Induction therapy with twice-daily interferon-beta does not improve the therapeutic efficacy of consensus interferon monotherapy for chronic hepatitis C
- PMID: 17008803
- DOI: 10.2302/kjm.55.111
Induction therapy with twice-daily interferon-beta does not improve the therapeutic efficacy of consensus interferon monotherapy for chronic hepatitis C
Abstract
We examined therapeutic superiority of induction therapy with twice-daily IFN-beta (3X2=6 million units/day) onto 6-months consensus interferon monotherapy for chronic hepatitis C. Patients were randomly assigned to monotherapy without (group I, n=16) and with induction therapy (group II, n=12). The mean age of group II was older than that of group I, and other baseline condition was not statistically significant. Sustained virological response (SVR) rates of group I and II were 81.3% (13/16) and 58.3% (7/12), respectively (p=0.365). SVR rates in patients with genotype 1b were 66.7% (4/6) and 0% (0/2, because of drop-out), and those with high viral load were 70% (7/10) and 75% (6/8) in group I and II, respectively (p=1.000). Drop-out rates during therapy were 6.3% (1/16) and 33.3% (4/12) in group I and II, respectively (p=0.176). Age less than 50 years was the only independent factor that was shown by multivariate logistic model analysis to be associated with a sustained virological response. Although randomization failed to produce and equal age distribution in the two groups in this study, our results suggest that induction therapy with twice-daily IFN-beta has no beneficial effect on the efficacy of monotherapy with consensus interferon, probably because of the higher drop-out rates and incidence of adverse reactions with induction therapy.
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