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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 4
2005 pubmed 55 citations

The efficacy and safety of thymosin alpha-1 in Japanese patients with chronic hepatitis B; results from a randomized clinical trial.

Iino. S S; Toyota. J J; Kumada. H H; Kiyosawa. K K; Kakumu. S S; Sata. M M; Suzuki. H H; Martins. E B EB

Key Findings

  • Both 0.8 mg and 1.6 mg Tα1 led to ~30% ALT normalization and ~30% HBV‑DNA clearance after 24 weeks, sustained at 72 weeks
  • ~23% of patients cleared HBe‑antigen, indicating immune control of the virus
  • The higher 1.6 mg dose gave a better response in patients with advanced liver fibrosis, while safety was comparable between doses

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters with chronic HBV, a 24‑week course of Tα1 at 0.8–1.6 mg appears safe and can improve liver health and viral load. Start with the lower dose and consider the higher dose if you have significant fibrosis, while regularly checking liver enzymes and viral markers.

Summary

Thymosin‑alpha‑1 (Tα1) taken at either 0.8 mg or 1.6 mg daily for 24 weeks helped a good share of chronic hepatitis B patients lower liver enzymes, clear the virus from the blood, and lose the HBe‑antigen, with benefits still visible a year after stopping the drug. Side effects were mild and similar at both doses.

Abstract

Thymalfasin (thymosin alpha-1; Talpha1) is a 28-amino acid polypeptide that has shown efficacy in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. The objective of this study was to evaluate the long-term, dose-related efficacy and safety of Talpha1 treatment in chronic hepatitis B patients with positive HBV-DNA and abnormally high alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels. A total of 316 patients were randomized to receive either 0.8 or 1.6 mg of Talpha1 monotherapy for 24 weeks. At the end of the 72-week observation period (12 months after cessation of therapy), 36.4% of patients in the 1.6-mg treatment group achieved normalization of ALT, 30% achieved clearance of HBV-DNA by branched DNA vs 15% by transcription-mediated amplification, and 22.8% achieved clearance of HBe-antigen. Patients in the 0.8-mg treatment group achieved similar efficacy rates, although patients with advanced fibrosis demonstrated a significantly better response rate when treated with 1.6 mg of Talpha1 monotherapy vs 0.8 mg (as determined by intragroup analysis; patients were not stratified by liver biopsy). All adverse drug reactions were mild and most involved the fluctuation of liver enzymes, which was most likely related to the positive immune effects caused by the response to Talpha1 treatment. Adverse event incidence was similar in the 1.6- and 0.8-mg treatment groups. In conclusion, Talpha1 at doses of 0.8 and 1.6 mg exhibits long-term efficacy against hepatitis B with a good safety profile.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-05-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2893.2005.00633.x

Citations

55

References

48