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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
2005 pubmed 52 citations

Immunomodulatory therapy for chronic hepatitis B virus infection.

Sprengers. D D; Janssen. H L A HL

Key Findings

  • Chronic HBV persists due to an insufficient but damaging immune response.
  • Standard antiviral monotherapy can cause drug‑resistant HBV strains and relapse after stopping treatment.
  • Immunomodulatory agents such as thymosin‑alpha‑1 and experimental vaccines are being explored to enhance the immune clearance of HBV.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers without HBV, this isn’t directly useful. If you have chronic hepatitis B, the idea of adding an immune‑boosting peptide like thymosin‑alpha‑1 may be worth discussing with a specialist, but dosing and safety data are still limited. The main takeaway is that immune‑based therapies are a research focus, not a ready‑to‑use protocol.

Summary

The paper explains that chronic hepatitis B sticks around because the body’s immune system can’t fully clear the virus, and that simply using antiviral pills often leads to resistance. It suggests that boosting the immune system with things like thymosin‑alpha‑1 or special vaccines might help the body fight the virus better, but the research is still early and mostly aimed at patients with chronic infection.

Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is one of the most prevalent viral pathogens of man with around 350 million chronically infected patients. It has been postulated that in persistently infected individuals the HBV-specific immune response is too weak to eliminate HBV from all infected hepatocytes, but sufficiently strong to continuously destroy HBV-infected hepatocytes and to induce chronic inflammatory liver disease. The primary aim in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B is to induce sustained disease remission and prevent serious complications like liver failure and/or hepatocellular carcinoma. The recent emergence of drug-resistant HBV mutants and post-treatment relapse as a consequence of nucleoside analogue monotherapy emphasizes that the principal goal should be to stimulate a successful immune response. In this paper we will focus on the immune response to HBV and we will review reported data on immunotherapeutic strategies like immunomodulatory drugs (cytokines and Thymic derivates) and vaccine therapies using currently available recombinant anti-HBV vaccines, lipopeptide-based T cell vaccine and newly developed genetic vaccines.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-02-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1472-8206.2004.00300.x

Citations

52

References

88