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Adherence and mental side effects during hepatitis C treatment with interferon alfa and ribavirin in psychiatric risk groups
Author(s) -
Schaefer Martin,
Schmidt Folkhard,
Folwaczny Christian,
Lorenz Reinhard,
Martin Gaby,
Schindlbeck Norbert,
Heldwein Walter,
Soyka Michael,
Grunze Heinz,
Koenig August,
Loeschke Klaus
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1053/jhep.2003.50031
Subject(s) - medicine , ribavirin , psychiatry , hepatitis c , methadone , methadone maintenance , alpha interferon , prospective cohort study , hepatitis c virus , interferon alfa , gastroenterology , interferon , immunology , virus
Abstract Psychiatric disorders or drug addiction are often regarded as contraindications against the use of interferon alfa (IFN‐α) in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Our aim was to obtain prospective data on adherence to as well as efficacy and mental side effects of treatment with IFN‐α in different psychiatric risk groups compared with controls. In a prospective trial, 81 patients with chronic hepatitis C (positive hepatitis C virus[HCV] RNA and elevated alanine aminotransferase[ALT] level) and psychiatric disorders (n = 16), methadone substitution (n = 21), former drug addiction (n = 21), or controls without a psychiatric history or drug addiction (n = 23) were treated with a combination of IFN‐α‐2a 3 MU 3 times weekly and ribavirin (1,000‐1,200 mg/d). Sustained virologic response (overall, 37%) did not differ significantly between subgroups. No significant differences between groups were detected with respect to IFN‐α–related development of depressions during treatment. However, in the psychiatric group, significantly more patients received antidepressants before and during treatment with IFN‐α ( P < .001). Most of those who dropped out of the study were patients with former drug addiction (43%; P = .04) compared with 14% in the methadone group, 13% in the control group, and 18% in the psychiatric group. No patient in the psychiatric group had to discontinue treatment because of psychiatric deterioration. In conclusion, our data do not confirm the supposed increased risk for IFN‐α–induced mental side effects and dropouts in psychiatric patients if interdisciplinary care and antidepressant treatment are available. Preexisting psychiatric disorders or present methadone substitution should no longer be regarded as contraindications to treatment of chronic hepatitis C with IFN‐α and ribavirin in an interdisciplinary setting.