• Extended interferon-alpha therapy accelerates telomere length loss in human peripheral blood T lymphocytes

      O'Bryan, Joel M.; Potts, James A.; Bonkovsky, Herbert L.; Mathew, Anuja; Rothman, Alan L. (2011-08-04)
      BACKGROUND: Type I interferons have pleiotropic effects on host cells, including inhibiting telomerase in lymphocytes and antiviral activity. We tested the hypothesis that long-term interferon treatment would result in significant reduction in average telomere length in peripheral blood T lymphocytes. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a flow cytometry-based telomere length assay on peripheral blood mononuclear cell samples from the Hepatitis-C Antiviral Long-term Treatment against Cirrhosis (HALT-C) study, we measured T cell telomere lengths at screening and at months 21 and 45 in 29 Hepatitis-C virus infected subjects. These subjects had failed to achieve a sustained virologic response following 24 weeks of pegylated-interferon-alpha plus ribavirin treatment and were subsequently randomized to either a no additional therapy group or a maintenance dose pegylated-IFNalpha group for an additional 3.5 years. Significant telomere loss in naive T cells occurred in the first 21 months in the interferon-alpha group. Telomere losses were similar in both groups during the final two years. Expansion of CD8(+)CD45RA(+)CD57(+) memory T cells and an inverse correlation of alanine aminotransferase levels with naive CD8(+) T cell telomere loss were observed in the control group but not in the interferon-alpha group. Telomere length at screening inversely correlated with Hepatitis-C viral load and body mass index. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Sustained interferon-alpha treatment increased telomere loss in naive T cells, and inhibited the accumulation of T cell memory expansions. The durability of this effect and consequences for immune senescence need to be defined.
    • Health-related quality of life in chronic hepatitis C: impact of disease and treatment response. The Interventional Therapy Group

      Ware, John E. Jr.; Bayliss, Martha S.; Mannocchia, Michael; Davis, Gary L. (1999-07-27)
      Hepatitis C infects nearly 4 million Americans. Most have chronic hepatitis C (CHC), which progresses to cirrhosis in about 20% of patients. Interferon treatment leads to transient responses in about 40% of patients and apparent eradication of infection in 7% to 40% of patients. In this report, we document the impact of CHC on health-related quality of life (HQL), and changes in HQL among treatment responders. Three hundred twenty-four CHC patients from 10 countries who had relapsed after responding to interferon-alfa therapy were randomized to monotherapy (IFN alfa-2b + placebo) or combination therapy (IFN alfa-2b + ribavirin), treated for 24 weeks, and followed up for 24 weeks. HQL was assessed using the Hepatitis Quality of Life Questionnaire (HQLQ), containing the generic SF-36 Health Survey, three additional generic scales, and two hepatitis-specific scales. Before treatment, CHC patients were impaired in 5 of 8 SF-36 concepts (physical functioning, role-physical, general health, vitality, and social functioning) in comparison with matched population norms. Sustained virological response (SVR) to treatment yielded improvements on three generic scales (vitality, social functioning, and health distress) and the CHC-specific health distress scale. Overall response to treatment (SVR plus histological improvement) yielded the same pattern of improvements with additional gains in generic general health and CHC-specific limitations. Successful treatment of CHC improved HQL as measured by both CHC-specific and generic measures of functional health and well being.
    • High sustained virologic response rates in children with chronic hepatitis C receiving peginterferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin

      Wirth, Stefan; Ribes-Koninckx, Carmen; Calzado, Maria Angeles; Bortolotti, Flavia; Zancan, Lucia; Jara, Paloma; Shelton, Mark; Kerkar, Nanda; Galoppo, Marcela; Pedreira, Alejandra; et al. (2010-04-02)
      BACKGROUND and AIMS: Pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) alfa-2b plus ribavirin (RBV) is the standard of care for adults with chronic hepatitis C but was not approved for the treatment of children at the time of this study. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of PEG-IFN alfa-2b plus RBV in children. METHODS: Children and adolescents ages 3-17 years were treated with PEG-IFN alfa-2b (60microg/m(2)/week) plus RBV (15mg/kg/day). The duration of therapy was 24 weeks for genotype (G) 2 and G3 patients with low viral load (<600,000IU/ml) and 48 weeks for G1, G4, and G3 with high viral load (>or=600,000IU/ml). The primary end point was sustained virologic response (SVR), defined as undetectable hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA 24 weeks after completion of therapy. RESULTS: SVR was attained by 70 (65%) children. Genotype was the main predictor of response: G1, 53%; G2/3, 93%; G4, 80%. SVRs were similar in younger and older children. Baseline viral load was the main predictor of response in the G1 cohort. No new safety signals were identified, and adverse events (AEs) were generally mild or moderate in severity. Dose was modified because of AEs in 25% of children; 1 child discontinued because of an AE (thrombocytopenia). No serious AEs related to study drugs were reported. CONCLUSION: Therapy with PEG-IFN alfa-2b plus RBV in children and adolescents with chronic hepatitis C offers favorable efficacy, reduced injection frequency, and an acceptable safety profile.
    • Management of recurrent hepatitis C after liver transplantation: a concise review

      Szabo, Gyongyi; Katz, Eliezer; Bonkovsky, Herbert L. (2000-09-28)
      Recurrent hepatitis C infection and subsequent graft failure are increasingly recognized problems after orthotopic liver transplantation. Although many prospective therapeutic, controlled trials in primary hepatitis C disease have been reported, large-scale studies are yet to be performed in patients with posttransplant recurrent hepatitis C after liver transplantation. In this review, we summarize the current literature on the therapeutic approaches for recurrent hepatitis C and discuss the results of published studies on therapy with ribavirin or interferon (IFN) alone and on combination therapy with IFN plus ribavirin. Further, we discuss results of prophylactic approaches to the problem of recurrent hepatitis C after transplant. Finally, we discuss additional aspects of anti-hepatitis C virus therapy after liver transplantation.
    • Peginterferon with or without ribavirin has minimal effect on quality of life, behavioral/emotional, and cognitive outcomes in children

      Rodrigue, James R.; Balistreri, William; Haber, Barbara; Jonas, Maureen M.; Mohan, Parvathi; Molleston, Jean P.; Murray, Karen F.; Narkewicz, Michael R.; Rosenthal, Philip; Smith, Lesley J.; et al. (2011-05-01)
      The aim of this study was to prospectively assess the quality of life (QOL), behavioral/emotional functioning, and cognitive status of children undergoing treatment for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. In all, 114 children (5 to 18 years old) enrolled in a multisite randomized clinical trial (Peds-C) to evaluate peginterferon alpha 2a (PEG 2a) with ribavirin (RV) or with placebo (PL) completed several standardized measures prior to treatment and at 24 weeks, 48 weeks, 6 months following treatment, and at two annual follow-up visits. After 24 weeks of treatment, mean physical QOL scores declined significantly for both groups from baseline to 24 weeks of treatment (F = 5.8, P = 0.004), although scores remained in the average range. There were no significant time or group effects for behavioral/emotional or cognitive functioning. Three children (5%) in the PEG 2a + RV group and no children in the PEG 2a + PL group had a clinically significant increase in depression symptoms. For those children who received 48 weeks of treatment, there were no significant time or group effects on any of the outcome measures (P > 0.05). A majority of children in both the PEG 2a + RV and PEG 2a + PL groups experienced no clinically significant change in physical QOL, behavioral adjustment, depression, or cognitive functioning during or after treatment. Conclusion: Overall QOL and psychosocial functioning are not deleteriously impacted by PEG 2a + RV or PL treatment of children with HCV. (HEPATOLOGY 2011;).
    • The Combination of Ribavirin and Peginterferon Is Superior to Peginterferon and Placebo for Children and Adolescents With Chronic Hepatitis C

      Schwarz, Kathleen B.; Peds-C Clinical Research Network; Barton, Bruce A. (2010-11-03)
      BACKGROUND and AIMS: Although randomized trials of adults infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) have shown that ribavirin increases the efficacy of pegylated interferon (PEG), such trials have not been performed in children. We conducted a randomized controlled trial of PEG and ribavirin, compared with PEG and placebo, in children 5 to 17 years old with chronic hepatitis C. METHODS: HCV RNA-positive children from 11 university medical centers were randomly assigned to receive either PEG alfa-2a (PEG-2a; 180 mug/1.73 m(2) body surface area, subcutaneously each week; n = 55) and ribavirin (15 mg/kg orally in 2 doses daily) or PEG-2a and placebo (n = 59) for 48 weeks. The primary end point was sustained virologic response (SVR; lack of detectable HCV RNA at least 24 weeks after stopping therapy). RESULTS: SVR was achieved in 53% of children treated with PEG-2a and ribavirin, compared with 21% of children who received PEG-2a and placebo (P < .001). Early virologic response (HCV RNA reduction >2 log(10) IU at 12 weeks) had a negative predictive value of only 0.89 in children with genotype 1, indicating that these children might benefit from 24 weeks of therapy before stopping treatment. Side effects, especially neutropenia, led to dose modification in 40% of children. Eighty-two percent of the PEG/ribavirin and 86% of the PEG/placebo group were in compliance with the year 2 follow-up visit; the durability of virologic response was 100% in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of PEG and ribavirin is superior to PEG and placebo as therapy for chronic hepatitis C in children and adolescents. reserved.
    • The effects of interferon alpha-2b in combination with ribavirin on health related quality of life and work productivity

      McHutchison, John G.; Ware, John E. Jr.; Bayliss, Martha S.; Pianko, Stephen; Albrecht, Janice K.; Cort, Susannah; Yang, Ilsoon; Neary, Maureen P. (2001-02-24)
      BACKGROUND/AIMS: Interferon plus ribavirin is the most effective therapy for chronic hepatitis C. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of chronic hepatitis C and therapy on health-related quality of life and work functioning. METHODS: Nine hundred and twelve patients with hepatitis C infection were randomized in a controlled trial of Interferon alpha 2b 3 MU tiw for 24 or 48 weeks plus ribavirin 1000-1200 mg or placebo. Questionnaire-based assessments of health-related quality of life and work functioning were performed before, during, and after treatment. Outcome measures included the SF-36 Health Survey and additional generic and specific scales. Work functioning was assessed as missed days, shorter hours or less productivity at work. RESULTS: Pre-treatment, patients had significant impairment in five of eight SF-36 concepts compared to matched population norms. Sustained responders had a return to normal for four of these five concepts. Quality of life did not improve in non-responders. Improvements in histology, viral load or ALT values predicted improvements in quality of life. Sustained responders also had improvements in work functioning and productivity. CONCLUSIONS: Hepatitis C patients had impaired quality of life. After combination therapy, sustained virologic responders achieved benefits in their quality of life and work functioning.