Thymosin alpha 1 in combination with interferon alpha and ribavirin in chronic hepatitis C patients who are non-responders or relapsers to interferon alpha plus ribavirin.
Abbas. Z Z; Hamid. S S SS; Tabassum. S S; Jafri. W W
Key Findings
- Four of five patients who had previously relapsed achieved a sustained virologic response when thymosin‑alpha‑1 was added to interferon‑alpha and ribavirin.
- One of six prior non‑responders cleared HCV RNA during follow‑up after the triple therapy.
- The combination was well tolerated with only minor adverse effects and no treatment discontinuations.
Practical Outcomes
- For those still using interferon‑based regimens (rare today), adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 may boost cure rates, especially in relapsers. However, the study is very small, and modern hepatitis C treatment now relies on direct‑acting antivirals, so the finding has limited relevance for most current protocols.
Summary
In a tiny study of 11 people who didn’t get better with the usual hepatitis C drugs (interferon and ribavirin), adding a peptide called thymosin‑alpha‑1 helped most of the relapsers and one non‑responder clear the virus. Side effects were mild and no dose cuts were needed.
Abstract
Interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) with or without ribavirin is an approved therapy for patients with chronic hepatitis C. However, a sustained response is achieved in less than 40% of all treated cases. Retreatment of relapsers or non-responders usually fails. Thymosin alpha 1 (Ta-1) is a polypeptide with immunomodulatory properties that has been suggested to increase response rates in patients with chronic hepatitis C. The aim of present study was to evaluate the efficacy of a novel triple regimen which includes Ta-1 for relapsers and non-responders to the combination of TA-1 and ribavirin. In the present study, 11 patients who relapsed (n=5) or did not respond (n=6) to previous INF-alpha-based therapy were retreated with combination Ta-1, INF-alpha and ribavirin for 12 months, and followed up for a further six months. Four out of five relapsers had a sustained response. One of the non-responders cleared the HCV RNA during the post-treatment follow-up. Minor adverse effects were observed during treatment with this combination therapy and no dose reduction or discontinuations were needed. This data suggests that thymosin alpha 1 may add to the efficacy of INF-alpha plus ribavirin in the retreatment of relapsers or non-responders to previous INF-alpha-based hepatitis C therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2004