Older
Hepatitis C Patients Have More Side Effects from Interferon-based
Therapy, but Many Can Achieve Sustained Response
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SUMMARY:
Chronic hepatitis C patients age 65 or older may experience
more adverse events and have a higher rate of treatment
discontinuation than late middle-aged people when using
pegylated interferon plus ribavirin, according to a
study from Taiwan published in the March
1, 2010 Journal of Infectious Diseases. Nevertheless,
half of older patients with HCV
genotype 1 and nearly 80% of those with genotypes
2 or 3 achieved sustained virological response.
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By
Liz Highleyman
In the U.S. the prevalence of advanced
liver disease related to hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is
increasing as people infected years or decades ago reach the
stage where they develop cirrhosis, liver cancer, and other complications.
Some past research indicates that older individuals do not respond
as well to interferon-based therapy, but data are inconsistent.
In the present study, Chung-Feng Huang from Kaohsiung Medical
University in Taiwan and colleagues evaluated the safety and efficacy
of pegylated interferon alpha-2a
(Pegasys) plus ribavirin in 70 older hepatitis C patients
(65 years or more) compared with 140 late middle-aged patients
(50-64 years) matched according to sex and HCV genotype.
Results
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The
older group had a significantly higher rate of treatment discontinuation
compared with the middle-aged group (21.4% vs 6.4%, respectively;
P = 0.001). |
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Severe
(grade 3 or 4) adverse events were also more common in the
older patients (34.3% vs 20.0%, respectively, P = 0.002). |
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In
intent-to-treat analysis, the sustained virological response
(SVR) rate was "substantially lower" for the older
compared with the middle-aged group (67.1% vs 78.6%, respectively),
but the difference did not reach statistical significance
(P = 0.07). |
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The
SVR rate was significantly lower for older versus middle-aged
patients with HCV genotype 1 (51.9% vs 75.9%, respectively;
P = 0.03). |
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However,
sustained response rates for older and middle-aged participants
with genotypes 2 or 3 were statistically similar (76.7% vs
80.2%; P = 0.65). |
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Among
older patients who experienced a rapid virological response
at week 4 of treatment, those with genotype 1 and those with
genotypes 2 or 3 had similar SVR rates (80.0% vs 87.9%, respectively).
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Among
participants who received treatment for > 80% of the original
expected duration, SVR rates were similar in the older and
middle-aged groups regardless of genotype (80.4% vs 82.6%,
respectively). |
Based
on these findings, the study authors concluded, "Older patients
with HCV infection, especially those in the subgroup infected
with HCV [genotype] 1, had a greater frequency of adverse events
and poorer adherence to the standard-of-care regimen, which may
be the major reason for treatment inferiority."
The SVR rates seen in this study -- even for the older genotype
1 patients, but more so for the middle-aged group -- were on the
high end of response rates usually seen in U.S. and European studies.
Research indicates, however, that Asian patients typically respond
better to interferon-based therapy than whites, who in turn respond
better than blacks.
Hepatobiliary Division, Department of Internal Medicine and
Departments of Occupational Medicine and Preventive Medicine,
Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital, Graduate Institute of Medicine
and Faculty of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, Kaohsiung
Medical University, Department of Internal Medicine, Kaohsiung
Municipal Hsiao-Kang Hospital, and Department of Internal Medicine,
Kaohsiung Municipal Ta-Tung Hospital, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
3/30/10
Reference
CF
Huang, JF Yang, CY Dai, and others. Efficacy and Safety of Pegylated
Interferon Combined with Ribavirin for the Treatment of Older
Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C. Journal of Infectious Diseases
201(5): 751-759 (Abstract).
March 1, 2010.
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