Background/aims: Subjects with chronic hepatitis C who fail treatment with interferon-alpha are generally divided into two groups: "relapsers" who normalized serum aminotransferase activity and have undetectable viral RNA during treatment and "non-responders" who do not achieve these results. The aim of this study was to examine retreatment of such subjects.

Methodology: We studied 117 subjects with chronic hepatitis C who failed treatment with interferon-alpha, 87 of whom were "non-responders" and 30 "relapsers." Retreatment was with either interferon-alpha-2b plus ribavirin for 48 weeks or with interferon-alpha-2b plus placebo for 24 weeks followed by 24 weeks of combined therapy.

Results: Sustained response rates, defined as undetectable viral RNA in serum 6 months after retreatment, were 53% in "relapsers" and 10% in "non-responders" (P < 0.005). There was no significant difference if ribavirin was given for 24 or 48 weeks. In "non-responders" infected with genotypes other than type 1, 42% achieved a sustained response compared to 5% infected with genotype 1 (P = 0.027; odds ratio 7.09).

Conclusions: Treatment with interferon-alpha-2b plus ribavirin is effective in approximately 50% of "relapsers" and "non-responders" infected with non-type 1 genotypes of hepatitis C virus. This therapy is only marginally effective in "non-responders" infected with genotype 1a or 1b.

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