Journal article
Directly acting antivirals for the treatment of patients with hepatitis C infection: A clinical development update addressing key future challenges
A Thompson, K Patel, H Tillman, JG McHutchison
Journal of Hepatology | Published : 2009
Abstract
Current therapy for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is effective in less than 50% of genotype 1-infected patients. Antiviral agents specifically targeting either the HCV protease or polymerase, or other targets, are now in clinical development. In general, direct antivirals are potent inhibitors of HCV replication and can result in rapid declines in serum HCV RNA levels. Yet these agents drive selection pressure for mutant viruses that can reduce susceptibility to any given drug. Using pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin (RBV) in combination with direct antivirals can suppress viral breakthrough and increase the likelihood of sustained virologic response. Direct antivirals..
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