Literature DB >> 20658462

Histologic outcomes in hepatitis C-infected patients with varying degrees of virologic response to interferon-based treatments.

Paul J Pockros1, Fayez M Hamzeh, Paul Martin, Ellen Lentz, Xiaolei Zhou, Sugantha Govindarajan, Anna S Lok.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Patients with chronic hepatitis C with partial virologic response or nonresponse to interferon-based therapies can experience treatment-related improvements in liver histology. This retrospective analysis assessed the histologic response to treatment in patients with varying degrees of virologic response (sustained virologic response [SVR], breakthrough, relapse, or nonresponse), time to hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA undetectability, and duration of viral suppression. Patients (HCV genotypes 1-6) with baseline and follow-up liver biopsies from eight phase 2 to phase 4 interferon-based trials were analyzed. Blinded biopsies were evaluated by a single pathologist. Improvements or worsening of METAVIR necroinflammatory activity and fibrosis were defined as increase or decrease of ≥1 grading category from baseline to 24 weeks after end of treatment. A majority of the 1571 patients with paired biopsy data were white, male, with HCV genotype 1/4, baseline HCV RNA levels >800,000 IU/mL, and baseline alanine aminotransferase levels ≤3 × upper limit of the normal range; mean baseline activity and fibrosis scores were 1.8 and 1.7, respectively. Overall, 80% of patients received peginterferon alfa-2a monotherapy or peginterferon alfa-2a/ribavirin combination therapy. Mean treatment duration was 46 weeks. There was a positive correlation between the degree of virologic response and improvements in METAVIR activity and fibrosis, and an inverse correlation with worsening activity and fibrosis (all comparisons, P < 0.0001). Patients with SVR had the greatest histologic benefit. As a combined group, relapsers and patients with breakthrough had significantly greater benefits than nonresponders (activity, P = 0.0001; fibrosis, P = 0.003). Consistent with these results, a better histologic response was correlated with a shorter time to undetectable HCV RNA and a longer duration of viral suppression (all comparisons, P < 0.0001).
CONCLUSION: In patients with chronic hepatitis C who were treated with interferon-based therapies, histologic benefits may be observed even in the absence of an SVR.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20658462     DOI: 10.1002/hep.23809

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  12 in total

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3.  Noninvasive Measurements Predict Liver Fibrosis Well in Hepatitis C Virus Patients After Direct-Acting Antiviral Therapy.

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5.  KASL clinical practice guidelines for liver cirrhosis: Varices, hepatic encephalopathy, and related complications.

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9.  Prediction of a null response to pegylated interferon α-2b plus ribavirin in patients with high viral load genotype 1b hepatitis C.

Authors:  Yuki Wada; Hideyuki Tamai; Akira Kawashima; Naoki Shingaki; Yoshiyuki Mori; Masanori Kawaguchi; Kosaku Moribata; Hisanobu Deguchi; Kazuki Ueda; Izumi Inoue; Takao Maekita; Mikitaka Iguchi; Jun Kato; Masao Ichinose
Journal:  Gut Liver       Date:  2014-04-23       Impact factor: 4.519

10.  The correlation between pretreatment cytokine expression patterns in peripheral blood mononuclear cells with chronic hepatitis C outcome.

Authors:  Joanna Jabłońska; Tomasz Pawłowski; Tomasz Laskus; Małgorzata Zalewska; Małgorzata Inglot; Sylwia Osowska; Karol Perlejewski; Iwona Bukowska-Ośko; Kamila Caraballo Cortes; Agnieszka Pawełczyk; Piotr Ząbek; Marek Radkowski
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