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1 . 2013

Triple combination treatment for chronic hepatitis C with protease inhibitors, pegylated interferon and ribavirin: lead-in or no lead-in?

Abstract

Direct acting antiviral agents for the management of chronic hepatitis C infection have recently been licensed. These new protease inhibitors are combined with pegylated interferon and ribavirin and markedly increase the proportion of patients who respond to antiviral therapy. The protease inhibitors may be used with a lead-in phase of pegylated interferon and ribavirin and the value of this approach has been much debated with those supporting 'lead in' citing the advantages of assessing the early response to therapy before commencing the direct acting antiviral agent.

Those opposed to the lead-in phase cite the complexity of the regime and the lack of robust evidence showing an improvement in clinical outcome in those treated in this fashion.

Keywords:boceprevir, direct acting antivirals, resistance, telaprevir

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Full-text version of the article is available only in paper version.

CHIEF EDITOR
Aleksandr V. Gorelov
Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, MD, Head of Infection Diseases and Epidemiology Department of the Scientific and Educational Institute of Clinical Medicine named after N.A. Semashko ofRussian University of Medicine, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation, Professor of the Department of Childhood Diseases, Clinical Institute of Children's Health named after N.F. Filatov, Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation, Deputy Director for Research, Central Research Institute of Epidemiology, Rospotrebnadzor (Moscow, Russian Federation)
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