Abstract

Interferon (IFN)-resistant hepatitis C virus strains limit efficacy of antiviral combination therapy in patients infected with genotypes 1 and 4. A single test dose of IFN was useful to identify non-responders to IFN-alpha2b/ribavirin (RBV) or likely non-responders to pegylated (PEG)-IFN-alpha2a/RBV therapy in genotype 1 patients. Our aim was to investigate this approach in genotype 4 patients. Viral load was measured in 46 patients before and 24 h after 10 megaunits (MU) IFN-alpha2b, and before and during 2 weeks of daily 5 MU IFN-alpha2b administration. Thereafter, patients received 48 weeks combination therapy with either 180 microg PEG-IFN-alpha2a/week (n=33), 1.5 microg/kg PEG-IFN-alpha2b/week (n=7) or 5 MU IFN-alpha2b/2 days (n=6), along with 1-1.2g RBV/day. For prediction analysis the largest group (PEG-IFN-alpha2a) was evaluated only. Median 24 h log10 change after 10 MU IFN-alpha2b was 1.15 (range 0.08-2.48) and after 5 MU IFN-alpha2b was 0.81 (-0.12-2.22; P<0.0001). Log10 changes after 2 weeks on 5 MU IFN-alpha2b daily and 24 h after 10 MU were the best predictors of early virological response (defined by negativity of a standard qualitative PCR) to PEG-IFN-alpha2a/RBV combination therapy (area under curve [AUC]=0.97; P<0.001, receiver operating characteristics), 24 h log10 change after 10 MU was the best predictor of sustained virological response (SVR; AUC=0.91, P=0.001). As in genotype 1 patients, there is large variation in IFN responsiveness, including the presence of resistant strains, in genotype 4 patients. A 24 h log10 change after 10 MU IFN-alpha2b is an excellent predictor of SVR on PEG-IFNalpha2a/RBV combination therapy. This test may be useful to obtain homogeneous groups for clinical studies and could help in clinical decision making.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call