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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 1
2012 pubmed 22 citations

Thymosin alpha-1 with peginterferon alfa-2a/ribavirin for chronic hepatitis C not responsive to IFN/ribavirin: an adjuvant role?

Ciancio. A A; Andreone. P P; Kaiser. S S; Mangia. A A; Milella. M M; Solà. R R; Pol. S S; Tsianos. E E; De Rosa. A A; Camerini. R R; McBeath. R R; Rizzetto. M M

Key Findings

  • In the intention‑to‑treat analysis, SVR was 12.7% with thymosin‑alpha‑1 vs 10.5% with placebo (no significant difference).
  • Among patients who completed the full 48‑week therapy, SVR was higher with thymosin‑alpha‑1 (41.0%) than placebo (26.3%), reaching statistical significance.
  • Adverse event rates were similar between the thymosin‑alpha‑1 and placebo groups.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers, this study offers little actionable guidance because modern hepatitis C treatment now relies on direct‑acting antivirals, not interferon‑based regimens. The modest benefit seen only in completers suggests thymosin‑alpha‑1 might help prevent relapse, but the clinical relevance is minimal in current practice.

Summary

Adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 to the old peginterferon‑ribavirin regimen for hard‑to‑cure hepatitis C didn’t improve overall cure rates, though a small subgroup who finished the full 48‑week course saw a modest boost. No extra side‑effects were seen, but the benefit is limited and the treatment itself is now outdated.

Abstract

This study was conducted to determine whether the adding thymosin alpha-1 to standard of care for re-treatment of nonresponding hepatitis C infections can improve sustained viral response (SVR) rates. Patients (n = 552) with hepatitis C infections not responding to the combination of Peginterferon alfa-2a or 2b with ribavirin (RBV)were randomized to receive peginterferon alfa-2a 180 mg/week with RBV 800-1200 mg/daily plus either thymosin alpha-1 1.6 mg SC twice weekly (n = 275) or placebo (n = 277) for 48 weeks. Eighty-eight per cent of patients had HCV genotype 1, 6.6% type 4, 2.2% type 2 and 3.6% type 3. SVR rates in the intention to treat population were similar between thymosin alpha-1 and placebo (12.7%vs 10.5%; P = 0.407). Among patients who completed all 48 weeks of therapy, the SVR rate was significantly higher in the thymosin alpha-1 group at 41.0% (34/83) compared with 26.3% (26/99) in the placebo group (P = 0.048). No significant difference was observed between treatment groups in the incidence of adverse events. The addition of thymosin alpha-1 to the standard of care did not increase the on-treatment HCV viral response. Thymosin alpha-1 seems to play no role in the primary therapy of the disease. This study raises the hypothesis that thymosin alpha-1 may have a secondary therapeutic role as an adjuvant in the prevention of relapses in patients achieving a virologic response during therapy.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-01-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2893.2011.01524.x

Citations

22

References

26