Efficacy of the regimen using twice-daily β-interferon followed by the standard of care for chronic hepatitis C genotype 1b with high viral load

Hepatol Res. 2012 Sep;42(9):864-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1872-034X.2012.00995.x. Epub 2012 Apr 4.

Abstract

Aim: In patients with refractory genotype 1b chronic hepatitis C with high viral loads, we retrospectively compared the efficacy of standard of care treatment (SOC: combined PEG-IFN-α-2b/ribavirin for 48 weeks) and a regimen in which 2 weeks of SOC induction was replaced by twice-daily β-interferon alone (IFN-β induction therapy).

Methods: Seventeen patients received the IFN-β induction therapy plus SOC (IFN-β induction group) and 13 patients received SOC alone (SOC group).

Results: In the IFN-β induction group and SOC group, early virological response (EVR) rates were 88.2% and 53.8%, respectively. The end of treatment rates were 100.0% and 92.3%, and sustained virological response (SVR) rates were 70.6% and 53.8%, respectively. By induction with IFN-β, even in refractory cases, the high virus negative conversion rate in the early treatment phase and actions of pegylated IFN-α-2b and ribavirin in the maintenance treatment phase led to an additive effect. In the analysis of contributing factors, only the achievement of EVR was associated with a significant difference in SVR (P = 0.0011). The univariate logistic regression analysis showed that only IFN-β treatment was associated with a significant difference in EVR (P = 0.0492, odds ratio = 6.248, 95% confidence interval = 1.026-40.252), whereas no significant factors were found in the multivariate analysis due to small samples.

Conclusion: IFN-β induction therapy with higher EVR might be beneficial for protease inhibitor-refractory chronic hepatitis C patients.