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Evidence summaries

Interferon for Interferon Nonresponding and Relapsing Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C

Long-term treatment with low-dose pegylated interferon might possibly increase all-cause mortality, though it reduces variceal bleeding, in patients with chronic hepatitis C with severe fibrosis who have failed prior antiviral therapy. Level of evidence: "D"

The quality of evidence is downgraded by study limitations (lack of/unclear allocation concealment) and by inconsistency and imprecise results.

Summary

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 included 7 trials with a total of 1976 patients to assess the benefits and harms of interferon monotherapy retreatment in chronic hepatitis C patients.

The primary outcomes were mortality (all-cause and hepatic), quality of life, and adverse events. Patients with chronic hepatitis C who had failed prior antiviral therapy and who had severe histologic (grade 3 or 4 fibrosis demonstrated on liver biopsy) but compensated liver disease, were considered. Intervention was maintenance (usually half dose) pegylated interferon monotherapy for 3.5 and 5 years in outpatient setting. The main results are presented in Table 1.

Table 1

OutcomeNumber of participants (studies)Assumed risk (control)Corresponding risk (interferon monotherapy)Relative effect (95% CI)
All-cause mortality(5 years)1710(3)72 per 1000(high risk population)93 per 1000(68 to 128)RR 1.3 (0.95 to 1.79)
Liver-related mortality(5 years)1084(2)72 per 100078 per 1000 (51 to 118)RR 1.07 (0.7 to 1.63)
Variceal bleeding1710 (3)21 per 10005 per 1000(2 to 15)RR 0.26(0.09 to 0.71)
Hepatic encephalopathy1676 (2)12 per 100011 per 1000(4 to 27)RR 0.92(0.38 to 2.26)
Hepatocellular carcinoma1710 (3)62 per 100050 per 1000(34 to 74)RR 0.81 (0.55 to 1.19)
Serious adverse events1103 (2) RR 1.02(0.9 to 10.05)

Clinical comments

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    References

    • Koretz RL, Pleguezuelo M, Arvaniti V, Barrera Baena P, Ciria R, Gurusamy KS, Davidson BR, Burroughs AK. Interferon for interferon nonresponding and relapsing patients with chronic hepatitis C. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2013, Issue 1:CD003617. [PubMed]

Primary/Secondary Keywords