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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
2011 pubmed 9 citations

[Treatment with interferon and thymosin alpha-1 versus interferon monotherapy for HBeAg positive chronic hepatitis B: a meta-analysis].

Mao. Hai-ying HY; Shi. Tong-dong TD

Key Findings

  • Combination therapy gave higher HBV‑DNA negative rates (≈55% vs 36%)
  • ALT normalization and HBeAg loss/seroconversion rates were significantly higher with the combo
  • HBsAg loss was higher at follow‑up (9.8% vs 3.7%) and adverse effects did not increase

Practical Outcomes

  • If you have chronic hepatitis B, a doctor‑prescribed regimen that adds thymosin‑alpha‑1 to interferon may boost viral clearance and liver recovery. Talk to a hepatologist about this combo, as dosing and monitoring are needed and it isn’t a self‑administered supplement.

Summary

Adding the immune‑boosting peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 to standard interferon treatment for people with HBeAg‑positive chronic hepatitis B makes the therapy work better, cutting the virus and improving liver health without extra side effects.

Abstract

To compare the efficacy of interferon and thymosin alpha-1 combination therapy with interferon monotherapy for HBeAg positive chronic hepatitis B. The relevant randomized controlled trials were searched throughout PubMed, EBSCO, Cochrane Library, CBMdisc, VIP, WanFang since Janurary 1990. Studies were included if patients were followed up for at least 6 months after cessation of treatment. Meta-analysis was carried out with RevMan5.0 software. Subgroup analyses were used at different time of observation. Seven randomized controlled trials were included(535 patients in total). According to the results of meta-analysis, the combination therapy was remarkably more effective than monotherapy both at the end of the treatment and the follow-up in terms of HBV-DNA negative rate (54.9% vs 36.3%, OR=2.39, 95% CI=1.64-3.49, P value is less than 0.01; 58.6% vs 30.7%, OR=3.68, 95% CI=2.51-5.41, P value is less than 0.01, respectively), ALT normalization rate (74.5% vs 60.9%, OR=1.94, 95% CI=1.26-3.00, P value is less than 0.01; 74.0% vs 55.6%, OR=2.36, 95% CI=1.54-3.62, P value is less than 0.01, respectively), HBeAg loss rate (56.9% vs 36.7%, OR=2.38, 95% CI=1.61-3.51, P value is less than 0.01; 62.2% vs 33.2%, OR=3.42, 95% CI=2.31-5.06, P value is less than 0.01, respectively) , and HBeAg seroconversion rate (40.1% vs 29.0%, OR=1.65, 95% CI=1.10-2.47, P value is less than 0.05; 47.0% vs 29.5%, OR=2.13, 95% CI=1.43-3.16, P value is less than 0.01, respectively); the HBsAg loss rate of the combination therapy group was significantly higher than that of the monotherapy group only at the end of the follow-up (9.8% vs 3.7%, OR=2.92, 95% CI=1.09-7.76, P value is less than 0.05). Interferon and thymosin alpha-1 combination therapy achieves superior effect with no increase in the adverse effects as compared to interferon monotherapy for HBeAg positive chronic hepatitis B.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2011

DOI

10.3760/cma.j.issn.1007-3418.2011.01.009

Citations

9