Background/aims: There is consensus that interferon for hepatitis C should be stopped if alanine aminotransferase (ALT) remains elevated after 12 weeks; however, this may lead to unjust treatment withdrawal in around 20% of potential sustained responders. No consensus exists for interferon-ribavirin combination therapy. The aim of this study was to assess the predictive value of an HCV RNA test at 4 weeks in comparison with ALT, both in interferon monotherapy and in interferon-ribavirin combination therapy.
Methods: Plasma HCV RNA was tested at 4 weeks in 149 naive patients undergoing 6 months and 187 undergoing up to 12 months of interferon monotherapy, and in 40 non-responders treated for 6 months with interferon-ribavirin combination therapy.
Results: For 6 and up to 12 months of interferon monotherapy, the predictive value for non-response was 99% resp. 97% for a positive HCV RNA at week 4, versus 97% resp. 91% for an elevated ALT at week 12. Using a positive HCV RNA at week 4 as a stopping rule would lead to missing 5% resp. 12% of potential sustained responders, versus 10% resp. 28% for an elevated ALT at week 12. In interferon-ribavirin combination therapy, the predictive value for non-response was 100% for week 4 HCV RNA versus 95% for week 12 ALT, and 0% potential sustained responders were missed by a test for week 4 HCV RNA versus 20% for week 12 ALT. The overall sensitivity and specificity of a week 4 HCV RNA test was significantly better (area under ROC 0.85) as compared to testing ALT at week 4 (0.78, p<0.001), week 8 (0.76, p<0.001) or week 12 (0.78, p<0.001).
Conclusion: A positive HCV RNA test (> or =10(3) copies/ ml) at 4 weeks is highly predictive for non-response and leads to significantly less misidentification of potential sustained responders than ALT at week 4, 8 or 12, both in 6 or up to 12 months interferon monotherapy and in 6 months interferon-ribavirin combination therapy of chronic hepatitis C.