Claudio Ucciferri1-2, Alessandro Occhionero1, Jacopo Vecchiet1 and Katia Falasca1.
1 Clinic of Infectious Diseases – Department of Medicine and Science of Aging, University “G. d’Annunzio” Chieti-Pescara, Italy
2 Department of Medicine and Health Sciences 'Vincenzo Tiberio', University of Molise, Campobasso, Italy.
Correspondence to: Katia Falasca, Clinic of Infectious
Diseases, Dept. of Medicine and Science of Aging, University “G.
D’Annunzio” School of Medicine, Via dei Vestini, 66100 Chieti – Italy.
Tel.: +39-0871-357562, fax: 0871-358070, e-mail:
k.falasca@unich.it
Published: November 1, 2018
Received: October 11, 2018
Accepted: October 22, 2018
Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis 2018, 10(1): e2018069 DOI
10.4084/MJHID.2018.069
This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
|
Dear Editor,
Hepatitis
C treatment is evolving from interferon-based therapy (IFN) 1-2 to
direct antiviral agents (DAA), which have been shown to be highly
effective with very few adverse events,[1,2] so, unlike interferon,[3] they can be safely administered, without growth factors, even in the presence of thrombocytopenia and anemia,[2,4]
but may have some dangerous extra-hematological adverse effects,
currently little known. In 2015 the Food and Drug Administration and
the European Medical Agency added information to the Harvoni
(ledipasvir / sofosbuvir) and Sovaldi (sofosbuvir) labels about the
serious slowing of the heart rate of amiodarone when taken in
combination with another direct acting antiviral for the treatment of
hepatitis C infection. It is still unknown why amiodarone together with
DAAs can lead to heart- related events, yet FDA recommends heart
monitoring in inpatient hospital setting for the first 48 hours in case
of unavailable alternative options of treatment.[5,6]
After
FDA published the warning about the bradycardia occurring during
direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment, several concerns have arisen
regarding cardiac toxicity, and a few cases of extreme bradycardia have
been described. Furthermore, DAA therapy is often used in older
population which have a higher risk of heart related diseases, and
consequently of related adverse.[7]
We report a
single center experience of four cases of arrhythmias in patients under
DAA treatment that were not under therapy with amiodarone, and we
retrospectively evaluated the clinical and pathological findings of the
cases.
At the time of the analysis, we had enrolled a total of 110
patients undergoing DAAs therapy with electrocardiographic exam
performed before DAAs therapy and did not show any alteration.
A
first patient is a 69-year-old man infected with HCV genotype 1a. He
was diagnosed with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in 2012, and he was
in treatment with aspirin, valsartan+hydrochlorothiazide and
flecainide. He had high grade hepatic fibrosis (14,5 kPa, F4 Metavir)
by Fibroscan. He started the treatment with 3D+ Ribavirin (ombitasvir /
paritaprevir / rit+dasabuvir+RBV scheme for 24 weeks) in April 2015
when he had a viremia of 816.793 UI/ml. In June, HCV-RNA was already
undetectable in plasma samples. In July it was necessary to adjust the
ribavirin dosage (800 mg/die) due to drug- induced anemia (Hb 12,7
mg/dl). In July he had a lypotimic episode and valsartan was reduced.
In October he had an extreme bradycardia episode that led to a syncope
requiring hospitalization. Even if the DAAs therapy was suspended,
arrhythmias were so severe that the implantation of a double chamber
pace-maker (PMK) was needed. Despite the DAA adverse effects, the SVR12
(i.e., the absence of detectable plasma HCV RNA 12 weeks after
completion of treatment) was achieved. An interaction with flecainide
cannot be ruled out, but the persistence of bradycardia after DAA
suspension raises concerns about a more direct conduction system
toxicity.
The second one is a 75-year-old woman, positive for HCV
infection since 1995, genotype 1b. She also had sinusal bradycardia,
high blood pressure, and favism. She was under treatment with
perindopril, nebivolol, and colecalciferol. She started the treatment
with DAAs in January 2016 (Daclatasvir+Sofosbuvir for 12 weeks) with a
viremia of 31.610 UI/ml. We observed the viremia dropping from 31.610
to 630 UI/ml at the end of the second week of treatment, and then it
remained persistently suppressed. In February, the second month of
therapy, she referred an episode of atrial fibrillation spontaneously
reverted to sinus rhythm. In April, the last month of therapy, she
referred to a similar episode of AF. We are now in the third month of
follow up, and the viremia is still negative, therefore, the patient
has obtained SVR12.
Patient n°3 is a 60-year-old man who had had
HCV infection for 25 years, genotype 1b. He had a history of surgical
procedures. He is a non- responder to previous PEG-IFN plus ribavirin
therapy which lasted for 15 months, during which he did not have
problems except for itching and an episode of syncope with urine loss
few hours after the administration of IFN. The Fibroscan testing
documented a stiffness of 6,3 kPa (Metavir F2), and he had an HCV
viremia of 1.118.000. The patient had a diagnosis of arterial
hypertension, so stress ECG and a Holter test were performed, resulting
in being perfectly normal. He started the treatment for HCV with PEG-
IFN+ribavirin+simeprevir for 12 weeks and then further 12 weeks with
PEG-IFN+ribavirin in December 2015. During the second month of
treatment, he was hospitalized because of a malignant syncope due to a
total atrioventricular block. There was a danger of death so a PMK was
implanted and the therapy definitively suspended. However, in December,
the patient had no more HCV-RNA detectable in the bloodstream and, even
if he had been under DAA treatment for just two months, the viremia was
still negative with SRV12.
A last patient is a 58-year-old man,
genotype 1b. He relapsed with the previous treatments with PEG-IFN and
Ribavirin. He has diabetes mellitus type II treated with oral
antidiabetic drugs and insulin. He had a high grade hepatic fibrosis
measured through Fibroscan which documented a parenchymal stiffness of
61,8 kPa (F4 Metavir). He began the treatment with Sofosbuvir,
Simeprevir, and Ribavirin (12 weeks) in April 2015. After one month of
therapy, the HCV-RNA was undetectable in venous blood samples. The
treatment was interrupted after only 46 days because of a myocardial
infarction complicated with pericardial effusion and arrhythmia that
required immediate coronary revascularization together with colchicine
and corticosteroids, but the patient obtained SVR12.
All patients
have had cardiac symptoms within the morning of the therapy
administration, 2-3 hours after taking the DAA therapy. All patients
stopped the treatment after having adverse, and all patients have
reached the SVR12.
Out of 110 enrolled subjects treated with new
DAA for hepatitis C, we had information on severe adverse events for
four patients, so in 3.6% of our sample, a cardiac event perhaps
correlated to new DAA has occurred. This is a clinical report of
cardiac dysfunction associated with the treatment of chronic HCV
infection. The first report of Ahmad et al.[8] showed
six of thirty-four patients receiving IFN-free BMS-986094 regimes who
reported cardiotoxic changes; pathological analysis revealed severe
myocyte damage with elongated myofibrils without gross necrosis. In
this observation of four cases of 110 treatments with new DAA, there is
no pathologic analysis of the cardiac tissue since the correlation
was realized after the events, and the biopsy was considered too
invasive. However, the correlation between DAAs and an alteration in
cardiac function was strong, given the occurrence of the cardiac
problems soon after starting the new therapy, occurring all the cardiac
events, including atrial fibrillation, in the morning after taking the
pills. Cases of severe bradycardia and heart block have been observed
when the DAAs were used in combination with amiodarone, with or without
other heart rate lowering drugs. The mechanism is not established. The
concomitant use of amiodarone was limited through the clinical
development of sofosbuvir plus other DAAs. These cases are potentially
life threatening, therefore amiodarone should not be used in patients
with DAAs. When the concomitant use of amiodarone is necessary,
patients are recommended to be closely monitored when initiating this
treatment. Although the mechanism of action is still not clarified,
DAAs are believed to be able to increase the concentrations of
these drugs (amiodarone, disapiramide, flecainide, mexiletine,
propafenone, quinidine), when administered orally, by inhibition of the
intestinal CYP3A4.[9] Close monitoring and clinical
caution are therefore recommended, especially when these
antiarrhythmics are administered orally.
Although these patients
did not have symptomatic heart failure, the frequency of,
after exposure, cardiac dysfunction suggests possible drug-related
cardiotoxicity. In most cases, there was no significant abnormality on
the pre- treatment surface ECG, but echocardiographic or Holter cardiac
studies were not performed. By reviewing the symptoms of these four
cases, it is possible to speculate that the DAA therapy has a
particular sensibility with nerve fibers of the sinoatrial node and can
interact with the cardiac electrical activity.
Anyway, the
possible cardiac toxicity of DAAs should be confirmed by a systematic
study, and if ascertained would require careful monitoring of patients
to identify early changes in cardiac function.
Consent for publication
Written informed consent was obtained from the patients for publication of this Case report.Acknowledgment
These cases were presented as a Poster at ICAR Italian Conference on AIDS AND Antiviral Therapy, 2016.Authors’ contributions
CU,
AO contributed to study design, literature review, data collection,
data analysis; KF, JV, CU initial manuscript writing, manuscript
review, approval of final version. All authors read and approved the
final manuscript.
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