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1.
BACKGROUND: Interferon alfa is the only effective treatment for patients with chronic hepatitis C. Forty percent of patients have an initial response to this therapy, but most subsequently relapse. We compared the effect of interferon alone with that of interferon plus oral ribavirin for relapses of chronic hepatitis C. METHODS: We studied 345 patients with chronic hepatitis C who relapsed after interferon treatment. A total of 173 patients were randomly assigned to receive standard-dose recombinant interferon alfa-2b concurrently with ribavirin (1000 to 1200 mg orally per day, depending on body weight) for six months, and 172 patients were assigned to receive interferon and placebo. RESULTS: At the completion of treatment, serum levels of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA were undetectable in 141 of the 173 patients who were treated with interferon and ribavirin and in 80 of the 172 patients who were treated with interferon alone (82 percent vs. 47 percent, P<0.001). Serum HCV RNA levels remained undetectable 24 weeks after the end of treatment in 84 patients (49 percent) in the combination-therapy group, but in only 8 patients (5 percent) in the interferon group (P<0.001). Sustained normalization of serum alanine aminotransferase concentrations and histologic improvement were highly correlated with virologic response. Base-line serum HCV RNA levels of 2 x 10(6) copies per milliliter or less were associated with higher rates of response in both treatment groups. Viral genotypes other than type 1 were associated with sustained responses only in the combination-therapy group. Combined therapy caused a predictable fall in hemoglobin concentrations but otherwise had a safety profile similar to that of interferon alone. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with chronic hepatitis C who relapse after treatment with interferon, therapy with interferon and oral ribavirin results in higher rates of sustained virologic, biochemical, and histologic response than treatment with interferon alone.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Only 15 to 20 percent of patients with chronic hepatitis C have a sustained virologic response to interferon therapy. We compared the efficacy and safety of recombinant interferon alfa-2b alone with those of a combination of interferon alfa-2b and ribavirin for the initial treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C. METHODS: We randomly assigned 912 patients with chronic hepatitis C to receive standard-dose interferon alfa-2b alone or in combination with ribavirin (1000 or 1200 mg orally per day, depending on body weight) for 24 or 48 weeks. Efficacy was assessed by measurements of serum hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA and serum aminotransferases and by liver biopsy. RESULTS: The rate of sustained virologic response (defined as an undetectable serum HCV RNA level 24 weeks after treatment was completed) was higher among patients who received combination therapy for either 24 weeks (70 of 228 patients, 31 percent) or 48 weeks (87 of 228 patients, 38 percent) than among patients who received interferon alone for either 24 weeks (13 of 231 patients, 6 percent) or 48 weeks (29 of 225 patients, 13 percent) (P<0.001 for the comparison of interferon alone with both 24 weeks and 48 weeks of combination treatment). Among patients with HCV genotype 1 infection, the best response occurred in those who were treated for 48 weeks with interferon and ribavirin. Histologic improvement was more common in patients who were treated with combination therapy for either 24 weeks (57 percent) or 48 weeks (61 percent) than in those who were treated with interferon alone for either 24 weeks (44 percent) or 48 weeks (41 percent). The drug doses had to be reduced and treatment discontinued more often in patients who were treated with combination therapy. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with chronic hepatitis C, initial therapy with interferon and ribavirin was more effective than treatment with interferon alone.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: The effect of interferon therapy on the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in chronic hepatitis C is poorly defined. OBJECTIVE: To compare the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in interferon-treated patients with chronic hepatitis C to that of historical controls and to examine whether response to therapy is related to incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with chronic hepatitis C. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: One university hospital and seven university-affiliated hospitals. PATIENTS: 419 consecutive patients with chronic hepatitis C who started interferon therapy between January 1992 and December 1993 (interferon group) and 144 patients with chronic hepatitis C who had liver biopsy between January 1986 and December 1989 and did not receive interferon (controls). INTERVENTION: Patients in the interferon group received human lymphoblastoid interferon, recombinant interferon-alpha2a, or recombinant interferon-alpha2b for 6 months. MEASUREMENTS: The end point was development of hepatocellular carcinoma on abdominal ultrasonography or computed tomography. Sustained response was defined as persistent normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels during interferon therapy and follow-up. Relapse was defined as a normal serum ALT level at the end of treatment with an increase to an abnormal level after cessation of treatment. Nonresponse included all other ALT patterns. RESULTS: Median follow-up in the interferon and control groups was 47.6 and 46.8 months, respectively. During follow-up, hepatocellular carcinoma was found in 28 interferon-treated patients and 19 controls. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis that included all patients revealed that interferon therapy (P=0.041), older age (P=0.003), greater histologic activity (P=0.029), and higher histologic stage (P=0.049) were independent factors associated with the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. The risk ratios for development of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with sustained response, relapse, and nonresponse were 0.06 (95% CI, 0.01 to 0.46), 0.51 (CI, 0.20 to 1.27), and 0.95 (CI, 0.48 to 1.84), respectively, compared with controls. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma was lower in patients with sustained response to interferon therapy than historical controls and nonresponders. Interferon therapy may decrease the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with chronic hepatitis C.  相似文献   

5.
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of interferon on cirrhotic patients with hepatitis C and the incidence of adverse reactions. The subjects were 35 cirrhotic patients, and 29 chronic active hepatitis patients without cirrhosis (CAH) served as controls. The cirrhotic patients received 3 or 6 million units of human lymphoblastoid interferon daily for one or two weeks and then three times a week for 22 or 23 weeks, while the CAH patients received 6 million units daily for 2 weeks and then three times a week for 14 or 16 weeks. Discontinuation of interferon treatment or dose reduction was required in the 7 cirrhotic patients. The most frequent reason was thrombocytopenia. Dose reduction alone was necessary in two CAH patients. Five cirrhotic patients (14.3%) and nine CAH patients (31.0%) were classified as complete responders to interferon treatment. In all five complete responders with cirrhosis, the hepatitis C virus RNA level before treatment was less than 5 log copies/50 microliters. The results of this study confirm the beneficial effect of interferon in selected patients with cirrhosis on basis of pre-treatment virus levels and platelet count.  相似文献   

6.
Four female patients had chronic hepatitis C associated with antithyroid autoantibodies. Hepatitis C virus infection was evidenced by liver biopsy and a positive-four-antigen recombinant immunoblot assay. All four patients were euthyroid before interferon therapy. Recombinant interferon alpha was given at a dose of 3 millions units three times a week for 6 months. At the end of the treatment, serum aminotransferase levels were within the normal range. Two patients progressed to hypothyroidism and 2 patients remained euthyroid. One year after the end of the treatment, only one patient had hypothyroidism and another had normal serum aminotransferase levels. These case-reports suggest that interferon administration may induce thyroid dysfunction in patients with antithyroid autoantibodies at the beginning of treatment. Thyroid dysfunction may be reversed when cytokine is withdrawn.  相似文献   

7.
In patients receiving interferon therapy for chronic hepatitis C, serum hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA often reverts from an undetectable to a detectable form after completion of treatment. Detection of the negative strand of HCV-RNA in liver tissue is regarded as an index of viral proliferation. Therefore, we investigated changes in the hepatic negative-strand HCV-RNA following interferon therapy to determine whether this parameter could predict the long-term response to treatment. The subjects of this study were 27 patients with chronic active hepatitis C. Serum positive-strand and hepatic tissue negative-strand HCV-RNA were detected using polymerase chain reaction. At the completion of interferon treatment, serum HCV-RNA was not detected in 21 patients. One year following treatment it remained undetectable in 14 of these patients but it had reverted to a detectable form in seven. The 14 patients in whom hepatic negative-strand RNA was not detected between 2 weeks and 12 months after treatment, had not relapsed after another year. In the 13 remaining patients, negative-strand RNA was found in liver tissue and serum RNA either reverted to a detectable form or remained detectable throughout. From these findings, we conclude that the detection of negative-strand HCV-RNA in liver tissue 2 weeks after the completion of interferon therapy is useful for predicting the long-term effect of therapy.  相似文献   

8.
Chronic hepatitis caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a common condition that leads to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Current treatment with interferon is unsatisfactory, with a low percentage of patients who respond and uncertain high-term significance; in addition, it is associated with sometimes severe side effects. The increasing sophistication of molecular biology has enabled viral characteristics such as viral load, genotypes, and quasi-species to be identified, which may help predict a patient's response to interferon treatment. We suggest that interferon therapy for hepatitis C virus should be restricted to referral centers in the context of controlled trials.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: Herein we present the final results of a prospective randomized study comparing two prophylactic treatment modalities for superficial bladder tumors: chemotherapy with mitomycin C and immunotherapy with interferon. METHODS: The study comprised 65 patients. Mitomycin C was utilized in 34 and interferon in 31 patients. RESULTS: The mitomycin C-treated patients had 41% recurrence, 1.7 recurrence/100 patients-month, 17 months mean time to recurrence and 8.8% tumor progression. The patients receiving interferon had 45% recurrence, 2.4 recurrence/100 patients-month, 12 months mean time to recurrence and 22.2% tumor progression rate. No significant differences were observed between the two groups of patients. Treatment was well-tolerated by both groups and the cost:efficacy ratio was higher for the interferon-treated patients. CONCLUSIONS: Immunoprophylaxis with interferon is as effective, but costs more than chemoprophylaxis with mitomycin C. Both agents have a moderate effect relative to control of recurrence, time to recurrence and tumor progression.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: To model the costs and effects of alpha interferon in the treatment of chronic active hepatitis C. DESIGN: A Markov modelling process to simulate the costs and outcomes in hypothetical cohorts of patients treated with and without alpha interferon. OUTCOME MEASURES: Costs per life saved and per life-year gained. RESULTS: On the basis of assumptions formulated about the disease processes and response to treatment, treatment with alpha interferon results in a discounted cost per life-year gained of $33,230 in patients with cirrhosis at the start of treatment and $71,950 in patients without advanced liver disease. The result is sensitive to the assumptions made about the long term effectiveness of alpha interferon. CONCLUSIONS: Alpha interferon is an expensive drug. Its effectiveness is clouded by uncertainty about the long term impact of the drug on the natural history of the disease. If adopted, its use should be monitored to allow the long term cost effectiveness of the drug to be evaluated properly.  相似文献   

11.
The natural history, prognosis, and clinical significance of chronic hepatitis C are highly variable and somewhat controversial. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of chronic hepatitis C infection on patients' perceptions of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and to evaluate whether treatment with interferon improves HRQOL. A total of 642 patients with compensated liver disease who were enrolled in a multicenter trial of interferon therapy for chronic hepatitis C had evaluation of HRQOL using the SF-36 and other instruments derived from the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS). These instruments were self-administered by patients at baseline and at the end of a 24-week post-treatment observation period after 24 weeks of interferon treatment. Patients with chronic hepatitis C were compared with healthy controls (n = 750) selected from a representative sample of adults in the United States. Unadjusted and age/gender-adjusted results were similar, as were analyses using parametric or nonparametric methods. Compared with healthy controls, patients with chronic hepatitis C at baseline had lower HRQOL on all eight scales of the SF-36 (P <.001 for all). Patients without cirrhosis (n = 284 ) showed similar although slightly smaller differences. The differences were highly significant, clinically and socially relevant, and greatest for those scales that were more reflective of physical than mental or emotional disease. Patients who had a sustained viral response to interferon therapy (n = 41) exhibited marked improvements in HRQOL, and these improvements exceeded those of nonresponders on 13 of 14 HRQOL scales (8 were statistically significant). Similar improvements were noted in patients with sustained biochemical responses. The authors concluded that patients with chronic hepatitis C with or without cirrhosis have markedly reduced HRQOL. Patients who had a sustained response (virological or biochemical) to interferon therapy experienced significant improvements in perceived wellness and functional status. Successful interferon therapy provides meaningful improvements in HRQOL in patients with chronic hepatitis C.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: In our area most of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected patients are intravenous drug users; HIV and hepatitis C virus infections often coexist in these patients. Due to the repercussions of both infections, we designed a trial to evaluate the efficacy, response-related factors and tolerance during an eight-month regime of recombinant interferon alpha-2b on hepatitis C virus infection. METHODOLOGY: We included 79 patients in an open, prospective and multicentric trial with zidovudine and interferon alpha-2b. Response to interferon treatment was evaluated by biochemical and histopathological criteria. RESULTS: A complete response (alanine aminotransferase normalization) was obtained in 57.4% of patients. The significant response-related factors were: degree of histopathological activity, CD4+ cell number and initial leukocyte number. CONCLUSIONS: Recombinant interferon therapy seems to be effective for chronic hepatitis C in HIV infected patients; the best response was in those with active chronic hepatitis and CD4+ cell counts > or = 200/mm3. General tolerance was variable, although side effects were not different from those seen in non-HIV patients. The most common side effect was flu-like syndrome (constitutional manifestations), with no interference on treatment continuity; however, hematological toxicity prevents the indiscriminate use of interferon.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection with interferon has been disappointing, with less than one third of patients achieving a sustained response and most experiencing significant side effects. For these reasons, an open-labeled prospective pilot study was conducted to test the safety and efficacy of the antiviral drug, amantadine, in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection who had previously failed therapy with interferon-alpha 2b. Twenty-two patients with chronic hepatitis C were enrolled into the study and treated with amantadine 100 mg orally twice daily for six months. Control groups included the same cohort followed off therapy for 29-36 months or during therapy with interferon. Serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) values decreased in 64% (P = 0.01) of patients with amantadine therapy compared to intervals without therapy or to interferon therapy. Twenty-seven percent of patients treated with amantadine had normalization of ALT values and loss of HCV RNA after six months while 18% achieved a sustained response with loss of HCV RNA by PCR six months after discontinuation of amantadine. Therapy with amantadine improved both biochemical and virological markers in patients with hepatitis C who had previously not responded to treatment with interferon.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Patients with chronic hepatitis C are often coinfected with the new identified Flaviviridae-like agent, termed hepatitis G virus (HGV). The aim of the study was to investigate the responsiveness of hepatitis G virus to interferon alpha and to evaluate whether a hepatitis G virus coinfection negatively influences the outcome of treatment in chronic hepatitis C. METHODS: One hundred and fifteen patients with histologically proven chronic hepatitis C were treated with interferon alpha and investigated for the presence of hepatitis G virus coinfection by nested polymerase chain reaction with primers from the helicase region of hepatitis G virus. All patients received at least 3 MU (range 3-6) interferon alpha thrice weekly for at least 6 months (mean 8, range 6-12). Polymerase chain reaction products of seven pre- and post-treatment hepatitis G virus positive patients were directly sequenced for identification of sequence variability during the follow-up. RESULTS: Eighteen (16%) patients were coinfected with hepatitis G virus. Although nine (50%) of these patients became HGV RNA negative during interferon alpha therapy, only three patients (17%) remained HGV RNA negative at the end of follow-up (mean 24 months). The rate of sustained response of chronic hepatitis C was not significantly different between patients with hepatitis C virus infection and HCV/HGV coinfection (19% vs 28%). Severity of liver disease as determined by alanine aminotransferase levels, histology and hepatitis C virus viremia was not significantly different in patients with hepatitis C virus or HCV/HGV coinfection. Sequence analysis of the helicase region revealed that our isolates all belonged to the hepatitis G virus and not to the GBV-C like genotype. No amino acid exchanges during the observation period of up to 48 months were observed, indicating that this region is highly conserved. CONCLUSIONS: The responsiveness of hepatitis G virus to interferon alpha in chronic HCV/HGV coinfected patients is similar to that observed in chronic hepatitis C. Hepatitis G virus coinfection seems not to interfere with the efficacy of interferon alpha treatment in patients with chronic hepatitis C.  相似文献   

15.
Hepatitis C virus is a worldwide health care problem. It affects all age groups. Many patients have had the infection for 20-30 years before they present for therapy. With a peak incidence of disease in the 30-40 year age group, it is obvious that a large number of cases must occur in the elderly (age > 65 years). Of these, a fraction progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Interferon is the only agent approved for use in patients with chronic hepatitis C. The efficacy of interferon in younger patients is reported to be 50%. Half of these will experience a relapse within 1 year. There are few studies assessing the role of interferon used for elderly patients with chronic hepatitis C. The reported response rate to interferon in elderly patients was 60%, with 30% having a virologic/complete response. These studies demonstrate that the elderly tolerate interferon reasonably well. No significant differences have been reported between elderly and young treatment groups.  相似文献   

16.
Treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C has had limited success because of relapses and nonresponse to interferon alfa therapy (currently the only established therapeutic agent). A retrospective study was done to determine the efficacy of re-treatment with interferon and the predictors of response in patients who failed to achieve sustained response after one standard course of interferon therapy (3 million units three times a week for 24 weeks). One hundred and eleven patients (47 relapsers and 64 nonresponders), mean age 45 years, were included in the study. Eighteen relapsers and 13 nonresponders received a higher dose (5 MU), and 11 relapsers and 6 nonresponders received a longer duration (48 weeks) of interferon therapy. The remaining patients received the same regimen as the first treatment. Eighty-one percent and 23% of relapsers and nonresponders, respectively, had an end-of-treatment response, and 19% and 3% of the corresponding patient groups had a sustained response to re-treatment. Two patients with breakthrough during their first treatment were the only nonresponders with sustained response after re-treatment. Sustained response was observed only in patients who received an increased dose or duration of interferon therapy. No predictor of sustained response was found. In conclusion, sustained response to re-treatment with interferon was only observed with augmentation of dose or duration of therapy in some relapsers and patients who had breakthrough. Established predictors of response to interferon in naive patients, in particular serum hepatitis C virus RNA and genotype, were not associated with sustained response to re-treatment.  相似文献   

17.
CONTEXT: Chronic hepatitis C (CHC) infection affects nearly 4 million people in the United States. Treatment with interferon alfa-2b has been limited by its cost and low likelihood of long-term response. OBJECTIVE: To examine the cost-effectiveness of alternative pretreatment management strategies for patients with CHC. DESIGN: Decision and cost-effectiveness analysis using a Markov model to examine prevalence of genotypes, viral load, and histological characteristics in relation to the sustained response rate with treatment. Data were based on a previously published decision model and a MEDLINE literature search for hepatitis C, biopsy, and liver from 1966 to 1996. PATIENTS: A hypothetical population of patients with CHC infection and elevated serum alanine aminotransferase level. INTERVENTIONS: Combinations of liver biopsy, genotyping, and quantitative viral load determination prior to a single 6-month course of interferon alfa-2b; empirical interferon treatment; and conservative management. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Proportion of sustained responders, lifetime costs, life expectancy, and quality-adjusted life expectancy. RESULTS: Strategies involving hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA testing had marginal cost-effectiveness ratios up to $4400 per discounted quality-adjusted life-year gained but would miss up to 36% of sustained responders. Empirical interferon treatment had a marginal cost-effectiveness ratio of $12400 per discounted quality-adjusted life-year gained and reached all potential sustained responders. Strategies involving liver biopsy were more expensive and would miss 6% of sustained responders and yield slightly lower life expectancies. CONCLUSIONS: Routine liver biopsy before treatment with interferon increases the cost of managing patients with CHC without improving health outcomes. Using quantitative HCV RNA testing to guide therapy misses some potential sustained responders. Empirical interferon treatment has a marginal cost-effectiveness ratio within the bounds of other commonly accepted therapies and misses none of the sustained responders.  相似文献   

18.
Patients treated with alpha-2a interferon for chronic hepatitis C may produce anti-interferon antibodies whose effect, if any, on the individual response to therapy has not been fully clarified. The prevalence and kinetics of anti-interferon, including those of neutralizing type, have been studied in 60 patients with chronic hepatitis C enrolled in a randomized controlled trial of recombinant alpha-2a interferon. Thirty patients received interferon while 30 were untreated controls. Two different methods, an enzyme immunoassay and an antiviral neutralization bioassay, were used and serial serum samples from each patient were analyzed. Enzyme immunoassay-positive anti-interferon appeared in 60.7% of treated patients within 6 months of therapy; antiviral neutralization bioassay-positive anti-interferon appeared in 52.9% of these enzyme immunoassay-positive patients, and was associated with high enzyme immunoassay reactivity and long-term persistence. Anti-interferon was detected in 75% of patients showing no response to interferon. Antibodies were also detected in three out of six patients who showed alanine aminotransferase normalization persisting up to the end of treatment and in 8 out of 14 patients who showed an initial marked reduction or even normalization of alanine aminotransferase, followed by reactivation of liver damage during treatment. Interestingly, patients who became anti-interferon positive before complete alanine aminotransferase normalization later showed reactivation of liver damage independently of interferon dose reduction, while patients who became positive for anti-interferon after complete alanine aminotransferase normalization either did not reactivate or did so only after interferon dose reduction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
BA Vail 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1997,55(8):2749-56, 2759-61
Chronic viral hepatitis is a leading cause of death worldwide. Four of the six identifiable hepatitis viruses are associated with chronic disease. Until recently, the only accepted treatment has been injected interferon alfa. New antiviral medications currently hold promise in the treatment of hepatitis B. Hepatitis C remains more difficult to treat than hepatitis B, but involving the patient in selecting the treatment and identifying patients with better responses to interferon may help the physician direct the management of such patients more successfully.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Chronic hepatitis C is a common and often progressive liver disease for which interferon alfa therapy widely spreads, but the beneficial response is frequently transient. Ribavirin is a nucleoside analog with a broad spectrum of antiviral action, and we investigated the efficacy of it in patients with chronic active hepatitis C. METHODS: We conducted a pilot study of oral ribavirin in patients with chronic active hepatitis C. Twenty-seven patients with hepatitis C virus RNA were randomly assigned to receive either 0.8-1.0 g of ribavirin daily or 3 MU of interferon beta three times weekly or combination of the two for 24 weeks. RESULTS: Ribavirin was tolerated well, and all completed the treatment schedule. Ribavirin decreased aminotransferase levels in all instances, and the mean value at termination decreased to half of the baseline level (P < 0.01), but the enzyme level increased after cessation of therapy in most cases. Ribavirin suppressed amounts of hepatitis C virus RNA in 4 of 9 patients, and 1 became negative during follow-up. Interferon alone (P < 0.05) or with ribavirin (P < 0.01) significantly decreased the viral population, resulting in sustained loss of viremia with normal enzyme levels in 2 of 9 and 3 of 9 patients, respectively, in each therapy during follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that ribavirin has a beneficial effect in some patients with chronic hepatitis C, although the antiviral effect is less than interferon beta. Large-scale trials are needed to determine whether the combination of interferon and ribavirin is of more benefit than interferon alone.  相似文献   

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