Hepatitis B virus genotype B is associated with better response to thymosin alpha1 therapy than genotype C.
Chien. R-N RN; Lin. C-Y CY; Yeh. C-T CT; Liaw. Y-F YF
Key Findings
- Genotype B patients had a 52% complete response vs 24% for genotype C
- Precore mutation carriers responded better (64% vs 19%)
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 treatment itself was a strong independent predictor of success (OR ≈ 12)
Practical Outcomes
- For anyone with chronic HBV, testing the virus genotype could guide whether thymosin‑alpha‑1 is worth trying. The regimen used was 1.6 mg twice weekly for 26–52 weeks, showing higher cure rates in genotype B and precore‑mutated cases. Outside of HBV infection, the findings have limited direct use for general longevity or performance goals.
Summary
This study looked at people with chronic hepatitis B and found that a peptide called thymosin‑alpha‑1 helped clear the virus better in patients who have genotype B virus or a certain precore mutation, especially when given for up to a year.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) genotype has been reported to correlate with response to interferon treatment in several studies. The relationship between HBV genotype and thymosin alpha1 (T-alpha1) treatment is unknown. We retrospectively examine HBV genotypes, precore and core promoter mutations in patients treated with Talpha1 and analyse the correlation between complete response [alanine aminotransferase (ALT) normalization plus seroclearance of HBeAg and HBV-DNA] and HBV genotype. It consisted 98 patients with chronic hepatitis B randomly allocating to three groups: (i) T6 group (n = 32) received a 26-week course of Talpha1 1.6 mg two times a week; (ii) T12 group (n = 34) received the same regimen as T6 group, but Talpha1 therapy extended for 52 weeks; (iii) T0 group (n = 32) served as a control and was followed up for 18 months without specific treatment. Stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that genotype (OR, 3.747; 95% CI, 1.066-13.170; P = 0.039), precore mutation (OR, 6.285; 95% CI, 1.874-21.086; P = 0.003) and Talpha-1 treatment (OR, 12.045; 95% CI, 2.220-65.354; P = 0.004) as independent factors associated with complete response. The complete response of Talpha-1 therapy was higher in patients with genotype B compared to patients with genotype C (52%vs 24%; P = 0.036) and in patients with precore mutation (64%vs 19%; P = 0.002). In conclusion, genotype, presence of precore mutation and Talpha-1 therapy were independent predictors to complete response. Genotype B, compared to genotype C, is associated with a higher response rate to T-alpha1 therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2893.2006.00761.x
20
47