Objectives: Hepatitis C virus infection universally recurs in liver transplant recipients. Peginterferon/ribavirin achieves a sustained virologic response rate of 30% in recipients infected with hepatitis C virus genotype 1. Consensus-interferon plus ribavirin yields sustained virologic response rates to 30% in patients failing to achieve sustained virologic response with peginterferon/ribavirin pretransplant, but it has not been studied posttransplant. We sought to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of consensus-interferon and ribavirin in treating posttransplant hepatitis C virus.
Materials And Methods: Clinical, laboratory, and virologic data were collected retrospectively from all patients who received at least 1 dose of consensus-interferon after transplant between January 2008 and December 2011. A standardized treatment protocol was used. The primary aim was sustained virologic response defined by undetectable hepatitis C virus RNA at 24 weeks after completing therapy.
Results: Twenty-three patients were treated with consensus-interferon/ribavirin; 15 with prior nonresponse (87%) or breakthrough (6.7%) during peginterferon/ribavirin, and 8 as initial therapy. The intention-to-treat sustained virologic response with consensus-interferon was 30%. Anemia, leukopenia, and growth factor requirement were similar between peginterferon and consensus-interferon cohorts.
Conclusions: Consensus-interferon may rescue liver recipients who are nonresponders to peginterferon-based therapy. The efficacy of interferon-based treatment regimens may benefit from substitution of consensus-interferon for peginterferon.
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