| Early 
Treatment of Acute Hepatitis C with Pegylated Interferon Monotherapy Produces 
Better Results than Delayed Combination Therapy By 
Liz Highleyman
 Acute 
hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection -- within the first 6 months -- is much 
easier to treat with interferon-based 
therapy than chronic infection, but the 
optimal time for starting therapy, length of treatment, and need for ribavirin 
are not clearly established.
 
 In a late-breaker presentation at the 44th 
Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL 2009) 
last month in Copenhagen, K. Deterding and colleagues with the HEP-NET Acute HCV 
Study Group described findings from a randomized trial of early versus delayed 
treatment of acute hepatitis C.
 | ACUTE 
HEPATITIS C  |  |  | 
 Early 
treatment of acute hepatitis C with interferon monotherapy is highly effective, 
producing sustained virological response 
(SVR) rates of 85% or higher, the investigators noted as background. An alternative 
strategy might be to delay treatment for 3 months, and only treat those patients 
who did not spontaneously clear the virus during that time. The 
HEP-NET Acute HCV-III study was a prospective trial of patients with symptomatic 
or asymptomatic acute hepatitis C. Eligible individuals were either HCV antibody 
positive, had elevated ALT (> 10 x upper limit of normal), or were exposed 
to HCV within the past 4 months. None had hepatitis A, hepatitis B, or HIV coinfection.
 A 
total of 108 participants at 72 centers in Germany enrolled between 2004 and 2008. 
A majority (60%) were men, the mean age was 40 years, about half had HCV genotype 
1, and about 60% had jaundice (icterus). The present efficacy analysis included 
89 patents; the other 19 dropped out for various reasons after randomization.
 
 Participants 
were randomly assigned to receive either immediate treatment with pegylated 
interferon alfa-2b (PegIntron) monotherapy for 6 months (n = 52), or else 
delayed treatment with pegylated 
interferon alfa-2b plus ribavirin for 6 months starting 12 weeks after randomization 
in patients who remained HCV RNA positive (n = 20). All asymptomatic patients 
received early treatment with pegylated interferon monotherapy.
 
 Results
 	
 In an intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis, the SVR rate was 78% for symptomatic patients 
in the immediate treatment arm, compared with 54% in the delayed treatment arm 
(P = 0.034). 
 
  Among symptomatic patients in the immediate treatment arm who achieved good adherence 
-- defined as taking 80% of prescribed therapy -- the SVR rate was 88%. 
 
  22% of symptomatic patients (8 of 37) randomized to the delayed treatment arm 
experienced spontaneous sustained HCV clearance. 
 
  The lower ITT SVR rate in the delayed treatment arm was mainly attributable to 
the high drop-out rate (16 of 37 patients) during the initial 12-week observation 
period prior to therapy. 
 
  When considering only adherent patients who remained in the study, delayed treatment 
with pegylated interferon plus ribavirin was comparably effective, with an SVR 
rate of 100% (12 of 12 patients). 
 
  Among the asymptomatic participants, the SVR rates were 69% in an ITT analysis 
and 88% among adherent patients.
 Conclusion
 "This 
so far largest prospective and the first randomized European trial on acute hepatitis 
C confirmed that early immediate treatment with [pegylated interferon alfa-2b] 
is highly effective in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients," the investigators 
concluded.
 
 "Delayed [pegylated interferon alfa-2b] plus ribavirin 
treatment resulted in lower overall response rates in this real-life treatment 
setting," they added, "however, if adherence can be assured this strategy 
seems to be of similar efficacy in symptomatic patients."
 
 Hannover 
Medical School, HEP-NET: German Network of Competence on Viral Hepatitis, Hannover, 
Germany; Ludwig-Maximillians-University, Munich, Germany; University of Leipzig, 
Hannover, Germany; University Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany; Johannes-Gutenberg 
University Mainz, Mainz, Germany; University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; University 
of Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Kiel, Germany; Charité Berlin Campus 
Virchow-Klinikum, Berlin, Germany.
 
 5/05/09
 ReferenceK 
Deterding, N Gruner, J Wiegand, and others. Early versus delayed treatment of 
acute hepatitis C: the German HEP-NET Acute HCV-III study -- a randomized controlled 
trial. 44th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver 
(EASL 2009). Copenhagen, Denmark. April 22-26, 2009. Abstract 1047.
 
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