POZ - Treatment News : Is Pegasys Superior to PEG-Intron for Hep C Treatment?

POZ - Health, Life and HIV
Subscribe to:
POZ magazine
E-newsletters
Join POZ: Facebook MySpace Twitter Pinterest
Tumblr Google+ Flickr MySpace
POZ Personals
Sign In / Join
Username:
Password:

Back to home » Treatment News » January 2010

What's That Mean?
(just double-click it!)

NEW! If you don't understand one of the words in this article, just double-click it. A window will open with a definition from mondofacto's On-line Medical Dictionary. If the double-click feature doesn't work in your browser, you can enter the word below:


Most Popular Lessons

The HIV Life Cycle

Shingles

Herpes Simplex Virus

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)

What is AIDS & HIV?

Hepatitis & HIV

15 Years Ago In POZ


More Treatment News

Click here for more news

Have news about HIV? Send press releases, news tips and other announcements to news@poz.com.


email print

January 11, 2010

Is Pegasys Superior to PEG-Intron for Hep C Treatment?

A hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment regimen including Genentech’s Pegasys (pegylated interferon-alpha-2a) is superior to a regimen including Schering-Plough’s PEG-Intron (pegylated interferon-alpha-2b), according to two studies published in the January issue of Gastroenterology. The studies did not include people living with HIV, however.

New types of HCV treatment are on the horizon. However, the compounds furthest along in development must still be paired with the two existing drugs: pegylated interferon and ribavirin.

There has been some question as to which pegylated interferon, Pegasys and PEG-Intron, is superior in terms of treatment success. HCV treatment is deemed successful if a person achieves and sustains undetectable HCV levels for six months after completing a course of HCV treatment. This is called a sustained virological suppression, or an SVR.

To determine which pegylated interferon is more likely to achieve an SVR, two studies were conducted in people with HCV—people with HIV were not included in either study.

In the first study, Maria Grazia Rumi, MD, from the Università degli Studi di Milano, in Milan, and her colleagues compared the two treatments, combined with ribavirin in 219 people with HCV. In the second study, Antonio Ascione, MD, from the Center for Liver Disease at Fatebenefratelli Hospital, in Napoli, Italy, compared the two treatments in 320 people.

In both studies, people who received Pegasys were significantly more likely to achieve an SVR than people who received PEG-Intron—66 percent in the Pegasys group compared with 54 percent in the PEG-Intron group in Rumi’s study and 68.8 percent compared with 54.4 percent in Ascione’s study. Side effects were similar in both groups in both studies. The difference in efficacy was independent of the genotype, or strain, of HCV of the participants (for example, genotype 1, 2, 3 or 4).

In a special commentary appearing alongside the studies in Gastroenterology, Stefan Seuzem, MD, from Goethe University in Frankfurt concludes, “It took…eight years to characterize the…differences between the two drugs in detail. At the dawn of new direct antiretroviral drugs against the HCV we need now to investigate how important the observed differences between the peginterferons…are in combination with [the latest experimental drugs].”

Search: Pegasys, interferon-alpha-2a, PEG-Intron, interferon-alpha-2b, hepatitis C virus, hep C, HCV, sustained virological response, SVR, Maria Grazia Remi, Antonio Ascione


Scroll down to comment on this story.

email print

Name:

(will display; 2-50 characters)

Email:

(will NOT display)

City:

(will display; optional)

Comment (500 characters left):

(Note: The POZ team reviews all comments before they are posted. Please do not include either ":" or "@" in your comment. The opinions expressed by people providing comments are theirs alone. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Smart + Strong, which is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by people providing comments.)

| Posting Rules

Previous Comments:

         


[Go to top]


Join POZ Facebook Twitter Google+ MySpace YouTube Tumblr Flickr
Quick Links
Current Issue

HIV 101
HIV Testing
Safer Sex
Find a Date
Newly Diagnosed
Disclosing Your Status
POZ TV
Read the Blogs
Visit the Forums
Women
African American
Latino
Providers
Job Listings
Events Calendar
Starting Treatment
Quilt in the Capital
POZ Army


    charliehunter
    San Francisco
    California


    UPPinAction
    New Brunswick
    New Jersey


    ToPherCE
    san diego
    California


    humboman
    Baltimore
    Maryland
Click here to join POZ Personals!
Talk to Us
Poll
Do you support rapid in-home HIV testing?
Yes
No

Survey
Health 2.0

more surveys
Contact Us
We welcome your comments!
[ about Smart + Strong | about POZ | POZ advisory board | partner links | advertising policy | advertise/contact us | site map]
© 2012 Smart + Strong. All Rights Reserved. Terms of use and Your privacy.
Smart + Strong® is a registered trademark of CDM Publishing, LLC.