Prospective study of a high-intensity interferon-alpha regimen for chronic hepatitis C virus genotype 1b infection.

2002 
Background/Aims: To evaluate efficacy of high-intensity interferon administration for patients chronically infected with hepatitis C virus genotype 1b, we administered interferon-alpha with different regimens according to viral load. Methodology: Eighty-eight patients with hepatitis C virus genotype 1b were treated with recombinant interferon alpha-2b. The 70 patients with pretreatment hepatitis C virus RNA concentration ≥10 6 copies/mL were given 10 7 units of interferon daily for the first 8 weeks and then three times weekly for 16 weeks (group A). The 18 patients with smaller pretreatment hepatitis C virus RNA concentration received the same dose daily for the first 2 weeks and then three times weekly for 14 weeks (group B). We analyzed tolerance of therapy, responses, and long-term outcome in the two groups. Results: Fifteen of 70 patients (21.4%) in group A could not continue treatment and dropped out, while all patients in group B completed the entire course of therapy. The rate of sustained response in group A was 10.0%, being significantly less than is group B (72.2%; p<0.0001). However, 12 patients in group A showed a biochemical sustained response despite presence of viremia. Long-term outcome did not differ between groups. Conclusions: Many patients could not tolerate high-intensity therapy, which showed tile limitation of tolerance of patients receiving interferon monotherapy. High-intensity therapy could not improve eradication of hepatitis C virus in patients with high pretreatment hepatitis C virus RNA concentration. However, this therapy may increase the rate of sustained biochemical response, improving long-term outcome.
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