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1.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: In chronic hepatitis C, interferon-alpha (alpha-IFN) and ribavirin combination therapy improves sustained response compared to alpha-IFN monotherapy, both in naive patients and in previous alpha-IFN relapsers, but the efficacy of such therapy remains limited in non-responder cases. The aim of this study was to assess whether the pattern of response to alpha-IFN alone may predict sustained response to combination therapy during retreatment. METHODS: Fifty previous alpha-IFN relapsers and 50 previous alpha-IFN non-responders were retreated with a high alpha-IFN dose (6 MU/thrice weekly for 2 months; induction phase) and then randomised to continue with alpha-IFN alone (3 MU/thrice weekly) or to receive combination therapy (3 MU/thrice weekly of alpha-IFN and 1000-1200 mg/daily of ribavirin) for an additional 6 months according to the biochemical response to alpha-IFN shown after the induction phase. All patients were also evaluated for virological and histological response. RESULTS: Eleven of 25 (44%) relapsers treated with combination therapy and 4/25 (16%) treated with alpha-IFN alone achieved a sustained response. The corresponding figures among non-responders were 1/25 (4%) and 0/25, respectively. Among 26 patients with a complete ALT and HCV-RNA response after 2 months of alpha-IFN, sustained response was seen in 11/14 (79%) treated with combination therapy and in 4/12 (33%) treated with alpha-IFN alone (p=0.05). On the other hand, of 74 cases still HCV-RNA positive after 2 months of alpha-IFN alone, biochemical and virological end of therapy response was better with combination therapy (11/36; 30.5%) compared to alpha-IFN alone (4/38; 10.5%), but only one patient developed a sustained response (1/36; 3%). CONCLUSIONS: The retreatment with a 6-month combination therapy was associated with a high rate of sustained response only in patients showing a complete biochemical and virological response to alpha-IFN alone. Longer retreatment with combination therapy may be needed to achieve a sustained response in patients without a prompt virological response to alpha-IFN.  相似文献   

2.
Nineteen patients with chronic hepatitis C who were virological non-responders (seven responder/relapse and 12 no response) to an initial 24-week course of interferon-α2b (IFN-α2b) at a dose of 3million units (MU) thrice weekly were retreated for an additional 48 weeks at the same dosing schedule and followed-up for another 24 weeks post-therapy. At the end of follow-up (week 72), six (32%) of the 19 patients were hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA negative and were virological complete responders to retreatment. The viral genotypes in these six patients included two each with 1b and 3a, one with 2b, and another with 2a/2b; five of the six virological responder patients had cirrhosis. Significant predictors for successful retreatment included lower baseline HCV RNA concentrations prior to the first course of therapy, 2 log10 reductions in serum HCV RNA during the initial treatment and classification into the virological ‘responder/relapse’ category after the first course of IFN (P < 0.01 for all observations). When the above factors were used to construct a predictive model to determine response to retreatment, it was found that the absence of a 2 log10 drop in HCV RNA concentrations during the first course of IFN therapy was the most reliable indicator of non-response to retreatment (likelihood ratio = 10, P = 0.0014). In addition, the presence of HCV RNA at week 12 of retreatment was 100% predictive of virological non-response to the 48-week course of therapy. Our findings indicate that an additional 48-week course of IFN-α2b therapy at 3 MU thrice weekly will achieve a virological complete response in 60% of patients who had a 2 log10 drop in HCV RNA during their first course of treatment, and measurement of week-12 HCV RNA during retreatment to identify non-responders is beneficial to patients as well as being cost-effective. Thus, a second course of IFN remains a viable option in a subgroup of non-responder patients, regardless of genotype or the presence of compensated cirrhosis.  相似文献   

3.
Relapse after interferon (IFN) therapy for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection occurs in 50% of patients after the initial response. The benefit of retreatment with IFN alone has not been assessed in large controlled studies. To assess the effectiveness and the tolerability of IFN retreatment and to identify the optimal second course regimen, we performed a meta-analysis of individual patient's data on a set of 549 patients (mean age 43.8 years; 12.2 SD, men: 65%) who had an end-of-treatment biochemical response to a first IFN course and then relapsed. Retreatment was started within 24 months after the end of the first course. Biochemical end-of-treatment responses (ETR) and sustained responses (SR) were observed in 405 of 549 (73.8%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 70.1-77.5) and in 124 of 549 (22.6%; CI 19.1-26.1) patients, respectively. One hundred seventy-five of 404 patients (43.3%; CI 38.6-48.2) developed an end-of-treatment, biochemical, and virological response when retreated. A biochemical and virological SR to retreatment occurred in 73 of 494 (14.8%; CI 11.7-18) patients. Thirty-two patients (5. 8%; CI 3.5-7.8) stopped retreatment for adverse effects. Biochemical and virological SR was predicted independently by logistic regression analysis using a negative HCV RNA at the end of the first cycle of IFN (P =.01) and by retreatment with a high IFN dose (P =. 03). Age, cirrhosis, genotype, and gamma-glutamyl transferase levels before retreatment were not significant by multivariate analysis. The excellent tolerability of IFN monotherapy retreatment makes it an option for patients who transiently cleared HCV-RNA during their first IFN course. Patients should be retreated with a high IFN dose regardless of the strength of the dose received during the previous course of treatment.  相似文献   

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Patients with chronic hepatitis C who have not had a sustained hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA response or serum alanine transaminase (ALT) response to a 6-month course of interferon (IFN) may respond to higher dose retreatment with consensus interferon (CIFN). Some nonresponders to initial IFN treatment have a transient response defined as undetectable HCV RNA or normalization of ALT during treatment, but subsequently have a "breakthrough" while still on treatment. The aim of this study was to determine if nonresponders who had breakthroughs responded differently to CIFN retreatment than nonresponders without breakthroughs using data from a large, multicenter trial. ALT and HCV RNA were monitored frequently during initial IFN therapy (either 9 mcg CIFN or 3 MU IFN-alpha2b 3 times per week). HCV-RNA breakthroughs were observed in 86 of 467 (18%) of all treated patients, and ALT breakthroughs were observed in 90 of 467 (19%) of all treated patients. There was no association between breakthroughs and the presence of either binding or neutralizing anti-IFN antibodies. When the patients who were nonresponders to initial IFN treatment were retreated with CIFN (15 mcg) for 12 months, 27% of those with viral breakthroughs had a sustained viral response compared with 8% in prior nonresponders without breakthroughs (P =.102). Sustained ALT responses were observed in 39% with breakthroughs compared with 10% in those without breakthroughs (P =.014). The data suggest that prior nonresponders with breakthroughs have a greater chance of responding to retreatment than do nonresponders without breakthroughs. However, most breakthrough patients would be missed unless repeated HCV-RNA testing were conducted during therapy.  相似文献   

6.
Background: The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of alpha-IFN in adult beta-thalassemic patients with chronic hepatitis C. After a long-term follow-up, we describe the special pattern of biochemical and virological response of thalassemics. Methods: Thirty-two anti-HCV-positive adult thalassemic patients (19 female and 13 male, mean age 23.4+/-5.5 years) with biopsy-proven chronic hepatitis were treated with IFN alpha2beta at a dose of 3 MU thrice weekly for 6-12 months. The patients were followed up until 45-62 months after the end of treatment. Results: A sustained response was obtained in eight patients (25%). Only two of the sustained responders (25%) normalized ALT during the first 3 months of treatment. Both early and late biochemical responders cleared HCV-RNA after 6 months of treatment. Eight patients (25%) responded with ALT normalization within 2 months of treatment but relapsed soon after stopping IFN. Sixteen patients (50%) did not respond to IFN. Conclusion: The response rate in multitransfused thalassemic patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with IFN is similar to that in non-thalassemics. The special feature of thalassemics is that early biochemical response does not predict a sustained response; on the contrary, patients who normalize ALT after 6 months of IFN treatment usually do not relapse.  相似文献   

7.
Interferon has been shown to be an effective treatment for some patients with chronic hepatitis C. In this study, the value of retreatment of nonresponders to interferon was investigated. Thirty-eight patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA-positive chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA-positive chronic hepatitis C who had been treated with betainterferon but still showed an alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level>50 KU upon completion of therapy were retreated with alpha-interferon. Eight patients (21.1%) had normalization of ALT levels after interferon retreatment were studied. Of 16 patients with transient HCV-RNA negativity 1 month after the initial interferon therapy, 7 (43.8%) had a complete response, with normalization of ALT levels and undetectable HCV-RNA, more than 6 months after interferon retreatment. On the other hand, of the 22 patients with HCV-RNA activity 1 month after the initial interferon therapy, only 1 (4.5%) had a complete response. Multivariate analysis, using a multiple logistic model, indicated that a complete response to readministration of interferon was most strongly correlated to transient negative conversion for HCV-RNA after the initial course of treatment.  相似文献   

8.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA status and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels determined shortly after interferon (IFN) therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C do not predict long-term response. To determine the virological sustained response after the completion of IFN therapy, HCV-RNA was measured at the end of treatment and at 3-4 months and 12 months after the completion of therapy in 537 patients with chronic hepatitis C. In 347 patients, HCV-RNA was not detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) at the completion of therapy and 175 of these patients (50%) were still PCR negative 12 months later. In contrast, of the 180 patients who were HCV-RNA negative at 3-4 months after completion of therapy, 99% remained negative at 12 months. Normal ALT levels were found in 80, 93 and 95% of patients who were negative for HCV-RNA either at the end of treatment or at 3-4 months and 12 months after the completion of therapy, respectively. Of patients who were HCV-RNA positive, 30, 15 and 20% were found to have normal ALT levels at the same respective time points. To determine a sustained virological response shortly after the completion of therapy, serum HCV-RNA was serially examined in 66 patients negative for HCV-RNA at the end of therapy. Of 31 patients who relapsed, HCV-RNA reappeared in 33, 80, 97 and 100% of patients by 1, 2, 4 and 8 weeks after the completion of therapy. In conclusion, a sustained virological response could be determined with 97 and 99% certainty at 4 weeks and at 3-4 months after the completion of therapy, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Decreased alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level is the accepted basic indicator of an interferon (IFN) therapeutic effect in chronic hepatitis C. This study assessed whether delayed normalization of ALT predicts a poor response to a combined therapy of IFN and ribavirin in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. METHODS: Patients were treated with IFN-alpha 2b three times weekly and oral ribavirin for 24 weeks. The ALT values were assessed monthly and patterns of changes in ALT activity were analyzed. Serum HCV-RNA was checked at weeks 0, 12, 24, and 48. RESULTS: A total of 103 patients completed therapy and 69 (67%) of them achieved a sustained viral response (SVR). There was no significant difference in the SVR between patients with or without early normalization (week 12) of ALT level (69 vs 56%). Of the sustained responders, nine patients (13%) with delayed ALT normalization had a SVR. Nine of the 12 patients (75%) with abnormal ALT and negative HCV-RNA at week 12 had a SVR compared with none of four patients who had positive HCV-RNA at week 12 (P = 0.0192). CONCLUSIONS: Lack of normalization of the ALT level at week 12 does not preclude successful virological outcome in hepatitis C patients receiving a combined therapy of IFN and ribavirin. Hepatitis C virus RNA at week 12 may be a useful predictor of treatment outcome in patients without early biochemical response.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND/AIMS: Chronic hepatitis C virus carriers may have repeatedly normal alanine aminotransferase activity despite detectable viremia and histological hepatitis. We aimed to evaluate the effect of interferon treatment in these cases. METHODOLOGY: Twelve patients with persistently normal alanine aminotransferase levels at least 6 months before therapy were treated with recombinant interferon (IFN)alpha-2b for 6 months, totaling 840 MU in amount. Alanine aminotransferase levels were measured monthly during treatment and after treatment withdrawal, and HCV-RNA levels were measured by polymerase chain reaction before treatment, and 6 and 12 months after treatment withdrawal. RESULTS: At treatment withdrawal, HCV-RNA levels had significantly decreased and HCV-RNA disappeared in 9 of the 12 patients by polymerase chain reaction. At 6 months after treatment withdrawal, HCV-RNA reappeared in 6 of the 9 patients whose HCV-RNA was negative at treatment withdrawal. Over all, only 4 of the 12 patients (33%) were sustained virological responders (HCV-RNA is negative more than 6 months after treatment withdrawal). Pre-treatment HCV-RNA levels in a sustained virological responder was significantly lower than that of transient and non-responders (4.9 +/- 1.6 vs. 7.7 +/- 1.6 log10[copies/ml], p < 0.05). Of 8 patients who did not achieved sustained virological response, alanine aminotransferase levels had transiently increased above normal during treatment in one patient and after treatment withdrawal in 6 patients; however, in the remaining one patient abnormal values have continued from 8 months after treatment withdrawal till now for 24 months. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with chronic hepatitis C with normal alanine aminotransferase levels, the response to interferon therapy was by no means satisfactory. However, if it would be used in cases with the lower pre-treatment HCV-RNA levels with careful attention to a transient alanine aminotransferase elevation, the more a sustained virological response might be expected.  相似文献   

13.
To evaluate leukocyte interferon alpha-n3 tolerability and efficacy in the retreatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C poorly tolerant to previous treatment with recombinant interferon alpha, 142 patients (73 "relapsers" and 69 "nonresponders") were retreated with leukocyte interferon alpha-n3 (6 MU thrice weekly for 6 months) and followed up for 12-42 months. Only patients with complete regression of any previous interferon-related adverse events were included. Three patients dropped out due to recurrence of a severe depressive syndrome. In 104/139 patients (75%) no significant life-style changes vs baseline were observed during retreatment, while 35 subjects experienced moderately negative interference with their living habits. The different influence on the patients' quality of life during leukocyte interferon alpha-n3 treatment in comparison with the previous treatment was significant. In 118 patients (85%) the interferon-related adverse events significantly decreased. After 12 months of follow-up, a sustained biochemical response was observed in 48 patients (35%), and a persistent biochemical and virological response was seen in 33 (23%). The good compliance with leukocyte interferon alpha-n3 administration shown by poorly tolerant patients, "relapsers/nonresponders" to recombinant interferon, permitted retreatment with full doses and thus increased the chance of obtaining a larger number of sustained responses.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Retreatment with a combination of alpha interferon (IFN) plus ribavirin of patients with chronic hepatitis C who did not respond to IFN monotherapy has not been assessed in large controlled studies. METHODS: To assess the effectiveness and tolerability of IFN/ribavirin retreatment of non-responders to IFN and to identify predictors of complete (biochemical and virological) sustained response, we performed a meta-analysis of individual data on 581 patients from 10 centres. Retreatment with various IFN schedules (mean total dose 544 mega units) and a fixed ribavirin dose (1000-1200 mg/daily depending on body weight) was given for 24-60 (mean 39.5) weeks. RESULTS: Biochemical end of treatment and sustained responses were observed in 271/581 (46.6%; 95% confidence interval (CI) 42.6-50.7%) and in 109/581 (18.7%; 95% CI 15.6-22.0%) cases, respectively. Two hundred and six of 532 patients (38.7%; 95% CI 34.6-42.9%) had an end of treatment complete response to retreatment while a complete sustained response occurred in 88 of 559 (15.7%; 95% CI 12.8-18.8%). Fifty four of 581 patients (9.2%; 95% CI 7.0-11.7%) stopped retreatment due to adverse effects. By logistic regression, complete sustained response was predicted independently by age <45 years (p=0.04), by normal pretreatment gamma-glutamyltransferase levels (p=0.01), and by a second course total IFN dose of at least 432 mega units (p=0.008). CONCLUSIONS: The overall low probability of effectiveness argues against indiscriminate retreatment of all IFN monotherapy non-responders with IFN/ribavirin. Patients less than 45 years old with normal gamma-glutamyltransferase levels who were retreated with high dose long course combination therapy had a complete sustained response rate of 30%.  相似文献   

16.
Chronic hepatitis C: retreatment of relapsers. An evidence-based approach   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Post-treatment relapse remains a major issue in the long-term management of chronic hepatitis C. Many studies have been conducted to identify the ideal therapy that would increase the cost-effectiveness of retreatment in the individual patient. Although the conclusions of two consensus conferences for the retreatment of relapse of chronic hepatitis C have been published recently, several important issues still remain unanswered. We reviewed the available data by an evidence-based approach and conclude the following: (1) patients should be retreated with a combination of interferon (IFN) and ribavirin for 6 months if there are no contraindications to ribavirin; (2) the excellent tolerability and the lesser expense of retreatment with IFN monotherapy makes it a low-cost option for patients who have transiently cleared HCV-RNA during the first IFN course, and a primary indication for those who are contraindications to ribavirin or are likely to experience adverse events under ribavirin; (3) relapsers retreated with monotherapy must receive a high dose of IFN; and (4) patients with cirrhosis should not be retreated with IFN alone. More data, particularly on the long-term course of patients retreated with combination therapy, are needed before setting guidelines for retreatment of relapsers.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether in chronic hepatitis C-positive patients who failed to respond to interferon (IFN) monotherapy a sustained response obtained with retreatment using the combination therapy of IFN + ribavirin can be safely considered to reflect eradication of the infection. METHODS: Prospective follow-up of a cohort of 97 patients who responded to retreatment with different regimens of IFN + ribavirin after failing to respond to a first IFN monotherapy course. The patients were followed throughout 7 yr of follow-up with determinations of HCV viremia every 6 months. RESULTS: At the end of the follow-up, 11 patients (11.3%) showed a viremic reappearance. HCV late relapse rates were 0%, 13%, 20%, and 12% in patients retreated, respectively, with 3 MU IFN + ribavirin for 12 months (Group 1), 5 MU IFN + ribavirin for 12 months (Group 2), 3 MU IFN + ribavirin for 6 months (Group 3), and 5 MU IFN + ribavirin for 6 months (Group 4) (Group 2 vs Group 3, p= 0.005). The virologic relapses occurred within 2 yr from therapy withdrawal. Among patients with genotype 1 and 4, the long-term response was significantly higher in Group 2 than in Group 3 (15%vs 3%, p= 0.03). In patients with genotype 2 and 3, the long-term virological response was not affected by the different regimens. CONCLUSIONS: Nonresponders to IFN monotherapy who achieve a sustained virologic response after retreatment with IFN + ribavirin stand a discrete risk of HCV reactivation within 2 yr after therapy.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative chronic hepatitis B (CHBe-), interferon (IFN) achieves very low biochemical sustained response rates. No information exists on retreatment. METHODS: Two hundred sixteen CHBe- patients treated for 5 or 12 months with 3 MU IFN-alpha2b thrice weekly and retreated (51 patients, 60 courses) because of no response or relapse were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: After 7.0 years of median follow-up, 39 naive patients (18.1%) were still in biochemical and virologic remission after a single IFN course. Longer treatment and a biochemical response within 4 months were significant predictors, inversely related to relapse by multivariate analysis (relative hazard [RH], 0.611; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.448-0.834 and RH, 0.290; 95% CI, 0.192-0.438, respectively). Retreatment resulted in 18.4% sustained response by intention-to-treat (18 of 98 patients). Patients with sustained response had persistently normal alanine aminotransferase levels, undetectable hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA by molecular hybridization, and significant improvement of histologic grade, and 32% of them lost hepatitis B surface antigen. In sustained responders, serum HBV DNA was undetectable or very low at the end of treatment and at the end of follow-up (median 3934 and 903 copies/mL, respectively) by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. CONCLUSIONS: IFN induced long-term biochemical and virologic remission in approximately 18% of naive or retreated patients with CHBe-. Sustained responders exhibited significant histologic improvement and a high rate of HBsAg loss.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Few data are available concerning the short and long-term effects of beta-IFN in patients with chronic hepatitis C. METHODOLOGY: We randomized 61 consecutive patients with HCV-related cirrhosis to receive: a) natural beta-IFN with a 6 MU/tiw for 6 months followed by 3 MU/tiw for 6 months schedule or b) no treatment. Biochemical and virological response was defined by normalization of ALT and negativization of serum HCV-RNA. Patients were followed-up for 5 years. RESULTS: A biochemical end-of-therapy response (ETR) was observed in 5/38 patients (13%) who received beta-IFN compared to 2/23 (9%) of untreated cases, but a virological ETR appeared only in 4/38 (11%) treated cases. At long-term follow-up, 6 cases (16%) who received beta-IFN and 4 untreated (17%) developed a persistent normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) but only 2 (5%) and 1 (4%), respectively, were also HCV-RNA negative. The cumulative probability of liver decompensation (variceal bleeding ascites or hepatic encephalopathy) at 60 months was 24% in treated and 35% in untreated cases. Hepatocellular carcinoma developed in 2 treated and in 1 untreated patients. CONCLUSIONS: beta-IFN therapy was not associated with a significant improvement either in biochemical or virological response in cirrhotic patients with chronic hepatitis C. No significant reduction of cirrhosis related clinical events was linked to treatment.  相似文献   

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