A controlled trial of recombinant interferon-alpha in
Caucasian children with chronic hepatitis B.
Ruiz Moreno M, Jiménez J, Porres JC, Bartolomé J, Moreno A, Carreño V.
Department of Pediatrics, Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Madrid, Spain.
Twenty-four children with chronic active hepatitis due to hepatitis B virus (HBV)
infection, who were positive for HBeAg and had increased levels of transaminases,
were included in a controlled study of treatment using recombinant interferon-alpha
(rIFN-alpha), 10 MU/m2 body surface, intramuscularly, 3 times a week over a
period of 3 months. During therapy, a significant decrease in HBV-DNAp was
observed in the 12 patients treated. By the end of therapy, the HBV-DNA had
disappeared in 3 children, the same occurring in 1 child (33% overall) during
the course of the 4th month. By this time, all the controls remained with HBV
replication markers (p less than 0.05). The 4 treated patients who responded
became HBeAg-negative, developing anti-HBe during the first 12 months after
therapy. In the control group, the HBV-DNA disappeared in 3 children in the 7th
month of follow-up. All of the children remained HBsAg-positive. The therapy
with rIFN-alpha was well tolerated, secondary effects consisting of a flu-like
syndrome and a slight decrease in leukocytes and platelets. At the second biopsy,
15 months after the beginning of therapy, a significant decrease in Knodell's
index of histological activity was observed in the responders. In the light of
these results and since treated children lost viral replication markers in a
shorter period of time than the controls, who seroconverted spontaneously, we
consider that rIFN-alpha may be useful in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B
in childhood.
Publication Types:
- Clinical Trial
- Randomized Controlled Trial