Gut Liver.  2009 Mar;3(1):1-13.

Optimizing the Dose and Duration of Therapy for ChronicHepatitis C

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Medicine, Health Services Research and Development, VA San Diego Healthcare System, and University of California, San Diego, CA and Hepatitis C Resource Center, VA Medical Center, San Francisco, CA, USA. Samuel.Ho2@va.gov

Abstract

Recent studies indicate that antiviral treatment with pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin for hepatitis C can be individualized based on viral and host characteristics and the pattern of virologic response during the initial months of antiviral treatment. Patients with a low initial viral load who demonstrate a rapid virologic response to antiviral therapy may be treated with a shorter duration of therapy and are less sensitive to reduced dosing of ribavirin. Patients with delayed virologic response will require a longer duration of therapy - up to 72 weeks for patients with genotype 1 - in order to optimize chances of a sustained virologic response. Patients who were nonresponders or relapsed after an acceptable course of antiviral therapy may be retreated using a more intensive regimen and/or a longer duration of therapy. Previous nonresponders to pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin are less likely to respond to retreatment unless they demonstrate a virologic response within the first three months of retreatment, lack advanced fibrosis, and can tolerate a more intensive and/or lengthier treatment. Individualized treatment based on viral genotype, viral load, the presence of advanced fibrosis, and initial virologic response can improve therapy for some patients and save resources in others.

Keyword

Hepatitis C; Peginterferon alfa; Interferon; Ribavirin

MeSH Terms

Fibrosis
Genotype
Hepatitis C
Humans
Interferon-alpha
Interferons
Retreatment
Ribavirin
Viral Load
Interferon-alpha
Interferons
Ribavirin
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