Impact of high‐dose interferon induction and ribavirin therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C relapsing after or not responding to interferon monotherapy

Abstract
Background/aims: Initial high‐dose interferon‐α induction therapy in combination with ribavirin improves sustained response rates in treatment‐naïve patients. This prospective, randomized, controlled study tested whether non‐responders or relapsers to interferon monotherapy also benefit from induction therapy.Methods: Patients with chronic hepatitis C who had not responded to (n=75) or relapsed (n=80) after previous interferon therapy were randomized to receive three different interferon doses during the first 14 weeks of therapy (A: 10 MU IntronA®/day for 2 weeks, followed by 10 MU/2 days for 12 weeks; B:5 MU/d for 14 weeks; C: 5 MU/2 days for 14 weeks) followed in all by 5 MU/2 days for 24 weeks. All patients received 1–1.2 g ribavirin/day throughout the whole study.Results: The rates of viral clearance at any time on treatment were similar in all groups. Sustained response rates were also not different among the groups in interferon nonresponders (A 32%, B 29%, C 31%) and relapsers (A 64%, B 68%, C 71%), respectively, as well as in patients with different genotypes. As expected, sustained response rates were higher in patients with genotype non‐1 than in those with genotype 1.Conclusion: High‐dose induction therapy does not improve the outcome of interferon/ribavirin therapy in interferon nonresponders or relapsers.