Liver transplant outcomes improve in people with HIV and hepatitis C

By | June 25, 2021

Survival after a liver transplant has improved significantly in people with HIV and hepatitis C coinfection since the introduction of direct-acting antiviral treatment for hepatitis C, US researchers report in the journal Transplantation Direct.

Due to faster progression of liver damage in people coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C, people with both viruses are especially likely to develop end-stage liver disease and require a liver transplant. Prior to the introduction of direct-acting antiviral therapy from 2013, people with HIV had worse outcomes after liver transplantation, irrespective of hepatitis C coinfection.

In coinfected people, liver transplantation may only offer a temporary respite from liver damage, as untreated hepatitis C begins to damage the transplanted organ. Direct-acting antiviral treatment after transplantation results in a high cure rate but the extent to which transplant outcomes have improved since the introduction  of direct-acting antivirals has been unclear.

Glossary

direct-acting antiviral (DAA)

Modern drugs for the treatment of hepatitis C, which work directly against the hepatitis C virus. They stop the virus from reproducing by blocking certain steps in its lifecycle.

antiviral

A drug that acts against a virus or viruses.

referral

A healthcare professional’s recommendation that a person sees another medical specialist or service.

pegylated interferon

Pegylated interferon, also known as peginterferon, is a chemically modified form of the standard interferon, sometimes used to treat hepatitis B and C. The difference between interferon and peginterferon is the PEG, which stands for a molecule called polyethylene glycol. The PEG does nothing to fight the virus. But by attaching it to the interferon (which does fight the virus), the interferon will stay in the blood much longer. 

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end-stage disease

Final period or phase in the course of a disease leading to a person’s death.

Another factor that remains unclear when assessing transplant outcomes in people with HIV is the impact of receiving a liver from an HIV-positive donor. The 2013 HOPE Act authorised the use of organs from HIV-positive donors for transplants to people living with HIV, but the number of transplants resulting from the HOPE Act in the United States has been low, perhaps due to a lack of evidence on survival.

Researchers at major liver disease treatment centres in the United States used data from the United Network for Organ Sharing / Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network database to investigate whether transplant outcomes for people with HIV had improved since the introduction of direct-acting antiviral treatment.

They compared transplant outcomes in people with HIV with and without hepatitis C coinfection to those in people infected with hepatitis C alone and in people without either virus. They also compared outcomes in the four groups between two periods: prior to the introduction of direct-acting antivirals (2008-2012) and after the introduction of direct-acting antivirals (2014-2019). Transplants in 2013 were excluded because direct-acting antiviral access was inconsistent and the less effective first generation of direct-acting antivirals were used with pegylated interferon.

Between 2008 and 2019, 64,860 liver transplants were carried out in people with a known HIV status. In the pre-DAA period, 24,238 transplants took place, 68 in coinfected people and 49 in people with HIV alone. Transplant recipients with HIV were younger and had shorter waitlist times than other recipients, while all transplant recipients without hepatitis C had higher MELD scores, indicating more severe liver damage, and were more likely to be on life support at the time of transplantation.

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People with HIV and hepatitis had a significantly higher risk of graft failure (hazard ratio 1.85, 95% CI 1.31-2.59) in the pre-DAA era compared to people without either virus. This difference in risk disappeared in the DAA era, so that by three years after transplant, 81% of recipients with HIV and hepatitis C remained alive and had not suffered rejection of the donor organ (graft failure), compared with 58% in the pre-DAA era (p=0.006). Survival was 100% over a median follow-up period of 656 days among graft recipients with HIV who had chronic hepatitis C at the time of transplant.

Three-year graft survival in people who were not coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C was similar; 80% of people with HIV alone, 83% of people with hepatitis C alone and 84% of people with neither virus remained alive without rejection of the donor organ.

Overall survival did not differ either; 84% of people with HIV and hepatitis C remained alive after three years, compared to 81% in people with HIV alone, 84% in people with hepatitis C alone and 86% in people without either virus.

Survival in the 46 recipients of livers from HIV-positive donors did not differ from the overall survival; 82% of people with HIV who received a graft from an HIV-positive donor remained alive without rejection of the donor organ after three years.

The study authors say that the small number of transplants from HIV-positive donors to other people with HIV suggests that the HOPE Act provision is still underused. They speculate that transplant centres may be reluctant to carry out transplants in people with HIV due to a lack of evidence that prospects for graft survival have improved in people with HIV. Six transplant centres accounted for 40% of transplants in people with HIV, again suggesting lack of confidence or experience.

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They also note that surgeons may over-estimate the risk of HIV transmission from blood during transplant procedures.

“Our results should offer reassurance to transplant centers and to encourage timely referral of HIV patients with decompensated cirrhosis for transplantation evaluation, including patients coinfected with HCV,” the authors conclude.

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