Overview

The Beneficial Effect of Vitamin D Supplement to Peg Interferon Alpha 2a or to Telbivudine Monotherapy in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) Infection

Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2012-12-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Abstract Telbivudine is a potent inhibitor of HBV but, due to a low genetic barrier to resistance, a high incidence of resistance has been observed in patients with high baseline levels of replication and in those with detectable HBV DNA after 24 weeks of therapy (A1). Telbivudine might be used in patients with good predictors of response (HBV DNA <2 X 106 IU/ ml, i.e. approximately 107 copies/ ml, or 6.3 log 10 IU/ ml at baseline) with verification of HBV DNA suppression below detection in real time PCR assay at 24 weeks.(EASL Guidelines for HBV 2009) The therapy of Pegylated-interferon-alpha-2a is considered as the standard of care for patients with chronic hepatitis b viral infection. However, recent study by Buster et al showed that a sustained viral response (SVR less than 2000 iu.ml at 6 months after treatment)) is obtained in 8 % of patients with genotype D, 30% genotype A, and 20-25% genotypes B or C (47). Vitamin D is a potent immune-modulator; and has been shown to improve SVR in combination with peg interferone in patients with chronic HCV viral infection (48). The impact of vitamin D on virologic response rates of interferon-based treatment of CHB is unknown. The aim of this study therefore was to assess whether Vitamin D, added to the conventional peg therapy in CHB, or to nucleotide analogues could improve the treatment efficacy
Phase:
N/A
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Ziv Hospital
Treatments:
Entecavir
Ergocalciferols
Interferon-alpha
Interferons
Peginterferon alfa-2a
Telbivudine
Vitamin D
Vitamins
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- patients were eligible if they had been HBsAg positive for at least 6 months,

- patients were HBeAg positive or negative,

- patients had increased serum ALT levels between 1 and 10 times the upper limit of
normal (ULN),

- patients had serum HBV-DNA levels greater than 1.0 x 10E5 copies/mL (2.0 X 10E4 IUmL),
and

- patients had findings on a liver biopsy within the preceding 12 months that were
consistent with the presence of chronic hepatitis B.

Exclusion Criteria:

- decompensated liver disease,

- antiviral therapy within 6 months before randomization,

- viral co-infections (hepatitis C virus, hepatitis delta virus, or human
immunodeficiency virus), or

- pre-existent neutropenia or thrombocytopenia.