E. Tanaka et al., SERUM LEVELS OF HEPATITIS-C VIRUS CORE PROTEIN IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC HEPATITIS-C TREATED WITH INTERFERON-ALFA, Hepatology, 23(6), 1996, pp. 1330-1333
The quantitation of hepatitis C virus (HCV) viremia can be helpful in
the diagnosis, therapy, and monitoring of patients with chronic hepati
tis C, A sensitive and quantitative fluorescence enzyme immunoassay (F
EIA) has recently been developed for assaying HCV core protein in seru
m. To assess the utility of measurements of serum HCV core protein dur
ing the course of treatment of chronic hepatitis C, we studied 27 pati
ents who were treated with a single schedule of interferon alfa (IFN-a
lpha) (9 million units per dose for 24 weeks; total dose, 720 million
units), Eleven of the 27 patients responded with clearance of HCV RNA
and fall of aminotransferase to normal; 16 patients did not respond to
treatment, Before therapy, HCV core antigen was detectable in 25 of t
he 27 patients (93%). The initial serum concentration of HCV core prot
ein was significantly (P < .01) higher in the nonresponders versus the
responders. Two weeks after initiating IFN-alpha therapy, HCV core pr
otein was not detectable in any of the 11 responders, but was detected
in 8 of 16 nonresponders (P < .01). All responders, but none of the n
onresponders, remained negative for core protein after IFN-alpha thera
py. The measurement of HCV core protein by FEIA may be useful for pred
icting the response to IFN-alpha and for monitoring its therapeutic ef
ficacy.