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U.S. Multicenter Pilot Study of Daily Consensus Interferon (CIFN) Plus Ribavirin for 'Difficult-to-Treat' HCV Genotype 1 Patients

Authors :
Eric Dieperink
Lori Tetrick
William P. Boyd
C. Smith
Clark C. Kulig
Charles DeComarmond
Daniel P. McKee
Bashar Aqel
Marcos C. Pedrosa
Shanglei Liu
Samuel B. Ho
Edmund J. Bini
Yngve Falck-Ytter
Source :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Background Patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype 1 (HCV-1) and difficult-to-treat characteristics respond poorly to pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin (RBV), and could benefit from an interferon with increased activity (consensus interferon or CIFN), favorable viral kinetics from daily dosing, and a longer duration of therapy. The purpose of this pilot study was to determine the efficacy and safety of daily CIFN + RBV for initial treatment of patients with HCV-1 infection. Methods Patients with difficult-to-treat characteristics (92% male, 33% African American, 78% Veterans Affairs [VA]; 67% high viral load, 59% stage 3–4 fibrosis, and mean weight of 204 lbs) were enrolled at seven VA and two community medical centers. They were randomized to daily CIFN (15 mcg/day SQ) and RBV (1–1.2 g/d PO) given for either 52 weeks (group A, n = 33) or 52–72 weeks (from time of viral response +48 weeks) (group B, n = 31). Results Intention to treat analysis for treatment groups A and B demonstrated 33% (11/33) and 32% (10/31) sustained virologic response (SVR), respectively. Only 2/31 patients in group B received more than 52 weeks of treatment. The overall group demonstrated a 31% (20/64) rapid virologic response rate (RVR), 54% (34/64) end of treatment virologic response and a 33% (21/64) SVR. Patients with RVR at 4 weeks, early virologic response from 8–12 weeks, and late virologic response from 16–24 weeks demonstrated SVR of 75% (15/20), 31% (4/13), and 22% (2/9), respectively. Overall early non-protocol discontinuation occurred in 26/64 (40%) patients. Conclusion Daily CIFN and ribavirin for initial treatment of HCV-1 patients has potential for achieving a relatively high RVR rate, but discontinuations are frequent and successful use of this regimen is highly dependent on adequate patient support to maintain adherence.

Details

ISSN :
15732568 and 01632116
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9aa8b6502d9cfab008e6dfcf4c876626
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-010-1504-y