Gilead Sciences has welcomed the Technology Appraisal Guidance (TAG) issued by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which recommends Vosevi® (sofosbuvir 400mg/velpatasvir 100mg/voxilaprevir 100mg; SOF/VEL/VOX).1
Gilead Sciences has welcomed the Technology Appraisal Guidance (TAG) issued by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which recommends Vosevi® (sofosbuvir 400mg/velpatasvir 100mg/voxilaprevir 100mg; SOF/VEL/VOX).1
Although direct-acting antiviral (DAAs) have been shown to be highly effective in the majority of people with chronic HCV, a small percentage have been unable to be cured1 with current therapies. This guidance from NICE for SOF/VEL/VOX represents a new treatment for this population of HCV patients, and marks a significant next step in supporting NHS England’s plan to make the UK the first country in the world to eliminate hepatitis C which was announced last month.
SOF/VEL/VOX is a 12-week treatment regimen for patients with any genotype of chronic HCV infection, without cirrhosis or with compensated cirrhosis, who have previously failed therapy with a DAA-containing regimen. A 12-week regimen is recommended in DAA-naïve patients with compensated cirrhosis infected with any HCV genotype, with an option to shorten therapy to 8 weeks for those infected with genotype 3. For DAA-naïve patients without cirrhosis, the recommended treatment duration is 8 weeks.2
SOF/VEL/VOX is Gilead’s fourth sofosbuvir-based treatment to be recommended for the treatment of chronic HCV infection, and complements the existing portfolio in demonstrating high cure rates across a range of DAA – experienced and naïve patients, with a 12 or 8 week single tablet regimen.3,4 Sofosbuvir-based regimens are recommended by global guidelines across HCV genotypes and disease severities,5-7 and have been used to treat more than 1.5 million patients worldwide.8
In line with health technology appraisal process, the NHS in Wales must provide funding and resources for SOF/VEL/VOX within two months of the first publication of the final appraisal determination and NHS England must do the same within three months
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