Children with chronic hepatitis C respond well to peginterferon plus ribavirin
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The combination of pegylated interferon (PEG) plus ribavirin is better than PEG plus placebo for treating children infected with hepatitis C virus, according to a study published in the February issue of Gastroenterology.
TUESDAY, Feb. 15 (HealthDay News) -- The combination of pegylated interferon (PEG) plus ribavirin is better than PEG plus placebo for treating children infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), according to a study published in the February issue of Gastroenterology.
Kathleen B. Schwarz, M.D., from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and colleagues compared the outcomes of HCV patients aged 5 to 17 treated with either PEG and ribavirin or PEG and placebo. Fifty-five children received PEG alfa-2a subcutaneously each week, plus 15 mg/kg of ribavirin orally twice a day, and 59 children were treated with PEG and placebo. The primary end point was sustained virological response (SVR) for at least 24 weeks after ceasing therapy.
The investigators found a significantly improved SVR with PEG and ribavirin compared to PEG and placebo. Of the children receiving PEG and ribavirin, 53 percent achieved SVR, compared to 21 percent receiving PEG and placebo. Compliance at the two-year follow up was 82 percent with PEG plus ribavirin and 86 percent for PEG plus placebo, and virologic response was 100 percent durable in both groups.
"These results indicate that children with chronic hepatitis C should not receive PEG monotherapy," the authors write.
Several authors disclosed financial relationships with the pharmaceutical industry, including Roche, which provided the medications for this study.
AbstractFull Text (subscription or payment may be required)Editorial
Children With Chronic Hepatitis C Respond Well to Peginterferon Plus Ribavirin
Reuters Health Information,
February 17, 2011
By Bob Saunders
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Feb 16 - Ribavirin added to pegylated interferon more than doubles the sustained viral response rate in children with chronic hepatitis C, a multicenter team reports in the February issue of Gastroenterology.
"Children with hepatitis C require the combination of pegylated interferon and ribavirin for optimum viral clearance," Dr. Kathleen Schwarz advised in an email to Reuters Health.
There may be 132,000 HCV antibody-positive children in the United States, with 7200 new cases annually, observe Dr. Schwarz, with The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues at 11 university medical centers, in the introduction to their paper.
"Recommendations for treatment of HCV infection in children have been derived from trials in adults, although the efficacy and safety of these therapies may be different in children," the researchers write. They therefore conducted a randomized controlled trial of peginterferon and ribavirin, compared with peginterferon monotherapy, in children 5 to 17 years old with chronic hepatitis C.
By random assignment, 55 children received pegylated interferon alfa-2a (180 mcg/1.73 m� body surface area, subcutaneously weekly) and ribavirin (15 mg/kg orally in two doses daily), while 59 children were given peginterferon and placebo, for 48 weeks.
A sustained virologic response, defined as undetectable plasma levels of HCV RNA at least 24 weeks after stopping treatment, was documented in 29 children in the peginterferon-ribavirin group (53%) compared with 12 in the peginterferon-placebo group (20.3%), according to the report.
"In our study viral eradication was maintained for the two years we followed the children," Dr. Schwarz commented. "Children receiving this therapy should be monitored carefully for side effects, particularly neutropenia, which may require dose reduction," she added.
Almost all the children experienced headache, influenza-like symptoms and adverse GI effects, the researchers found. WBC and neutrophil counts dropped, along with hemoglobin levels, but returned to baseline when therapy ended. Dose reductions of peginterferon or ribavirin were common but didn't affect sustained responses in either group.
As in other studies, subjects with HCV genotype 1 had lower sustained response rates than those with the other genotypes, the investigators found.
"These results indicate that children with chronic hepatitis C should not receive peginterferon monotherapy," Dr. Schwarz and colleagues conclude. "The response rates in this trial were comparable to those in uncontrolled clinical trials of peginterferon and ribavirin in children and were similar to rates reported in adults."
So, are children the same as adults? asks an editorialist. "'Yes,' in that they benefit from combined therapy for HCV," writes Dr. Aymin Delgado-Borrego at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Florida. "'No,' in some ways, including altered viral kinetics. 'We don't know' in most ways. Efforts to accelerate trials in children will be essential to understand the key host differences between children and adults."
Gastroenterology. 2011;140:450-458.
Abstract
TUESDAY, Feb. 15 (HealthDay News) -- The combination of pegylated interferon (PEG) plus ribavirin is better than PEG plus placebo for treating children infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), according to a study published in the February issue of Gastroenterology.
Kathleen B. Schwarz, M.D., from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and colleagues compared the outcomes of HCV patients aged 5 to 17 treated with either PEG and ribavirin or PEG and placebo. Fifty-five children received PEG alfa-2a subcutaneously each week, plus 15 mg/kg of ribavirin orally twice a day, and 59 children were treated with PEG and placebo. The primary end point was sustained virological response (SVR) for at least 24 weeks after ceasing therapy.
The investigators found a significantly improved SVR with PEG and ribavirin compared to PEG and placebo. Of the children receiving PEG and ribavirin, 53 percent achieved SVR, compared to 21 percent receiving PEG and placebo. Compliance at the two-year follow up was 82 percent with PEG plus ribavirin and 86 percent for PEG plus placebo, and virologic response was 100 percent durable in both groups.
"These results indicate that children with chronic hepatitis C should not receive PEG monotherapy," the authors write.
Several authors disclosed financial relationships with the pharmaceutical industry, including Roche, which provided the medications for this study.
AbstractFull Text (subscription or payment may be required)Editorial
Children With Chronic Hepatitis C Respond Well to Peginterferon Plus Ribavirin
Reuters Health Information,
February 17, 2011
By Bob Saunders
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Feb 16 - Ribavirin added to pegylated interferon more than doubles the sustained viral response rate in children with chronic hepatitis C, a multicenter team reports in the February issue of Gastroenterology.
"Children with hepatitis C require the combination of pegylated interferon and ribavirin for optimum viral clearance," Dr. Kathleen Schwarz advised in an email to Reuters Health.
There may be 132,000 HCV antibody-positive children in the United States, with 7200 new cases annually, observe Dr. Schwarz, with The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues at 11 university medical centers, in the introduction to their paper.
"Recommendations for treatment of HCV infection in children have been derived from trials in adults, although the efficacy and safety of these therapies may be different in children," the researchers write. They therefore conducted a randomized controlled trial of peginterferon and ribavirin, compared with peginterferon monotherapy, in children 5 to 17 years old with chronic hepatitis C.
By random assignment, 55 children received pegylated interferon alfa-2a (180 mcg/1.73 m� body surface area, subcutaneously weekly) and ribavirin (15 mg/kg orally in two doses daily), while 59 children were given peginterferon and placebo, for 48 weeks.
A sustained virologic response, defined as undetectable plasma levels of HCV RNA at least 24 weeks after stopping treatment, was documented in 29 children in the peginterferon-ribavirin group (53%) compared with 12 in the peginterferon-placebo group (20.3%), according to the report.
"In our study viral eradication was maintained for the two years we followed the children," Dr. Schwarz commented. "Children receiving this therapy should be monitored carefully for side effects, particularly neutropenia, which may require dose reduction," she added.
Almost all the children experienced headache, influenza-like symptoms and adverse GI effects, the researchers found. WBC and neutrophil counts dropped, along with hemoglobin levels, but returned to baseline when therapy ended. Dose reductions of peginterferon or ribavirin were common but didn't affect sustained responses in either group.
As in other studies, subjects with HCV genotype 1 had lower sustained response rates than those with the other genotypes, the investigators found.
"These results indicate that children with chronic hepatitis C should not receive peginterferon monotherapy," Dr. Schwarz and colleagues conclude. "The response rates in this trial were comparable to those in uncontrolled clinical trials of peginterferon and ribavirin in children and were similar to rates reported in adults."
So, are children the same as adults? asks an editorialist. "'Yes,' in that they benefit from combined therapy for HCV," writes Dr. Aymin Delgado-Borrego at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Florida. "'No,' in some ways, including altered viral kinetics. 'We don't know' in most ways. Efforts to accelerate trials in children will be essential to understand the key host differences between children and adults."
Gastroenterology. 2011;140:450-458.
Abstract
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