Triple combination of thymalfasin, peginterferon alfa-2a and ribavirin in patients with chronic hepatitis C who have failed prior interferon and ribavirin treatment: 24-week interim results of a pilot study.
Poo. Jorge Luis JL; Sánchez-Avila. F F; Kershenobich. D D; García-Samper. X X; Gongora. J J; Uribe. M M
Key Findings
- Triple therapy (peginterferon alfa‑2a, ribavirin, thymalfasin) was tested in 23 chronic HCV non‑responders.
- Viral response rates were 60.8% at week 12 and 47.8% at week 24.
- The study is a pilot with a small sample size, so findings are preliminary.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers without hepatitis C, this study has little direct use. It suggests thymosin‑alpha‑1 might boost antiviral effects in a specific medical context, but it doesn't provide a general protocol for longevity, metabolism, or performance.
Summary
A small pilot study gave 23 people who hadn't responded to standard hepatitis C treatment a combo of three drugs: peginterferon, ribavirin, and the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1. After 12 weeks about 61% showed a drop in virus levels, and after 24 weeks about 48% still had a response. The results are promising for hard‑to‑treat hepatitis C patients but don't offer a new health hack for most people.
Abstract
Despite steady progress in antiviral treatment for patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV), many patients still have detectable serum HCV RNA levels by the end of interferon-based treatment and are known as virological non-responders. Re-treatment of these patients not responding to previous therapy remains challenging. Studies of the dynamics of the HCV population show a marked decline in new cases since 1996; however, the relative proportion of non-responders is expected to increase over time and, similarly, the number of patients eligible for first-line treatment is expected to decrease. The current standard of care for treatment involves the use of pegylated interferons in combination with ribavirin. However, many difficult-to-treat groups still have low response rates. Newer combinations are being investigated to optimize chances of attaining a sustained response in these groups: one such triple therapy regimen is peginterferon alfa-2a, ribavirin and thymalfasin, which was given to 23 previously non-responder patients. Viral response was 60.8% at week 12 and 47.8% at week 24. These preliminary results encourage further evaluation of this promising combination.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1440-1746.2004.03634.x
19
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