First Reported Treatment Failure in a Recipient of a Hepatitis C Viremic Heart Transplant

2020 
Introduction Cardiac transplant centers are now successfully utilizing hepatitis C virus (HCV) donor hearts to increase the availability of organs now that a curative treatment is available with direct acting antivirals (DAA). We present the first described case of DAA treatment failure in a patient who received an HCV donor, nucleic acid testing (NAT) positive heart. Case Report A 65-year-old male with a mixed cardiomyopathy underwent orthotopic heart transplant with an HCV+/NAT+ heart. He seroconverted within seven days of transplant, noted by a peak HCV viral load of 7.65 log IU/mL and genotype of 1a without resistance markers. Planned initial treatment with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir (G/P) was denied by insurance. After approval for and treatment with ledipasvir/sofosbuvir (L/S) for 8 weeks, the patient's viral load was initially undetectable. However, he developed recurrent viremia 6 months after treatment completion with an HCV load of 7.40 log IU/mL with NS5A resistance due to a Y93H mutation. He was subsequently initiated on sofosbuvir/velpatasvir/voxilaprevir (S/V/V) with persistent undetectable viral loads to date at 4 months. Summary This is the first documented case of DAA treatment failure in a recipient of HCV+/NAT+ transplanted heart treated with L/S. This treatment failure was likely secondary to insufficient treatment duration. The ION-3 study demonstrated noninferiority for an 8 week treatment duration compared to 12 weeks of L/S, but at the cost of a higher relapse rate in the 8 week arm (5% vs 1%) associated with viral load of >6.78 log IU/mL. The Y93H mutation is more likely to reduce treatment efficacy in L/S as noted by a pooled resistance analysis compared to G/P, which has a failure rate of
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