Home Forums Main Forum Experts Corner Viral Load and SVR How can the virus reappear after UND

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  • #11543
    Avatar photoDan
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @dan

    Hi.

    I wonder if anyone can give me an answer. On tx we all reach UND, which is the virus not detected, but how can some people relapse.

    Where is the virus coming from?


    Gen 1b, F1-F2. Naive.
    Started Twinvir tx on 2 nd of December 2015 for 12 weeks.
    Starting VL 400000, Alt 49/AST 44
    1 week VL 29, ALT 44/AST 30.
    4 weeks VL 12, ALT 33, Platelets 145, all other tests normal.
    7 weeks VL Detected, ALT 28, all other normal
    8 weeks UND, 12 week UND, 24 week SVR UND

    #11547
    Avatar photoEnkel
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @enkel

    Being UND doesn’t mean that every virus is killed. some viruses reside deep in the body. Some viruses may hide. But this is not the case with the new treatment where many have been detected at EOT and still cured.


    Male, Fibro F1. Geno 1b. ALT 67 before treatment Viral load 5 million. My huge viral load replicates in my nervous system as I suffer anxiety.
    Started Twinvir 12/12/15.
    Two weeks
    ALT 17 at 2 weeks
    Viral Load UND at 2 weeks
    ALT 13.5 at 7 weeks EOT
    ALT 10.5 at 15 weeks EOT
    ALT 13 at 27 weeks EOT, VL UND, Cured

    #11548
    Avatar photoSirchinenge
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @sirchinenge

    Well, like I said in the previous thread, best I can see the majority who fail don’t reach UD during
    the 12 weeks they are usually 12 throughout then post treatment the virus is no longer being
    suppressed via medications therefore it comes back.

    There is a small percentage, I mean tiny who are UD during the 12 weeks and the virus also
    comes back they don’t know why, these treatments are new its gonna take some time to figure out
    why some maybe resistant to treatment.

    Lastly, they have being retreating those who fail with success it seems these people react better
    to extra DAA.


    Sob/Dac from Oct 29 2015
    Geno 1b
    Fiberscan 9.9 Pre treatment
    Fiberscan 7.4 week 10
    VL 1.3 million pre treatment
    Week 2.5 VL 96
    Week 5.5 VL 17
    Week 10 VL UD
    SVR 3 UD
    SVR 16 UD
    Cured:
    All liver functions in normal ranges.

    #11576
    Avatar photodointime
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @dointime

    best I can see the majority who fail don’t reach UD during
    the 12 weeks they are usually 12 throughout

    I don’t agree Sir. People do routinely reach UND without all the virus being gone. The PCR test just isn’t sensitive enough to detect what’s left. If we had a test that really could detect every virus then it would be much simpler. We’d know when we got the UND result that we could stop tx.

    dt

    #11581
    avatar876.jpegGaj
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @gaj

    Agree dt,

    UND doesn’t mean ‘None there!’, rather it is ‘I can’t see any?’.
    and the test can’t determine whether the RNA it can see is viable or not which is why some who are still detected at EOT go on to a SVR.
    Then there is the question of whether some who ‘relapsed’ may have actually been reinfected post treatment?


    G3a since ’78 – Dx ’12 – F4 (2xHCC)
    24wk Tx – PEG/Riba/Dac 2013 relapsed
    24wk Tx – Generic Sof/Dac/Riba 2015/16 relapsed
    16wk Tx – 12/01/17 -> 03/05/17 NS3/NS5a + Generic Sof
    SVR7 – 22/06/17 UND
    SRV12 – 27/07/17 UND
    SVR24 – 26/10/17 UND
    :cheer: :cheer: :cheer:

    #11788
    dope-on-a-rope.jpgDr James
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @fixhepc

    Viral load tests are imperfect.

    There is very little viral RNA to to count it we use something called Polymerase Chain Reaction – this amplifies the quantity to something we can count.

    The Lower Limit of Quantification (LLOQ) may be 30, 25, 15, 12 or 10 and virus that can be detected, but is at a lower level than this results in a <30 detected, <25 detected, ... <10 detected.

    The Lower Limit of Detection (LLOD) is the smallest quantity that can be seen. A test with LLOQ <15 will have an LLOD of around <6 so RNA in the range 0-5 will come back as undetected.

    When we see the rapid drop in HCV RNA this is all the easy stuff being killed. The problem is the mutants which are present in low levels. They are present in low levels because they don't grow as fast, but kill off all the faster growing stuff and you are left with the mutants.

    Think of it like pulling all the plants out of a garden to leave raw earth. Pretty soon weeds take over the empty space.

    So recurrence comes from hard to kill mutants that were present below the LLOD at the end of treatment. In other words the undetected was really "can't detect with the sensitivity required". For this reason we over treat everyone. 8 weeks Havoni for GT1 naive with low fibrosis gets at 121/123 SVR if the viral load is < 6 million to start with. A high viral load is a negative predictor because it says 1) your body is not doing a good job killing it and 2) there are more virions, so more mutants.


    YMMV

    #11789
    Avatar photoisaing4
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @isaing4

    Thanks Dr. James for your explanations!
    Some mutants are hard to kill :woohoo:
    Hope to kill them all! :evil:


    HCV since I don’t know. Diagnosed in 2010.
    GT1b, F0/F1, VL 9M, ALT 44, AST 42, Tx naive,
    started 12 wks Twinvir on 06.12.2015. Feeling great and grateful 🙂
    virus not detected 06.02.2016 & SVR24
    isaing4@gmail.com

    #11792
    Avatar photoLondonGirl
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @londongirl

    This has always been my instinct Dr F – and now you have given those little hardcore cells a name, ‘The Mutants’ :evil:

    Wanting those mutants gone. I currently have flu, hope it doesn’t make it harder to kill those evil mutants off.


    GT1a Dec14 F2/8.7 VL 900000-2.5M
    Jan16 Hepcivir-L MonkMed/Redemption
    Baseline: VL 913575 Alt 76 Platelets low
    Wk2 VL1157 Alt 23
    DET Wk 8 VL 32 Alt19 ‘In the slow lane’
    June16 Fibro 5.7 F0/1 LIF 1.5
    Wk 11 VL<12 Alt 13 Det/Unq
    Extending tx 12 wks Mylan Sofo/Dac MonkMed
    Wk 14 VL <12 Det/Unq
    Wk 16 VL UNDETECTED
    Wk 22 + 4 Wks Sunprevir FixHepC
    Wk 24 UNDETECTED Alt 13
    Wk 12 post tx SVR12 Wk 26 SVR24
    Thank-you Tim, Dr Debasis @ MonkMed & Dr Freeman @ Fix HepC

    #11819
    Avatar photoAriel
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @ariel

    Thanks Dr James
    The test performed on me at Day 25 says measured in the assay range 30-100000000 and I came back as <30 but the doctor yesterday at the liver clinic called it "still detected" not UND yet?

    I'm at week 5 now and have 7 to go with no liver damage and this first blood result is therefore good.

    So my next path sheet handed to me is for the same clinic and the same requests
    Does this mean it's always going to just come back <30 I am confused?

    Or does this test somehow show up UND?
    I'm attaching a screenshot of yesterday's result.
    Thankyou James for this awesome medicine and your assistance with understanding this report
    Ariel

    Attachments:
    • image-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11.jpeg
    #12109
    dope-on-a-rope.jpgDr James
    • Guardian Angel
    • ★★★★★
    @fixhepc

    We discussed this privately but <30 mean old machine!

    There is not an undetected or detected notation on this (which there is on most of the results)

    Use a lab that does <15

    The lower limit of detection is about <6 so anything in the range 0-5 will be undetected.

    You need a real zero to clear but we can't measure that low, so we over treat by a working safe margin.

    With GT1 for example SVR is typically 97% at 12 weeks (depends on your profile) but 99% at 24 weeks. To a government/insurance payer the extra 2% of not worth the extra 100% cost. If we just treated the 3% failures with 2 x the treatment length the cost only goes up 6% so it's a pretty logical decision to do 12 weeks and retreat failures for 106% when you weigh it up against spending 200% in the first instance to get there.

    If you are privately paying you might reasonably decide that you would prefer 100:1 odds rather than 33:1 and opt for 24 weeks, but it is overkill for 97% and the last 12 weeks will be going into a body with no HCV.

    Not an easy choice but you have to draw the line on treatment duration somewhere.


    YMMV

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