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Treatment of chronic hepatitis C with interferon-alpha. Clinical histological and virological implications.

Authors :
Olaso V
Córdoba J
Berenguer M
Prieto M
Lainez B
Argüello L
Valverde J
Pascual S
Gobernado M
Berenguer J
Source :
Revista espanola de enfermedades digestivas : organo oficial de la Sociedad Espanola de Patologia Digestiva [Rev Esp Enferm Dig] 1997 Jul; Vol. 89 (7), pp. 531-50.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Objective: to identify pretreatment predictive factors of long-term biochemical and virological response to interferon-alpha in chronic hepatitis C and to determine the effects of a second course of interferon-alpha in patients who responded but relapsed after interferon withdrawal.<br />Design: retrospective analysis.<br />Setting: outpatient liver clinic of a tertiary hospital in Spain.<br />Patients: 112 patients with chronic hepatitis C were treated with recombinant interferon-alpha (3 MU three times a week for 6 months). Twenty-four patients who responded but relapsed after interferon withdrawal were treated with a second course of interferon (3 MU three times a week for 12 months).<br />Results: seventy-two patients were non-responders (64%), 11 patients had a sustained response (10%) and 29 patients responded but relapsed after interferon withdrawal (26%). Five (25%) of the 24 patients who relapsed and were treated with a second course of interferon experienced a sustained response (mean follow-up: 10 months). By multivariate analysis, four pretreatment variables were found to be predictive of a complete response: age < 40 years (p = 0.0004), history of IVDA (p = 0.001), low serum levels (p = 0.013), and genotype 3 (p = 0.01). Two variables were found to be predictive of a sustained response: short duration of HCV infection (p = 0.09) and genotype 3 (p = 0.01). Sustained responders appeared to have lower HCV-RNA levels than those with complete response who relapsed and non-responders. HCV viremia levels were not associated with the severity of liver histology, duration of disease or the source of hepatitis.<br />Conclusions: in the present study a low sustained response rate was observed using a standard interferon-alpha regimen (3 MU three times a week for 6 months). The sustained response rate increased slightly with a second course of interferon-alpha (3 MU three times a week for 12 months) in patients with a complete response who relapsed after interferon withdrawal. Sustained response is related to viral genotype and duration of HCV infection.

Details

Language :
English; Spanish; Castilian
ISSN :
1130-0108
Volume :
89
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Revista espanola de enfermedades digestivas : organo oficial de la Sociedad Espanola de Patologia Digestiva
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9265839