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Gastroenterologists, hepatologists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and other health care professionals involved in the treatment of patients with HCV.
HCV; drug-drug interactions; interferon-free regimens; HIV/HCV coinfection
Nancy Reau, MD, FAASLD, AGAF, is currently associate director of solid organ transplantation and section chief of hepatology at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois. She received her bachelor of arts degree at Oberlin College in Oberlin Ohio, and her doctorate of medicine, cum laude, from the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. She completed a medicine residency and a gastroenterology fellowship at the Ohio State University, and an advanced transplant hepatology fellowship at The Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland.| 1. | Discuss the importance of HCV treatment and achievement of sustained viral response for improvement of hepatic and extrahepatic manifestations in mild as well as severe disease. | 2. | Apply the clinical evidence to optimize treatment duration, monitoring strategies, and drug-drug interactions for newly approved and emerging interferon-free regimens. |
| 3. | Appraise the clinical evidence to determine how to optimize the use of newly approved and emerging interferon-free regimens in special populations of patients including those with decompensated cirrhosis, HIV/HCV coinfection, transplant/post-transplant of liver, renal impairment, and HCV genotype 3. |
| 1. | Discuss the importance of HCV treatment and achievement of sustained viral response for improvement of hepatic and extrahepatic manifestations in mild as well as severe disease. |
| 2. | Apply the clinical evidence to optimize treatment duration, monitoring strategies, and drug-drug interactions for newly approved and emerging interferon-free regimens. |
| 3. | Appraise the clinical evidence to determine how to optimize the use of newly approved and emerging interferon-free regimens in special populations of patients including those with decompensated cirrhosis, HIV/HCV coinfection, transplant/post-transplant of liver, renal impairment, and HCV genotype 3. |

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