Natural human interferon alpha given orally has different effects on patients with distinct forms of chronic viral hepatitis B.

Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz)

Georgiades Foundation for Therapy of Chronic Disease, Stafford, TX 77477, USA.

Published: February 1997

During therapy of chronic viral hepatitis B (CVHB), some patients treated with natural human interferon alpha (nHuIFN-alpha) lozenges failed to respond. These observations triggered studies aimed to determine whether there are markers predicting patients' response to therapy with nHuIFN-alpha lozenges. In these studies, 32 patients with CVHB were involved: 20 males and 12 females, 16-61 years of age with proven persistent hepatitis B viremia (HBV). Patients were evaluated for clinical, biochemical liver function, and virological markers of disease. During 300 days of treatment of the patients received 75-150 IU nHuIFN-alpha daily in form of lozenges. The responders to oral interferon therapy were those who had initially alanine amino transferase (ALAT) level higher than 100 IU (85.7% cure rate) and weak responses were observed among patients who had an initial ALAT level below 100 IU (9.0% response rate). Therefore, ALAT test in patients with CVHB may serve as a predicting indicator of the outcome of IFN lozenges therapy.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

natural human
8
human interferon
8
interferon alpha
8
chronic viral
8
viral hepatitis
8
nhuifn-alpha lozenges
8
patients cvhb
8
alat level
8
patients
7
alpha orally
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!