Chronic hepatitis C infection (HCV) is a disease that affects worldwide about 170 million people. The previous standard of care therapy of chronic HCV patients consists of pegylated-IFN-α combined with ribavirin, and results in sustained clearance of HCV-RNA in only about 50% of the HCV genotype 1 infected patients. Telaprevir, a NS3A-4A inhibitor, has previously proven to offer therapeutic options to previous non-responders to the standard of care. Although, not all chronic HCV patients benefit from telaprevir and it is still not known why certain patients are also non-responsive to this triple therapy. In this study we try to understand why certain patients are also non-responsive to telaprevir, how triple therapy modulates the responsiveness to IFN-α and what the immunological consequences are of treatment with telaprevir, either directly or as a result of telaprevir-induced reduction of HCV-RNA levels.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
20
Reinier de Graaf Ziekenhuis
Delft, South Holland, Netherlands
Erasmus Medical Center
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Determine functionality of immune cells in the liver and blood in chronic HCV patients before, during and after treatment with telaprevir, pegylated-IFN-a and ribavirin
By looking at T cells, NK cells and monocytes during triple therapy, as well intrahepatic as in peripheral blood, we try to better understand why some patients respond and others do not respond to therapy.
Time frame: 24 week follow-up
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