The efficacy of herbal medicine (kampo) in reducing the adverse effects of IFN-beta in chronic hepatitis C |
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Authors: | Kainuma Mosaburo Hayashi Jun Sakai Shinya Imai Kazuaki Mantani Naoki Kohta Kazufumi Mitsuma Tadamichi Shimada Yutaka Kashiwagi Seizaburo Terasawa Katsutoshi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Japanese Oriental Medicine, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Japan. Kainuma@ms.toyama-mpu.ac.jp |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study was to determine if the adverse effects of interferon (IFN) in hepatitis C patients could be reduced by treatment with Japanese Oriental (Kampo) medicine. Twelve patients with chronic hepatitis C were treated with a combination of IFN-beta and either Mao-to or Dai-seiryu-to (groups A and B), and 16 patients were treated with IFN-beta alone (group C). Mao-to was administered to eight patients and Dai-seiryu-to was administered to four in groups A and B, respectively. Adverse effects were evaluated by clinical and laboratory examinations. The severity of symptoms was daily self-classified into four categories (1: none, 2: very slight, 3: moderate, and 4: serious), using a questionnaire consisting of 29 items. Scores of symptom such as discomfort and fever in group A, and discomfort, general malaise, paresthesia and arthralgia in group B were significantly lower than those in group C (p < 0.05). In all patients, HCV-RNA was negative at the end of the treatment, and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels had normalized transiently in all group A and B patients with genotype 1b by 2 weeks after cessation of IFN treatment. This study indicates that Kampo medicines are useful for reducing the adverse effects accompanying IFN treatment in patients with chronic hepatitis C without reducing the antiviral effects. |
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