We studied 81 patients with chronic hepatitis C to investigate the relationship between iron and alpha-interferon response. Sixty-one patients (group A) were given alpha-interferon irrespective of iron status, whereas 20 (group B) with iron overload, were iron depleted before alpha-interferon therapy. In group A, 21 patients responded to alpha-interferon and 40 were non-responders. Increased iron indices were significantly more frequent in non-responders than responders. Multivariate analysis showed that among the independent variables evaluated, only gamma-GT and liver iron concentration predicted therapy outcome. After phlebotomy treatment, serum alanine aminotransferase fell significantly both in patients of group B (196 +/- 122 IU/l vs 82 +/- 37 IU/l, p < 10(-6)) and in 12 non-responders of group A (198 +/- 89 IU/l vs 107 +/- 81 IU/l, p < 10(-6)). In 16 iron depleted patients, eight from each group, subsequent treatment with alpha-interferon produced a response in only one patient. These results suggest that increased liver iron is a negative prognostic factor for alpha-interferon response in chronic hepatitis C. Iron depletion had a beneficial effect on serum alanine aminotransferase in all the patients treated, but did not improve the response to alpha-interferon.

Piperno, A., Sampietro, M., D'Alba, R., Roffi, L., Fargion, S., Parma, S., et al. (1996). Iron stores, response to alpha-interferon therapy, and effects of iron depletion in chronic hepatitis C. LIVER, 16(4), 248-254.

Iron stores, response to alpha-interferon therapy, and effects of iron depletion in chronic hepatitis C

PIPERNO, ALBERTO
Primo
;
1996

Abstract

We studied 81 patients with chronic hepatitis C to investigate the relationship between iron and alpha-interferon response. Sixty-one patients (group A) were given alpha-interferon irrespective of iron status, whereas 20 (group B) with iron overload, were iron depleted before alpha-interferon therapy. In group A, 21 patients responded to alpha-interferon and 40 were non-responders. Increased iron indices were significantly more frequent in non-responders than responders. Multivariate analysis showed that among the independent variables evaluated, only gamma-GT and liver iron concentration predicted therapy outcome. After phlebotomy treatment, serum alanine aminotransferase fell significantly both in patients of group B (196 +/- 122 IU/l vs 82 +/- 37 IU/l, p < 10(-6)) and in 12 non-responders of group A (198 +/- 89 IU/l vs 107 +/- 81 IU/l, p < 10(-6)). In 16 iron depleted patients, eight from each group, subsequent treatment with alpha-interferon produced a response in only one patient. These results suggest that increased liver iron is a negative prognostic factor for alpha-interferon response in chronic hepatitis C. Iron depletion had a beneficial effect on serum alanine aminotransferase in all the patients treated, but did not improve the response to alpha-interferon.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Adult; Aged; Alanine Transaminase; Female; Ferritins; Hepatitis C; Humans; Interferon-alpha; Iron; Iron Overload; Liver; Male; Middle Aged; Multivariate Analysis; Phlebotomy; Prognosis; Transferrin; gamma-Glutamyltransferase
English
1996
16
4
248
254
reserved
Piperno, A., Sampietro, M., D'Alba, R., Roffi, L., Fargion, S., Parma, S., et al. (1996). Iron stores, response to alpha-interferon therapy, and effects of iron depletion in chronic hepatitis C. LIVER, 16(4), 248-254.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/58215
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