Title

Hansenula-Derived Pegylated-Interferon Alpha-2a in Egyptian Children With Chronic HCV
Safety and Efficacy of Hansenula-Derived Pegylated-Interferon Alpha-2a and Ribavirin Customized Combination Therapy in Egyptian Children With Chronic Hepatitis C Infection
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    46
Egypt has the highest prevalence of hepatitis C virus infection in adults (up to 20%) and children (up to 5.5%). The major genotype (90%) is type 4. Pegylated interferon-alpha-2a or -2b and ribavirin have been used in small numbers of hepatitis C virus-infected children with sustained virological response being higher in genotypes 2 and 3 than in genotypes 1 and 4. Genotype 4 is has been described as difficult-to-treat genotype. Several attempts to modify treatment protocols have been tried in adults in an attempt to achieve higher rates of sustained virological response. Shortening injection interval and/or treatment duration prolongation have been tried with variable outcome reports.

A novel Hansenula- derived pegylated interferon alpha 2a: 20 Kilo dalton (Reiferon Retard) has been used over the last 4 years in the Egyptian market.

We aimed to investigate the safety and efficacy of Reiferon retard plus ribavirin customized regimen in hepatitis C virus-RNA seropositive Egyptian children. Forty six children with chronic hepatitis C virus aged 3-19 years were selected from 3 hepatic tertiary centers.

Clinical and laboratory evaluation were undertaken. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for HCV-RNA was done before starting treatment, at 4, 12, 24, 48, 72 weeks during treatment and 6 months after stoppage of treatment. All patients were assigned to receive a weekly subcutaneous injection of pegylated interferon alpha 2-a ( Reiferon Retard) plus oral Ribavirin daily for 12 weeks ,then cases were divided according to PCR results into 2 groups.

Group I: Patients who continued treatment on weekly basis: this group included patients who had negative PCR at week 12 as well those who had positive PCR without any change in viremia. Group II: Patients who continued treatment on a 5- days schedule: this group included patients who had any decrease in viremia at week 12.

Patients who were PCR-negative at week 48 and had at least one PCR-positive test during therapy were assigned to have an extended treatment course of 6 months duration.

The occurrence of adverse effects was assessed during treatment and follow up
hepatitis C virus is a major health problem, not only in adults but also in the pediatric age group. In Egypt, the prevalent genotype is the difficult-to-treat genotype 4. Attempts are being made to improve the treatment outcomes. In the current study we aim to investigate the effect of customized pegylated interferon-alpha-2a plus ribavirin in children with chronic hepatitis C virus. For that, 46 children with chronic hepatitis C virus were recruited from three tertiary Pediatric Hepatology centers. All were assigned to receive weekly subcutaneous pegylated interferon-alpha-2a plus daily ribavirin for 12 weeks. At this point, the study population was divided into two arms. Arm 1 included those who became hepatitis C virus-RNA negative by polymerase chain reaction and those who showed no change of viremia or a decrease of less than 1 log. This group continued treatment on weekly bases for 48 weeks, even those who are hepatitis C virus-RNA positive. Arm 2; included patients who had a decrease in viremia more than one log of pre-treatment viremia level. For those patients, injection interval was shortened to every 5-day for a completion period of 48 weeks. Patients from either group who were polymerase chain reaction-negative at week 48, but had at least one polymerase chain reaction-positive test during therapy, were assigned to have an extended treatment course up to 72 weeks.

So the first customization was,

prolongation of treatment duration for up to 48 weeks regardless response type
Shortening injection interval in some patients to every 5-day injection
The third customization was the prolongation of treatment for extra 6 months, i.e. up tp 72 weeks in some patients.

The occurrence of adverse effects, virological and biochemical responses were assessed during treatment and follow up.
Study Started
Feb 28
2009
Primary Completion
Jan 31
2011
Study Completion
Aug 31
2011
Last Update
Jan 06
2014
Estimate

Drug Reiferon R

subcutaneous injection of 100 μg/m2

  • Other names: Hansenula-derived pegylated interferon alpha 2a, Reiferon Retard

Drug Ribavirin

15 mg/kg daily on two divided doses

Reiferon R weekly plus ribavirin Active Comparator

patients who continued treatment on weekly basis (7-day schedule). This group included patients who were HCV-RNA negative at week 12 and those who had < 1 log decrease in HCV-RNA viremia

Reiferon R (every 5-day) plus ribavirin Active Comparator

patients who continued treatment on a 5-day schedule. This group included patients who had ≥ 1 log decrease in viremia (compared to pre-treatment level) at week 12

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

children aged 3-19 years
compensated chronic HCV infection (HCV-RNA positive by PCR for more than 6 months)
whose hemoglobin was ≥10 g/dL
neutrophilic count > 1500/mm3
platelet count > 75,000/mm3
normal random blood sugar
normal serum creatinine
normal serum ferritin
normal thyroid function tests
normal lipid profile
no other causes of liver disease (autoimmune hepatitis, Wilson disease, alpha one antitrypsin deficiency nor hepatitis B virus infection).
Liver biopsy was mandatory for enrollment

Exclusion Criteria:

decompensated cirrhosis
any other cause of liver disease associating HCV infection
body mass index ≥ 95 percentile
severe psychiatric conditions
uncontrolled seizure disorder
decompensated cardiovascular disease, renal insufficiency
evidence of retinopathy
decompensated thyroid disease
hemoglobinopathy
immunologically mediated diseases or any other chronic illness requiring long term immunosuppressive drugs
previous interferon therapy within one year of enrollment
No Results Posted