Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
2018 pubmed 17 citations

Combination of entecavir with thymosin alpha-1 in HBV-related compensated cirrhosis: a prospective multicenter randomized open-label study.

Wu. Xiaoning X; Shi. Yiwen Y; Zhou. Jialing J; Sun. Yameng Y; Piao. Hongxin H; Jiang. Wei W; Ma. Anlin A; Chen. Yongpeng Y; Xu. Mingyi M; Xie. Wen W; Cheng. Jun J; Xie. Shibin S; Shang. Jia J; Cheng. Jilin J; Xie. Qing Q; Ding. Huiguo H; Zhang. Xuqing X; Bai. Lang L; Zhang. Mingxiang M; Wang. Bingqiong B; Chen. Shuyan S; Ma. Hong H; Ou. Xiaojuan X; Jia. Jidong J; You. Hong H

Key Findings

  • Combination therapy showed similar rates of liver decompensation, cancer, and death compared to entecavir alone
  • HCC occurred in 1.7% of the combo group versus 2.1% with entecavir only, with no new cancers after week 39 in the combo arm
  • Virologic, serologic and liver enzyme responses were alike between groups and both treatments were well tolerated

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers without HBV, this study isn’t directly useful. For HBV‑infected individuals, adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 appears safe but offers no strong evidence of added benefit, so it’s not a must‑have addition to standard therapy.

Summary

Adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 to the standard HBV drug entecavir was safe but didn’t clearly improve liver outcomes or survival in people with compensated cirrhosis, though there was a tiny drop in liver cancer cases.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background: Thymosin alpha-1 (Ta-1) suppresses HBV viral replication, while the evidence of combination effect with nucleoide is still limited. We aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of combination therapy of Ta-1 with entecavir (ETV) in patients with compensated liver cirrhosis. A total of 690 patients were randomized to receive Ta-1 plus ETV (n = 351) or ETV monotherapy (n = 339) for 52 weeks after 26 weeks of ETV treatment, followed by continued entecavir therapy. The primary endpoint was defined as liver decompensation, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) or death. The median followed up was 38.2 months. The cumulative incidence of liver decompensation, HCC, or death were similar between two groups. During the Ta-1 combination treatment, the HCC incidence was 1.7% in combination group and 2.1% in ETV group, without new HCC cases developed during week 39 to week 77 in combination group. The virologic response, serologic response, biochemical response was similar between two groups at week 104. Both therapies were well-tolerated. There was no significant difference between two groups in endpoint events, while combination therapy with Ta-1 has a tendency to inhibit the development of HCC.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-05-31T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1080/14712598.2018.1451511

Citations

17

References

28