for 12 weeks to see if spontaneous viral clearance occurred. If not, they were 
treated with 180 mcg/week pegylated 
interferon alfa-2a (Pegasys). Those who experienced rapid virological response 
(RVR; HCV RNA < 50 IU/mL) at week 4 continued on monotherapy. Those who did 
not achieve RVR could add weight-adjusted ribavirin at their physician's discretion. 
Week 12 early virological response (EVR; at least a 2 log10 drop in HCV RNA) results 
were presented.
Results 
 
|  | Of 
the 12 treated patients, only 3 (25%) achieved RVR. | 
|  | An 
additional 3 patients (25%) achieved EVR, 1 of them using pegylated interferon 
alone and 2 after adding ribavirin. | 
|  | 6 
patients (50%) were non-responders, including 1 person who added ribavirin. | 
|  | There 
were no observed statistical differences in baseline characteristics that could 
predict RVR vs non-RVR status. | 
"Peginterferon 
alfa-2a monotherapy resulted in a high percentage of non-response in HIV-infected 
patients with acute HCV infection," the investigators concluded. "Unlike 
the situation in acute HCV monoinfected patients, combination or add-on therapy 
with ribavirin seems necessary in HIV-infected patients with acute HCV infection."
University 
Med. Ctr. Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands. 
9/15/09
Reference
JE 
Arends, T Mudrikova, AMJ Wensing, and others. High Percentage of Non-Response 
with Peginterferon-alfa-2a Monotherapy for the Treatment of Acute Hepatitis C 
in HIV Infected Patients. 49th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents 
and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009). San Francisco. September 12-15, 2009. Abstract 
H-222.