Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
For chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) treatment has recently been established. However, the complete responding rate is not higher than 20-25%. The aim of our study was to assess
IFN
-alpha retreatment in chronic hepatitis C. In summary, during a second cycle of
IFN
-alpha, 60% of the patients responded to the retreatment. Indeed, a sustained complete response, together with long-lasting normal
alanine aminotransferase
values and negative serum HCV-RNA, was observed in about 40% of the retreated patients. Future prospective and controlled trials must define the optimal retreatment strategy, as well as the response-predicting factors including HCV genotypes and quantitative HCV-RNA levels.
...
PMID:Interferon-alpha retreatment in chronic hepatitis C. 760 63
We studied the prevalence of long-term responders to interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) treatment (undetectable levels of serum IgM anti-HBc, HBV-DNA and normal
ALT
values for 3 years) in 53 anti-HBe-positive chronic hepatitis B patients. Forty-two of them were treated with (6-18 MU) alpha-2a-recombinant-
IFN
t.w. for 4-6 months, and the remaining 11 with 10 MU of lymphoblastoid-
IFN
thrice weekly for 6 months. At the end of treatment, HBV-DNA levels were undetectable and
ALT
values within the normal range in 34 of 53 patients (60%); IgM anti-HBc levels decreased in all the 34 patients, falling below 10 PEI U in 2/34 (6%). Response to treatment was maintained throughout the follow-up (mean 3 years, range 2-7 years) in five patients (9.4%). The remaining 29 patients experienced HBV reactivation within median follow-up of 6 months (range 1-22 months; 90% of cases within 12 months). Overall 4/9 long-term responders (44.4%) cleared serum HBsAg. In conclusion, chronic anti-HBe-positive hepatitis B has a lower
IFN
treatment response rate than the HBeAg-positive form; however, among long-term responders, the incidence of serum HBsAg clearance is comparable in the two forms. Because of the high rate of relapses, stringent monitoring criteria (HBV-DNA, IgM anti-HBc and
ALT
monthly tested for at least 12 months) are mandatory.
...
PMID:Treatment of chronic anti-HBe-positive hepatitis B with interferon-alpha. 760 75
Alpha interferon (
IFN
-alpha) represents the best therapy for HCV active chronic hepatitis, but only 25% of treated patients achieve a complete recovery. Several attempts have been made to increase this percentage. The objective of our study is to verify whether the combination ribavirin (R)+
IFN
-alpha can lead to positive results in non-responders to treatment with
IFN
-alpha alone. The preliminary results for 5 subjects, all non-responders to
IFN
, treated with R+
IFN
for 60 days and then
IFN
alone for 4 months more show that during the R+IFN treatment, 2 subjects presented a reduction in transaminase; a month after the suspension of R,
ALT
returned to pre-treatment values. The results are preliminary but we can say that this combination in the proposed doses and times in these subjects, cannot be considered adequate to modify the natural course of this disease.
...
PMID:Treatment with ribavirin+alpha interferon in HCV chronic active hepatitis non-responders to interferon alone: preliminary results. 762 62
Hepatitis C virus infection is a common disease with a high propensity to progress towards chronicity. Alpha interferon has been proposed to halt progression of the disease and prevent the development of more severe liver diseases such as cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Unfortunately, less than 20% of treated patients show a long-lasting
ALT
normalization and HCV-RNA negativity. Factors which might be predictive of a long term response to interferon are debated. Univariate analysis of data collected in randomized clinical studies, has shown that
IFN
dose, age, duration of disease, cirrhosis and early response (primary) to
IFN
were all predictors of a sustained response to
IFN
, but with differences in different studies. When data were analyzed by a multivariate analysis, short duration of the disease and absence of cirrhosis were found to predict long-term response to interferon. Finally, many evidences indicate that response rates to therapy may be better in patients with low pretreatment levels of HCV-RNA measured either by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or the branched-DNA assay (b-DNA).
...
PMID:Alpha interferon treatment of chronic hepatitis C. 764 81
A 42-year-old man was treated with interferon-alpha for chronic hepatitis B; during the fourth week of treatment he developed an exacerbation of liver disease, and nuclear and smooth muscle autoantibodies, which were previously negative, were detected in very high titers. After discontinuation of interferon therapy,
ALT
values subsided promptly and autoantibodies disappeared within a few months. This sequence of events strongly suggests a direct relationship between
IFN
treatment and a self-limited hepatitis with autoimmune markers in this case.
...
PMID:Development of transient autoimmune hepatitis during interferon treatment of chronic hepatitis B. 764 89
Alpha-interferon (
IFN
-alpha) is an effective treatment for chronic hepatitis C, but only 20% to 30% of patients are apparently cured with the current recommended schedule of 3 MU given three times a week for 6 months. To evaluate the efficacy of more aggressive treatment regimens, we have conducted a randomized trial in 174 patients with chronic hepatitis C using three different schedules: (1) 12-month treatment starting with 6 MU/ three times a week and decreasing the dose on the basis of serum
alanine transaminase
(
ALT
) activities (group A: 59 cases); (2) fixed dose of 3 MU three times a week for 12 months (Group B: 61 cases), (3) fixed dose of 6 MU three times of week for 6 months (Group C: 54 cases). Patients were evaluated during therapy for biochemical and virological response and followed for at least 12 months after therapy to assess long-term efficacy and liver histological outcome. The genotype of infecting HCV was also analyzed in all patients, and predictors of response were determined by multivariate analysis. Serum
ALT
became normal during therapy in 76% of patients (95% confidence interval [CI]: 63 to 86), 65% (CI: 52 to 77), and 74% (CI: 60 to 85) in groups A, B, and C, respectively (P = NS). The corresponding figures for sustained response 12 months after therapy were 49% (CI: 36 to 62), 31% (CI: 20 to 44), and 28% (CI: 16 to 42)(A vs. B, P = .06; A vs. C, P = 0.03). Eighty-six percent of patients with sustained response cleared HCV-RNA from serum, and 72% improved histologically.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Randomized trial comparing three different regimens of alpha-2a-interferon in chronic hepatitis C. The TriVeneto Viral Hepatitis Group. 765 72
Antibody against the recombinant protein Y19 deriving from non-structural region 3 (NS3) of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome was measured in the serum from 300 patients with nonA-nonB chronic liver disease including serial serum samples from these patients by using an enzyme linked immuno-sorbent assay. Simultaneously, antibodies to a synthetic core peptide (AR142) and the recombinant peptide of NS 3-4 region (C-100) were tested. Anti-Y19 antibody was detected in 83.3%, 65.2% and 76.6% of patients with nonA-nonB chronic hepatitis (n = 144), liver cirrhosis (n = 46) and hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 43), respectively. In sera of other chronic liver disease, the detection rate of anti-Y19 antibody was significantly low comparing to nonA-nonB chronic liver disease. Positive rates of the patients for AR142 antibody and C-100 antibody were similar to the one for Y19 antibody. Patients positive for Y19 antibody have a tendency to be positive for C-100 antibody. Serum Y19 antibody level during and after treatment with natural interferon alpha (
IFN
-alpha; 5MU, 24 weeks) was studied in 33 patients with chronic hepatitis C. The effectiveness of
IFN
therapy did not correlate with the Y19 antibody level before the treatment. In most cases Y19 antibody level decreased relating to the improvement of the serum
ALT
level during the treatment. Y19 antibody level declined not only during
IFN
treatment but after the treatment in Responder group (as assessed by normal
ALT
for 6 months after the treatment; n = 14). Whereas, in Non-responder group (the rest of Responder group; n = 16) Y19 antibody level was maintained to the level at the end of the treatment or elevated again to the level before the treatment. In Responder group, 6 of 7 cases in whose serum HCV-RNA disappeared at 6 months after the treatment, had decrease of Y19 antibody to less than 20% of the pretreatment level and Y19 antibody became undetectable in 4 cases at 6 months after the treatment. One case in whom Y19 antibody did not decrease by the treatment had an increase of serum
ALT
level and a relapse of the disease at 12 months after the treatment. 5 of 6 cases in "Responder" group that HCV-RNA remained positive had more than 20% of Y19 antibody level of the pretreatment level at 6 months after the treatment. Therefore the decrease of Y19 antibody level was closely related to the efficacy in terms of serum
ALT
level and HCV-RNA level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of antibody to Y19 protein in nonA and nonB chronic liver disease]. 768 28
We describe here a patient with chronic hepatitis C and liver hemosiderosis whose serum ferritin level was notably reduced by long-term interferon-alpha (
IFN
alpha) therapy. The decrease of the elevated serum ferritin level was considered to have been mostly obtained by the improvement of liver dysfunction. However, at the beginning of the therapy, in spite of
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) improvement, his serum ferritin level increased transiently, and after cessation of
IFN
alpha therapy, the serum
ALT
increased again, but the serum ferritin had not increased. This indicates that
IFN
alpha has an effect on the iron-related measurement, partly due to improvement of hepatic status.
...
PMID:Decrease in serum ferritin level in a patient with HCV hepatitis and liver hemosiderosis by interferon-alpha. 776 77
A 60-year-old woman with chronic active hepatitis C was treated with 6 million units of rIFN-alpha 2b daily for two weeks and subsequently three times weekly for several months. Histological examination proved a severe form of chronic active hepatitis C unexpectedly complicated with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Before treatment, levels of serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) or gammaglutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) had remained within normal limits over six months, although anti-mitochondrial antibody (AMA) was shown to be positive. After eight weeks of therapy, the daily dose of rIFN was reduced to 3 million units because of a marked increase of ALP and GGT, although the serum
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) was normalized. Four months later,
IFN
treatment was suspended because of continuous elevation of the ALP and GGT levels, and administration of ursodeoxycholic acid was substituted. Two months later, the ALP and GGT levels returned to the normal range, although
ALT
was not normalized and HCV-RNA remained positive. This is the first report case that demonstrates
IFN
treatment potentially exacerbates PBC associated with chronic active hepatitis C. It is important for treating physicians to keep this association in mind.
...
PMID:Exacerbation of primary biliary cirrhosis during interferon-alpha 2b therapy for chronic active hepatitis C. 778 37
The aim of this study was to determine whether 12 months course of interferon alfa (
IFN
-alpha) therapy could improve the beneficial effect of
IFN
in chronic hepatitis C. Eighty-eight patients were treated with natural
IFN
-alpha for either 28 weeks (45 cases) or 52 weeks (43 cases). Sustained response was achieved in 15 (33.3%) of 45 cases treated for 28 weeks and in 23 (53.5%) of 43 cases treated for 52 weeks. Transient response with relapse of
alanine transaminase
(
ALT
) after completion of therapy was observed in 13 cases (28.9%) treated for 28 weeks and in 4 cases (9.3%) treated for 52 weeks. Thus,
ALT
relapse was suppressed by prolonged
IFN
treatment. No response was found in 17 cases (37.8%) treated for 28 weeks and in 16 cases (37.2%) treated for 52 weeks, indicating that approximately 38% of the patients with chronic hepatitis C were resistant to
IFN
therapy even with prolonged treatment. The rate of sustained response was significantly higher in patients with type 2a or 2b than in those with type 1b. Even in type 1b cases, it was higher in the 52-week treatment group than in the 28-week treatment group, and the rate of transient response was lower in the 52-week treatment group, indicating that relapse in type 1b cases was suppressed by prolonged
IFN
therapy.
IFN
therapy was not effective for patients with advanced liver fibrosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ability of prolonged interferon treatment to suppress relapse after cessation of therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C: a multicenter randomized controlled trial. 784 96
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>