High doses of recombinant alpha-interferon or gamma-interferon
for chronic hepatitis C: a randomized, controlled trial.
Saez-Royuela F, Porres JC, Moreno A, Castillo I, Martínez G, Galiana F,
Carreño V.
Department of Gastroenterology, Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Madrid, Spain.
Chronic hepatitis C is often a progressive liver disease for which there is no
satisfactory treatment. We studied the efficacy of recombinant alpha-interferon
or gamma-interferon in the treatment of this disease in comparison with a
control group. Thirty patients were randomly assigned to three groups. Ten
patients received 7.5 MU alpha-interferon/m2 body surface three times weekly for
3 mo, then 5 MU/m2 for 3 mo and 2.5 MU/m2 for 6 mo. Ten patients were treated
with gamma-interferon at a dose of 2 MU/m2 for 6 mo and the other 10 served as
controls without treatment. The mean serum ALT levels and liver histological
findings improved significantly only in the patients treated with alpha-interferon.
No changes were observed in patients treated with gamma-interferon or in
controls. Five of 10 patients treated with alpha-interferon had complete
responses (mean ALT normal during therapy). After treatment ALT returned to
pretreatment levels in two of 5 patients. The long-term response rate after
alpha-interferon therapy was 30% at 18 mo. We conclude that alpha-interferon is
effective in controlling disease activity in a portion of patients with chronic
hepatitis C. High doses of alpha-interferon do not appear to add further benefit
in the response rate or relapse rate. gamma-Interferon therapy is ineffective.
Publication Types:
- Clinical Trial
- Randomized Controlled Trial