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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
2009 pubmed

Treatment with lamivudine versus lamivudine and thymosin alpha-1 for e antigen-positive chronic hepatitis B patients: a meta-analysis.

Zhang. Yuan-Yuan YY; Chen. En-Qiang EQ; Yang. Jin J; Duan. Yu-Rong YR; Tang. Hong H

Key Findings

  • ALT (liver enzyme) normalized in 80.2% of patients on the combo vs 68.8% on lamivudine alone.
  • Virological response (virus load drop) was 84.7% with the combo vs 74.9% with lamivudine alone.
  • HBeAg seroconversion (a key marker of disease control) occurred in 45.1% with the combo vs 15.2% with lamivudine alone.

Practical Outcomes

  • For people with HBeAg‑positive chronic hepatitis B, adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 to lamivudine may boost treatment effectiveness. Biohackers considering self‑experiments should only try this under medical supervision, as dosing and safety details are not provided in the abstract. The data suggest a potential protocol tweak for HBV management, but it’s specific to that disease and not broadly applicable to general longevity or performance goals.

Summary

A review of eight studies (583 patients) found that adding the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 to the standard antiviral drug lamivudine improves liver enzyme normalization, virus suppression, and the chance that the hepatitis B virus marker (HBeAg) disappears, compared to lamivudine alone.

Abstract

Currently, there is no evidence on the combination of lamivudine and thymosin alpha-1 on chronic hepatitis B patients. The aim of this study was to compare the effect of lamivudine monotherapy with that of lamivudine and thymosin alpha-1 combination therapy for the treatment of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive hepatitis B patients. We searched PUBMED (from 1966 onwards), EMBASE (from 1966), CBMdisk (Chinese Biomedical Database, from 1978), CNKI (National Knowledge Infrastructure, from 1980), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Eight trials (583 patients in total) were identified. The lamivudine and thymosin alpha-1 combination treatment was significantly superior to lamivudine treatment in terms of ALT normalization rate (80.2% vs. 68.8%, P = 0.01), virological response rate (84.7% vs. 74.9%, P = 0.002), and HBeAg seroconversion rate (45.1% vs. 15.2%, P < 0.00001). Among HBeAg-positive patients, thymosin alpha-1 and lamivudine combination therapy may be more effective than lamivudine monotherapy, providing superior rates of biochemical response, virological response, and HBeAg seroconversion.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2009

Date

2009-05-25T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1186/1743-422x-6-63