Sustained 
                            Response to Interferon-based Therapy Leads to Improved 
                            Quality of Life in Chronic Hepatitis C Patients
                          
                          By 
                            Liz Highleyman
                            
                            Ava 
                            John-Baptiste from the University of Toronto and colleagues 
                            compared the health status of hepatitis C patients 
                            with sustained 
                            response to interferon-based 
                            antiviral therapy -- defined as continued undetectable 
                            HCV viral load 6 months after completion of therapy 
                            -- versus that of individuals who "failed" 
                            treatment. 
                          After 
                            finishing therapy, a total of 235 patients -- 133 
                            sustained responders and 102 non-responders -- completed 
                            either written surveys by mail or in-person interviews. 
                            Questionnaires were completed an average of 3.7 years 
                            after the end of treatment.
                          The 
                            investigators used standardized health-related quality 
                            of life and preference (utility) measures: 
                          
                             
                              |  | Hepatitis-specific 
                                Medical Outcomes Study; | 
                             
                              |  | Short-Form 
                                36-Item Health Survey (SF-36); | 
                             
                              |  | Health 
                                Utilities Index Mark 2/3 (HUI-2/3); | 
                             
                              |  | Time 
                                trade-off (TTO) for current health. | 
                          
                          Respondents 
                            also provided information about demographic characteristics, 
                            history of substance abuse, co-existing conditions, 
                            and other aspects of health history. Finally, they 
                            indicated whether they missed work, volunteer activities, 
                            or household activities during the prior 3 months 
                            due to hepatitis C or its treatment. Detailed clinical 
                            information was obtained from medical chart reviews.
                          Results
                          
                             
                              |  | Relatively 
                                to sustained responders, participants who did 
                                not achieve SVR after treatment had: | 
                             
                              |  | 
                                   
                                    |  | Significantly 
                                      lower scores on the 8 SF-36 domains (P < 
                                      0.01); |   
                                    |  | Lower 
                                      scores on hepatitis-specific domains (P 
                                      < 0.0001); |   
                                    |  | Lower 
                                      physical (42.5 vs 49.2) and mental (40.5 
                                      vs 46.1) component summary scores (P < 
                                      0.01). |  | 
                             
                              |  | Non-responders 
                                also had significantly lower scores than sustained 
                                responders using other measures (all P < 0.05): | 
                             
                              |  | 
                                   
                                    |  | HUI-2: 
                                      0.74 vs 0.80; |   
                                    |  | HUI-3: 
                                      0.57 vs 0.70; |   
                                    |  | SF-6D: 
                                      0.65 vs 0.71; |   
                                    |  | TTO: 
                                      0.84 vs 0.89. |  | 
                             
                              |  | However, 
                                differences in HUI-2 and TTO scores were no longer 
                                significant after adjusting for demographic and 
                                clinical variables. | 
                             
                              |  | 44% 
                                of participants who experienced treatment failure 
                                missed work, volunteer opportunities, or household 
                                activities due to hepatitis C or its treatment, 
                                compared with 9% of sustained responders (P < 
                                0.001). | 
                          
                          Based 
                            on these findings, the study authors concluded, "Patients 
                            with a sustained response to antiviral therapy for 
                            chronic HCV infection have better quality of life 
                            than treatment failures do."
                          "Our 
                            study validates the benefits associated with the sustained 
                            response to antiviral therapy in a real-world clinic 
                            population and shows that these benefits are maintained 
                            over the long term," they added.
                          Department 
                            of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation and Faculty 
                            of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, 
                            Canada; University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, 
                            Canada; Toronto Health Economics and Technology Assessment 
                            (THETA) Collaborative, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
                          12/11/09
                          Reference
                            AA 
                            John-Baptiste, G Tomlinson, PC Hsu, and others. Sustained 
                            Responders Have Better Quality of Life and Productivity 
                            Compared With Treatment Failures Long After Antiviral 
                            Therapy for Hepatitis C. American Journal of Gastroenterology. 
                            104(10): 2439-2448 (Abstract). 
                            October 2009.