Back to Search Start Over

A 5-year prospective study of the late resolution of chronic hepatitis C after antiviral therapy

Authors :
B E, Annicchiarico
M, Siciliano
A W, Avolio
R L, Grillo
G, Bombardieri
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Persistence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in serum is assured after any course of antiviral therapy that failed to obtain a sustained virological response.To evaluate the long-term effect on serum HCV-RNA of a course of pegylated-interferon and ribavirin therapy that was unable to obtain sustained response.Serum HCV-RNA was determined at monthly intervals in 68 non-responders, breakthroughs or relapsers and in 52 naïve controls enrolled in a five-year study.Five genotype 2 or 3 patients (one non-responder, three breakthroughs, one relapser) cleared HCV-RNA after the end of therapy or relapse, and remained negative until the end of follow-up. HCV-RNA clearance rate in genotype 2 and 3 non-responders, breakthroughs or relapsers was higher than in controls with the same genotypes (22.7% vs. 0%; log-rank 9.62; P0.002). HCV-RNA at the end of treatment or at relapse was10(5) IU/mL in the five subjects who cleared the virus and10(4) IU/mL in four of them. None of genotype 1 or 4 subjects cleared HCV-RNA during follow-up.Late resolution of HCV infection is possible in genotype 2 or 3 patients with low viral load at the end of therapy or at relapse. In these subjects, HCV-RNA monitoring is advisable during the first year after therapy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....a572949b3a817c2e7ff5d0f0cae02f3c