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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
1996 pubmed 55 citations

Combination thymosin alpha 1 and lymphoblastoid interferon treatment in chronic hepatitis C.

Rasi. G G; DiVirgilio. D D; Mutchnick. M G MG; Colella. F F; Sinibaldi-Vallebona. P P; Pierimarchi. P P; Valli. B B; Garaci. E E

Key Findings

  • 73% of patients became HCV‑RNA negative after one year of combined thymosin‑alpha‑1 and interferon therapy
  • 40% maintained a virus‑free status six months after stopping treatment
  • The combination worked in patients who previously did not respond to interferon alone

Practical Outcomes

  • The results hint that thymosin‑alpha‑1 could boost interferon effectiveness for hepatitis C, but the study is tiny and uncontrolled. Biohackers should treat this as a preliminary signal, not a ready‑to‑use protocol, and any use should be under medical supervision and ideally within a formal clinical trial.

Summary

In a small open‑label study, adding the immune‑boosting peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 to standard interferon therapy helped most participants with chronic hepatitis C clear the virus, and some kept it cleared after stopping treatment, even those who had failed interferon alone before.

Abstract

Monotherapy for chronic hepatitis C using interferon (IFN) results in a very small proportion of patients exhibiting a sustained response. Clinical trials assessing the benefit of combination drug therapy may provide evidence of improved treatment response over that seen with single drug treatment. To assess the response in patients with chronic hepatitis C to one year of combination treatment: thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1), 1 mg twice weekly, and lymphoblastoid (L)-IFN, 3 MU thrice weekly. Fifteen patients with serum HCV RNA positive chronic hepatitis C were studied. Eleven patients were treatment naive and four had failed previous standard IFN therapy. Thirteen patients were HCV RNA serotype 1b. All patients were given combination T alpha 1 and L-IFN therapy for one year with a six month follow up period. Six months after initiation of treatment seven patients (47%) were sera HCV RNA negative and at completion of the one year treatment 11 (73%), including two who had failed previous standard IFN treatment, had negative serum HCV RNA. Six months after treatment, six patients (40%), including five with HCV type 1b, showed a sustained response characterized by a negative serum HCV RNA. The results of this open label trial suggest that there may be a potential benefit to combining an immune modulator (T alpha 1) with an antiviral (IFN) in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. Verification of the observations in this study require completion of a randomised controlled study.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1996

Date

1996-11-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1136/gut.39.5.679

Citations

55

References

47