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Therapy of chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis with alpha interferon. A comparison between natural and recombinant alpha interferon.
- Source :
-
La Clinica terapeutica [Clin Ter] 1993 Dec; Vol. 143 (6), pp. 489-97. - Publication Year :
- 1993
-
Abstract
- We studied the effects of two different types of interferon alpha (natural interferon from human leukocytes vs. recombinant interferon 2b) in 64 patients with chronic Non-A, Non-B hepatitis; other finalities were: definition of the optimal duration of therapy with interferon alpha (IFN alpha), entity of side effects, cost-benefit ratio. Patients were randomly assigned to one of three groups, according to duration of IFN alpha treatment: Group I was treated for 12 months, Group II for six months, Group III for 3 months. Each group consisted of two subgroups, divided on the basis of the type of IFN used: subgroup A was administered natural IFN alpha, and subgroup B received recombinant IFN alpha 2b. Each patients was given 3 million units of IFN alpha by intramuscular injection on alternate days. At the end of treatment, a decrease in serum ALT activity was achieved in 39 cases (65%). The response rate was higher in Group I (89%) than in Group II (54%) and Group III (55%). Natural and recombinant IFN alpha 2b induced similar effects in patients treated for twelve months (Group I); recombinant IFN was more effective than natural IFN alpha in patients treated for six and three months. We conclude that the 12-month treatment with 3 million units of intramuscular recombinant IFN alpha, administered on alternate days, might be the optimal therapy schedule. This proposal is also supported by the evaluation of the cost benefit ratio.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0009-9074
- Volume :
- 143
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- La Clinica terapeutica
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 8306572