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Hepatitis C Therapy Should Be Individually Tailored;
Starting Virus Levels, Genotype Predict Response to Interferon Treatment
PHILADELPHIA, May 8, 2000 /PRNewswire/ -- The following was issued today
by Patients Network, Inc.:
Viral genotype and baseline virus levels predict response to interferon
(IFN) treatment for patients with chronic Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.
Therapy with interferon alfacon-1 (Infergen, Amgen) should be tailored
for each patient's condition.
Today's standard treatments do not adjust therapy based on individual
patient's requirements. But patients with genotype 2 or 3 virus generally
respond better than those with genotype 1. So do patients with lower baseline
virus levels. (About 70% of HCV patients in the U.S. have genotype 1 virus.)
F. Blaine Hollinger, MD, Professor of Medicine, Virology, and Epidemiology
at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, says a clinical trial he did
shows that many patients will respond if given enough interferon, "and
if you give them daily doses, for example, instead of three times a week
or every other day."
The study he presented at the 1999 meeting of the American Association
for the Study of Liver Diseases provides evidence that optimal IFN doses
and schedules may differ depending on genotype and baseline virus concentration.
The patients were divided into two groups, according to their baseline
levels of virus (HCV RNA levels): low, with less than or equal to 106
copies/ml; and high, with greater than 106 copies/ml.
Researchers compared the effect of five different induction regimens
of IFN alfacon-1 on virus elimination in these patients. They received
one of five four-week IFN induction regimens: (1) 7.5 mcg twice a day;
(2) 15 mcg once daily; (3) 15 mcg three times a week; (4) 9 mcg daily;
or (5) 9 mcg three times a week. After the four-week induction period,
all subjects received 9 mcg three times a week for an additional 44 weeks.
Patients with low baseline viral concentrations had rapid and consistent
decreases in virus levels by week 4 with all induction dosing regimens
except 9 mcg three times a week. Within 2 weeks, most patients on the
effective regimens had low or undetectable virus levels. Levels continued
to decrease or remained low after the 4 week induction period. Patients
on the 9 mcg three times a week induction dose required 12 weeks of treatment
before their virus levels became undetectable .
Patients with high baseline virus levels did not experience as rapid
a decrease as did those with low baseline levels. And for some, levels
rebounded after switching to 9 mcg three times a week. The researchers
speculate that longer induction periods may be necessary for patients
with higher baseline viral loads.
Besides the faster rate of viral decrease in patients with low baseline
levels, more of them responded to every induction dosing regimen when
measured at 4 and 12 weeks, compared to patients with high levels.
For patients with genotype 1 virus and low baseline virus levels, induction
dosing with 15 mcg of IFN daily or 7.5 mcg twice daily produced a more
rapid decrease in viral levels than the other induction doses. But genotype
1 patients had rebounds in their virus levels after switching to 9 mcg
three times a week. Again, the researchers suggested that longer induction
periods may be necessary for these patients.
Based on the rate of viral decrease, the researchers calculated the optimal
induction period for genotype 1 patients. A dose of 15 mcg once daily
required the shortest induction period, 10.4 weeks, to bring virus down
to undetectable levels. The standard dose of 9 mcg three times a week
required 13.7 weeks.
The researchers concluded that treatment of chronic HCV patients should
be tailored based on their genotype and viral loads. Patients with low
baseline viral concentrations or who are not genotype 1 can achieve maximum
benefit when treated with 9 mcg of IFN alfacon-1 daily for 4 weeks and
then switched to 9 mcg three times a week for 44 weeks. However, patients
with high baseline viral levels or who are genotype 1 may do better if
treated with 15 mcg of IFN alfacon-1 daily for 10 weeks, followed by 9
mcg three times a week for the duration.
Dr. Hollinger already individualizes therapy based on viral load and
genotype, and he goes further by monitoring treatment efficacy along the
way. "We often will treat a patient for four weeks with high dose induction
therapy, and then look and find out whether they have undetectable virus
at that time," he says. "If they do, then I will switch them to every
other day therapy. If they don't, I'll continue on for at least 10 weeks
of daily therapy and then switch them to every other day after that and
continue the therapy for perhaps in that case up to a year instead of
six months."
Besides genotype and viral load, Dr. Hollinger thinks race may be another
important parameter to consider. "We haven't looked yet at the response
rates of African Americans versus Caucasians in this study, but I think
that's probably a very important issue as well," he says. African Americans
often have more resistant disease than Caucasians.
A report of Dr. Hollinger's study and several other highlights from the
AASLD meeting are available at the Med On Scene site at http://www.medonscene.com.
The site offers health professionals the opportunity to earn continuing
medical, nursing, or pharmacy education credits by completing the educational
activity based on AASLD meeting reports. A service of Patients Network,
Inc.
SOURCE Patients Network, Inc.
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