Standard interferon treatment is known to increase the risk of infections; this risk also needs to be evaluated in clinical practice for pegylated interferon. To this end, we studied 255 patients treated with standard (103) or pegylated (152) interferon, in combination with ribavirin, for hepatitis C. Overall, 31 anti-hepatitis C virus treatment-related infections were observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHIV and HCV share common transmission pathways, but HCV is more efficiently transmitted through blood than with sexual exposure. Thus HCV coinfection is frequent in HIV seropositives, mainly in those with history of injection drug use and/or transfusion. HIV coinfection increases HCV replication rate, the rate of HCV vertical transmission and accelerates the course of hepatitis C towards cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Effectiveness of combination therapy with standard interferon alpha doses and ribavirin is far from being demonstrated in patients with hepatitis C non responders to interferon alpha monotherapy. Recent kinetic studies revealed that these doses may be suboptimal.
Aims: To find the criteria for optimisation of the interferon dose, to be used in combination with ribavirin in patients with hepatitis C non responders to interferon alpha monotherapy.
A total of 204 patients with liver biopsy-proven hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, 84 with and 120 without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coinfection, were studied, to evaluate variables possibly associated with the stage of liver fibrosis. All patients were injection drugs users, with a mean age of 32 years and an estimated duration of HCV infection of 12 years. Twenty-four patients (11%) had many fibrous septa with (5%) or without (6%) cirrhosis, 56 (27%) had few fibrous septa, and 124 (60%) had no fibrous septa.
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