Table 4.
AEs | Cirrhotic patients (n = 35) |
---|---|
Events of clinical interest | 3 (8.6%) |
≥1 AEsa | 28 (80%) |
Nasopharyngitis | 5 (14.3%) |
Increased ALT level | 5 (14.3%) |
Increased AST level | 5 (14.3%) |
Rash | 3 (8.6%) |
Constipation | 3 (8.6%) |
Diarrhea | 3 (8.6%) |
Malaise | 2 (5.7%) |
Anemia | 2 (5.7%) |
Headache | 2 (5.7%) |
Drug-related AEsb | 13 (37.1%) |
SAEs | 0 (0%) |
Discontinuation because of AEs | 0 (0%) |
Deaths | 0 (0%) |
ALT | |
1.1–2.5 times baseline level | 2 (5.7%) |
>2.5–5.0 times baseline level | 2 (5.7%) |
>5.0 times baseline level | 1 (2.9%) |
AST | |
1.1–2.5 times baseline level | 3 (8.6%) |
>2.5–5.0 times baseline level | 1 (2.9%) |
>5.0 times baseline level | 1 (2.9%) |
Total bilirubin | |
>2.5–5.0 times baseline level | 0 (0%) |
>5.0–10.0 times baseline level | 0 (0%) |
>10.0× baseline | 0 (0%) |
Alkaline phosphatase | |
1.1–2.5 times baseline level | 7 (20%) |
>2.5–5.0 times baseline level | 0 (0%) |
>5.0 times baseline level | 0 (0%) |
ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, SAEs serious AEs
aIncidence greater than 5%
bAll mild intensity. The drug-related AEs most commonly reported for 5% of patients were increased ALT level (14.3%, 5/35), increased AST level (14.3%, 5/35), diarrhea (8.6%, 3/35), constipation (5.7%, 2/35), and malaise (5.7%, 2/35)