Interferon-α Therapy for Chronic Active Epstein-Barr Virus Infection

Abstract
A patient with aggressive chronic active Epstein-Barr virus (CAEBV) infection is described whose disease activity subsided after interferon (IFN)-alpha therapy. The patient had intermittent fever, cytopenia, liver dysfunction, hepatosplenomegaly, abnormal titers of EBV-associated antibodies, and positive EBV genomes. Despite repeated trials of the antiviral agents prednisolone and gamma-globulin, his condition deteriorated. The administration of IFN-alpha (1 x 10(5) U/kg subcutaneously 3 times per week) led to a dramatic clinical improvement. During the IFN-alpha therapy, the rearrangement bands of T-cell antigen receptor genes disappeared assessed by Southern blotting with a decrease in the number of activated T cells, although the EBV-genome remained evident. These observations suggest that IFN-alpha is useful in managing CAEBV, possibly restraining the clonal development of T-lymphoproliferative disease (LPD) and EBV-associated B-LPD, although it does not eradicate the proliferation of EBV.

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