Spontaneous resolution of acute hepatitis C virus infection cannot be predicted, and chronic evolution of the disease occurs in a majority of cases. To assess the efficacy and safety of peginterferon alpha-2b administered for 8, 12, or 24 weeks in patients with acute hepatitis C virus infection a total of 161 patients were identified with acute hepatitis C virus infection. Of these, 30 patients refused treatment but were retained in the study as a nonrandomized comparison group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPegylated interferon alpha (PEG IFN-alpha) improves sustained virological response rates in chronic hepatitis C, but neither its role in acute hepatitis C nor the biologic basis for its action has been defined. This prospective study assessed the efficacy of PEG IFN-alpha treatment in acute hepatitis C in relation to the kinetics of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD4(+) T cell responses during therapy and follow-up. Forty subjects with proven acute hepatitis C who received either PEG IFN-alpha plus ribavirin (n = 20) or PEG IFN-alpha monotherapy (n = 20) for 24 weeks in addition to 14 untreated subjects with acute hepatitis C were prospectively followed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground & Aims: Pegylated interferons (IFNs) with or without ribavirin were shown in several studies to improve sustained virologic response compared with standard IFN alpha-2 therapy. This study investigated if the greater efficacy of pegylated IFNs might be related to modulation of immunologic responses.
Methods: Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD4+ T-cell responses and cytokine production to various HCV proteins (Elispot assay) in peripheral blood were prospectively assessed in 42 patients receiving IFN alpha-2a monotherapy, peginterferon (PEG IFN) alpha-2a monotherapy, or PEG IFN alpha-2a plus ribavirin and correlated to the outcome of therapy.