Background: Appropriate treatment of acute hepatitis C is still a matter of controversy due to the lack of large controlled trials. Aim: To assess the effectiveness of interferon as treatment for acute hepatitis C by meta-analysis. Methods: MEDLINE search (1985-2002) was supplemented with manual searches of reference lists. Studies were included if they were controlled trials comparing interferon to no treatment and if they included patients with either post-transfusion or sporadic acute hepatitis C. Twelve trials were analyzed (414 patients). The outcome assessed was the sustained virological response (SVR) rate (undetectable hepatitis C virus RNA in serum at least 6 months after cessation of therapy). Results: Interferon significantly increased the SVR (risk difference 49%; 95% confidence interval 32.9-65%) in comparison to no treatment. The risk difference of SVR increased from 5 to 90% when trials were ordered by increasing interferon weekly dose. Delaying therapy by 8-12 weeks after the onset of disease does not compromise the SVR rate. Conclusions: Current evidence is sufficient to recommend interferon treatment of patients with acute hepatitis C. A later initiation of therapy yields the same likelihood of response as early treatment. A daily induction dose during the 1st month is the best option of treatment. © 2003 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Licata, A., Di Bona, D., Schepis, F., Shahied, L., Craxì, A., Cammà, C. (2003). When and how to treat acute hepatitis C?. JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, 39(6), 1056-1062 [10.1016/S0168-8278(03)00461-6].

When and how to treat acute hepatitis C?

LICATA, Anna;CRAXI, Antonio;CAMMA', Calogero
2003-01-01

Abstract

Background: Appropriate treatment of acute hepatitis C is still a matter of controversy due to the lack of large controlled trials. Aim: To assess the effectiveness of interferon as treatment for acute hepatitis C by meta-analysis. Methods: MEDLINE search (1985-2002) was supplemented with manual searches of reference lists. Studies were included if they were controlled trials comparing interferon to no treatment and if they included patients with either post-transfusion or sporadic acute hepatitis C. Twelve trials were analyzed (414 patients). The outcome assessed was the sustained virological response (SVR) rate (undetectable hepatitis C virus RNA in serum at least 6 months after cessation of therapy). Results: Interferon significantly increased the SVR (risk difference 49%; 95% confidence interval 32.9-65%) in comparison to no treatment. The risk difference of SVR increased from 5 to 90% when trials were ordered by increasing interferon weekly dose. Delaying therapy by 8-12 weeks after the onset of disease does not compromise the SVR rate. Conclusions: Current evidence is sufficient to recommend interferon treatment of patients with acute hepatitis C. A later initiation of therapy yields the same likelihood of response as early treatment. A daily induction dose during the 1st month is the best option of treatment. © 2003 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2003
Licata, A., Di Bona, D., Schepis, F., Shahied, L., Craxì, A., Cammà, C. (2003). When and how to treat acute hepatitis C?. JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, 39(6), 1056-1062 [10.1016/S0168-8278(03)00461-6].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/143275
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