Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this study was to evaluate the antifibrotic effect of interferon (IFN)-alpha in chronic hepatitis C (CH-C) patients with no response to IFN-alpha therapy. We studied 76 patients (46 men, 30 women; mean age, 55.6 years) who received IFN-alpha intramuscularly, at a total close of 480 to 880MU for 6 months (group A). As a control group, we studied 50 patients (32 men and 18 women; mean age, 58.5 years) with CH-C who received medication other than IFN (ie, Strong-Neo-Minophagen C, ursodeoxycholic acid, and a herbal medicine, Sho-saiko-to [TJ-9]) and who had persistent alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevation (group B). All patients were subdivided into three subgroups according to different patterns of ALT changes during the observation period, ie, (a) persistent ALT level < 60IU/ 1 (below about twice the upper limit of the normal range), (b) persistent ALT level > or = 60IU/1, (c) ALT levels other than (a) and (b). Liver biopsy was performed within 6 months prior to IFN therapy and more than 6 months after IFN therapy, while two liver biopsies were performed during therapy in group B. Liver fibrosis was compared between two specimens by staging. When the fibrosis stage was the same in the two specimens, we determined whether the fibrosis had improved or worsened by comparing the fibrotic ratio, ie, the ratio of the area of fibrosis to the area of the entire liver tissue specimen, calculated using computed graphic software. Serum aminoterminal peptide of type III procollagen (PIIIP) levels were measured on the day of the liver biopsy and their mean yearly changes were compared between the two groups. Improvement of liver fibrosis was found in 12% to 30% of patients in each ALT subgroup and in 24% of all patients in group A and there were no significant differences in liver fibrosis in comparison with findings in of group B when assessed by staging alone. However, these percentages rose to 59% to 75% and 66%, respectively, when liver fibrosis was assessed by the fibrotic ratio together with staging, resulting in a significant difference in fibrosis between groups A and B in total (P < 0.01). The mean yearly changes in serum PIIIP levels in each subgroup and in all patients in group A were below zero, indicating a tendency to improvement of fibrosis after IFN therapy, while these changes in group B were all above zero, except for subgroup (c). Improvement of fibrosis after IFN therapy was found in 15 of 24 patients (64%) whose ALT changes had the same pattern before and after IFN therapy, although no significant difference was noted between improved and worsened patients. These results suggest that IFN-alpha may have an antifibrotic effect even in CH-C patients with no overt response to IFN-alpha therapy, compared with the effect of medications other than IFN.
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PMID:Changes of liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C patients with no response to interferon-alpha therapy: including quantitative assessment by a morphometric method. 1068 Jun 65

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of various medications other than interferon (IFN) on liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C (CH-C) patients, and the results were compared with those obtained in CH-C patients without therapy. Fifty CH-C patients (32 men and 18 women; mean age 58.5 years) without previous IFN therapy, who randomly received medicines other than IFN such as Stronger Neo-Minophagen C, Ursodeoxycholic acid and a herbal medicine, Sho-saiko-to (TJ-9) (Group I), and as a control group, 45 CH-C patients (27 men and 18 women; mean age 56.6 years) without therapy (Group II) were examined. All patients had persistent alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevation more than 6 months before this study and were also subdivided into three subgroups according to different pattern of ALT during the observation period, i.e. (a): persistently ALT<60 IU/l (below about twice the upper limit of normal range); (b): persistently ALT>/=60 IU/l; and (c) other than (a) and (b). All patients were biopsied twice before starting this study and during observation period and the liver fibrosis was compared between them by staging in each case. When the fibrosis stage was the same between two specimens, we determined whether the degree of fibrosis had improved or worsened by computed image analysis. Blood tests for fibrosis marker, serum aminoterminal peptide of type III procollagen (P III P) and liver enzyme such as albumin (Alb) and zinc turbidity test (ZTT) levels, and platelet (Plt) counts were also examined on the two times of liver biopsy. As a result, there were no significant differences in fibrotic improvement rate when assessed by both staging only and staging together with fibrotic ratio, determined by computed image analysis and also in yearly change of P III P (P/Y) and fibrosis (F/Y), the changed rate of Alb, ZTT levels and Plt counts between Group I and Group II, except for P/Y in subgroup (a) which was rather higher in Group I than in Group II. There were also no significant relationship between the changes of histological activity and fibrosis staging in both groups. In conclusion, other medications than IFN could not significantly improve both liver fibrosis and its associated laboratory data irrespective of ALT levels in CH-C patients as compared to the control group during average 3 years' follow-up period.
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PMID:Does the control of alanine aminotransferase levels lead to a regression of liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C patients? 1116 39

Sho-saiko-to extract, a Chinese herbal medicine, is widely used for treatment of chronic hepatitis in Japan. However, it is not clear what conditions Sho-saiko-to extract improves hepatic inflammation and fibrosis. We therefore induced various stages of liver injury in model rats and administered Sho-saiko-to extract. We then evaluated the liver inflammation and liver fibrosis-improving effects of Sho-saiko-to extract. The liver injury model rats were produced by administration of various doses of dimethylnitrosamine (DMN) and Sho-saiko-to extract was administered to these rats. Then the liver inflammation and fibrosis-improving effects of Sho-saiko-to extract were evaluated according to L-asparate aminotransferase (AST), L-alanine aminotransferase (ALT), liver retinoid levels, levels of hydroxyproline, Transforming Growth Factor-beta (TGF-beta), and the liver fibrosis area. These indicators depended on the total doses of DMN. The ability of Sho-saiko-to extract to improve liver inflammation and fibrosis was limited to the following levels of the respective parameters: AST levels (234-264 U/l), ALT levels (208-232 U/l), TGF-beta levels (1102-1265 pg/g liver tissue), hydroxyproline levels (633-719 nmol/g liver tissue), and liver fibrosis area (9.7-10.6 times for normal rat). These findings suggested that Sho-saiko-to extract is effective in the treatment of liver inflammation and fibrosis up to a certain degree of severity, but it produces no improvement in more severe cases.
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PMID:Effect of Sho-saiko-to extract on hepatic inflammation and fibrosis in dimethylnitrosamine induced liver injury rats. 1241 51

To elucidate the effects of Sho-saiko-to extract and its components, baicalin, baicalein, glycyrrhizin and glycyrrhetic acid, against the effects of longer periods of acute hepatic injury induced by CCl4, we measured serum ALT activity in male Wistar rats for five days after ip administration of CCl4 (0.2 ml/kg), and examined the daily changes of the pharmacokinetic behavior of salicylamide (SAM) for five days. Serum ALT activity rose to a maximum level within a day after administration of CCl4 and then decreased to the control level after three. Sho-saiko-to extract and its components could suppress this acute change in serum ALT activity to less than 50% of CCl4 alone. However, the pharmacokinetics of SAM showed that liver function recovers in a biphasic manner, so that plasma clearance (CL) decreased significantly at days 1 and 3 after administration of CCl4 (P<0.05). We concluded that the CL change at day 1 corresponds to the acute action of CCl4 intoxication, and that the change at day 3 is effect of physiologically reduced liver function due to the liver regeneration for tissue repair after the CCl4 hepatic injury. Sho-saiko-to extract and its components were shown to suppress acute hepatic injury induced by CCl4, and to bring about an early recovery in liver function.
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PMID:Effects of Sho-saiko-to extract and its components, Baicalin, baicalein, glycyrrhizin and glycyrrhetic acid, on pharmacokinetic behavior of salicylamide in carbon tetrachloride intoxicated rats. 1504 26

In a previous study of patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)-associated liver cirrhosis (HCV-LC), we showed that increased liver inflammation, as assessed by higher serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), was associated with increased risk for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This suggested that suppression of inflammation might inhibit HCC development in HCV-LC. Several agents have been suggested to possess chemopreventive potential against the development of HCC in chronic HCV-associated liver disease, including herbal medicines, such as Stronger-Neo-Minophagen C (glycyrrhizin) and Sho-saiko-to (TJ-9). Ursodiol [ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA)], a bile acid widely used to treat cholestatic liver diseases, also possesses anti-inflammatory properties in liver disease. We hypothesized that suppression of liver inflammation, as assessed by decreases in serum ALT, might inhibit HCC occurrence in patients with HCV-LC. In this study, the preventive effect of UDCA on HCC was examined in patients with early-stage HCV-LC. One hundred two patients with HCV-LC (Child stage A) were treated with anti-inflammatory drugs, Stronger-Neo-Minophagen C,Sho-saiko-to, or UDCA, with the goal of lowering the average serum ALT level to <80 IU. Iftheaverage ALT level did not remain <80 IU after treatment with one agent, multiagent therapy was initiated. The patients were followed up for >5 years and were retrospectively subdivided into two groups: 56 UDCA users (group A) and 46 UDCA nonusers (group B). The mean +/- SD dosage of UDCA administered in group A was 473.7 +/- 183.0 mg/d. The average duration of UDCA administration in group A was 37.3 +/- 15.9 months over the 5-year study period. The cumulative incidence of HCC was recorded. The 5-year incidence of HCC in group A was 17.9% (10 of 56) and was significantly lower than that in group B (39.1%, 18 of 46; P = 0.025). The risk for HCC incidence, calculated by a logistic regression model, showed that the administration of UDCA significantly decreased hepatocarcinogenesis (P = 0.036). The herbal medicines used were comparable in dosage and treatment duration in the UDCA and non-UDCA groups. In conclusion, UDCA might prevent HCC development in HCV-LC. Interestingly, because the serum ALT trends over time were nearly the same in both groups, the chemopreventive effectiveness of UDCA was not accompanied by greater reductions in ALT compared with the UDCA nonusers.
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PMID:Ursodiol use is possibly associated with lower incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in hepatitis C virus-associated liver cirrhosis. 1566 91

Nowadays, patients with chronic hepatitis C in all countries are generally treated with interferon (IFN), and more than 50% of patients become HCV-RNA negative following PEG-IFN plus ribavirin therapy, but unfortunately, the IFN therapy is not effective in about 70% of patients with HCV-associated LC. In Japan, HCC actually develops in about 7% of those patients every year. A strategy for preventing HCC development other than IFN therapy is, therefore, urgently needed for those patients. We reported that the recurrence rate and the development of HCC was more rapid in the high serum ALT level (>80 IU) patients with HCV-associated LC. Sho-saiko-to, Juzen-taiho-to, and stronger-neo minophagen C are herbal medicines used in Japan to treat chronic viral liver diseases, and they work by reducing inflammatory processes and controlling ALT levels. Aggressive reduction therapy for ALT levels in HCV-LC patients could significantly prevent HCC development.
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PMID:Anti-inflammatory drugs reduce the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma development. 2208 28

Oxidative stress has been investigated in the context of alcoholic liver injury for many years and shown to be a causal factor of chronic hepatitis C (CHC), nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), drug-induced liver injury, Wilson's disease, and hemochromatosis. In CHC, it has been demonstrated that oxidative stress plays an important role in hepatocarcinogenesis. In cases with persistent hepatitis due to failure of hepatitis C virus eradication, or chronic liver disease, such as NASH, the treatment of which remains unestablished, it is important to reduce serum alanine aminotransferase levels and prevent liver fibrosis and development of hepatocellular carcinoma. This also suggests the importance of antioxidant therapy. Among treatment options where it would be expected that anti-inflammatory activity plays a role in their confirmed efficacy for chronic hepatitis, iron depletion therapy, glycyrrhizin, ursodeoxycholic acid, Sho-Saiko-To, and vitamin E can all be considered antioxidant therapies. To date, however, the ability of these treatments to prevent cancer has been confirmed only in CHC. Nevertheless, anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effects have been demonstrated in other liver diseases and these therapies may potentially be effective for cancer prevention.
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PMID:Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma: Focusing on antioxidant therapy. 2584 83