Background And Aims: Despite the recent spread of hepatitis C virus genotype 4 (HCV-4) into European countries, very little is known about the influence of ethnicity on treatment outcomes in patients with HCV-4. The aim of this study was to compare the virologic response (VR) rates of: rapid virologic response (RVR), early virologic response (EVR), VR at 24 weeks of treatment, at end of treatment (EoT), and sustained virologic response (SVR) of European and Egyptian HCV-4 patients.

Methods: Sixty (30 Europeans - Group A; and 30 Egyptians - Group B) chronic HCV-4 subtype A adult patients with elevated baseline viral load (>800 000 IU/m L) were treated for a fixed period of 48 weeks with pegylated interferon α2a (PEG-IFN- α2a) and ribavirin. During the study, HCV-RNA levels were measured at weeks 4,12,24,48 and 72.

Results: Baseline characteristics, including liver histology, were similar in the two groups. RVR, EVR and HCV-RNA at week 24 in Groups A and B were (RVR 26.7% vs. 30.0%) (EVR 23.3% vs. 16.7%) (in week 24 13.3% vs. 16.7%). Overall SVR rates were 36.7% (11/30) for Group A and 26.7% (8/30) for Group B (P = 0.59). For group B, RVR was the weakest indicator for SVR as compared with RVR of group A, where RVR was the best SVR indicator

Conclusions: The overall response to treatment was similar, but ethnic origin or previous history and treatment of schistosomiasis may influence intermediate response rates of chronic HCV-4a infected patients with elevated baseline HCV-RNA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3269084PMC

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