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Efficacy and safety of interferon-based therapy in the treatment of adult thalassemic patients with chronic hepatitis C: a 12 years audit
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Background. HCV infection and transfusional iron overload in Thalassemic patients may result in liver disease. HCV treatment in Thalassemia has raised safety concerns. Aim. Estimate effectiveness and tolerability of interferon-based therapy in HCV-infected Thalassemic patients. Material and methods. Over a 12-year period, consecutive patients with p Thalassemia major (TM) and chronic hepatitis C received treatment. Liver biopsy, HCV-RNA and genotyping were performed beforehand. Sustained virological response (SVR) was defined as negative HCV-RNA 6 months post-treatment. Forty eight patients (26 M-22 F, mean age 39.8) were enrolled. Twenty nine patients were treated with conventional interferon alpha (IFNa) for 48 weeks (group A). Nineteen patients (10 naive-9 previously IFNa experienced) received pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) (group B). Results. HCV-1 was found in 44%, HCV-2 in 14%, HCV-3 in 23% and HCV-4 in 19%. Group A: ten patients (38.5%) achieved SVR, 2 (7.5%) relapsed and 17 (54%) were non responders. Group B: five (28%) achieved SVR, 8 (44%) relapsed and 6 (28%) never responded. High HCV-RNA levels, genotype 1 and advanced liver fibrosis were independently associated with no response. Four patients (3 treated with IFNa, 1 with PEG-IFN) had to discontinue treatment due to complications. Conclusions. The response rate of IFN monotherapy in multi-transfused, HCV-infected Thalassemic patients is not inferior to that in non-multi-transfused patients. IFNa administration is well-tolerated and should be recommended as initial treatment schedule in this setting.
- Subjects :
- virus diseases
digestive system diseases
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.od......2127..a1e047a360e89eae4d8e1375811babb7