I am a 57-year-old white American male infected with Hepatitis C. I am involved in a controlled medical research study by Roche Pharmaceuticals of an experimental Polymerase Inhibitor (RO5024048 also known as RG7128) drug therapy for the virus. This document is the story of my illness and the experience of treatment. My lovely and pretty damn wonderful wife will be contributing her take on the experience as well.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Science Café About Hepatitis C Research

San Francisco has a thriving science and nerd community. A symptom of that is the wide array of science events that occur throughout the Bay Area every month. One of them is a monthly series titled “Science Café” in which a scientist or two is inveigled to come to a local café and talk for a few hours about their area of expertise. The most recent event was about Hepatitis C.

The Atlas Café was the scene and the scientists were Dr. Melanie Ott of the Gladstone Institute who researches the reproduction cycle of the Hep C virus and Dr. Todd Frederick a Hepatologist at the California Pacific Medical Center who treats Hep C patients. As a disclaimer I must mention that Dr. Frederick has examined, palpated and prescribed for me as part of the Polymerase Inhibitor study I was in.

Dr. Frederick gave an overview of the scope of the Hep C epidemic and the nature of current treatments available to combat it. He talked about the new protease inhibitors Telaprevir and Boceprevir that are awaiting FDA approval to be used in combination with interferon and ribavirin. He also gave a hint at possible future therapies using polymerase inhibitors with interferon and ribavirin and the possible combination of polymerase and protease inhibitors with ribavirin to create a treatment regimen that does not use interferon.

Dr. Ott gave us a basic yet thorough crash course in the reproductive cycle of the Hep C virus. She revealed its dependence on fat molecules in human cells and the promising area of research involved in using fat disabling compounds to interfere with the ability of the Hep C virus to reproduce itself. She also had a very cool animation that illustrated the reproductive cycle of the virus. She was quick to state that this was still basic, in the petri dish research and many years away from demonstrating efficacy in living organisms. It was fascinating stuff and the crowd of 30 was intent throughout both presentations.

A few of the questions asked in the Q & A were about the new compounds being developed and particularly about the issue of deciding whether to treat now or wait for new developments. Dr. Frederick clearly attempted to be balanced in his answers, but as a doctor involved in clinical trials of promising new compounds he is really exited about the possibilities of the new treatment combinations and he showed a bit of a bias towards waiting for new developments.

I respect Dr. Frederick’s viewpoint a great deal, but I think if you are seriously considering entering treatment, you need to consider a wide range of factors beyond the simple consideration of treatment outcome percentages. The condition of your general health, the condition of your liver, the amount of impact the disease is having on your quality of life, your family situation, your housing situation, your work situation, your insurance situation, your financial situation, the quality of support you can expect, all of these are important factors to consider in your decision. We still don’t know when the new drugs will be approved, how quickly they may be included in insurance company covered drug rosters, and how much they will cost (though we do know they will be expensive). So think it all through thoroughly and carefully before making a decision. While the future may be so bright we gotta wear shades, the shades might be very expensive and the future a bit further off than we would wish.

1 comment:

  1. I was diagnosed as HEPATITIS B carrier in 2013 with fibrosis of the
    liver already present. I started on antiviral medications which
    reduced the viral load initially. After a couple of years the virus
    became resistant. I started on HEPATITIS B Herbal treatment from
    ULTIMATE LIFE CLINIC (www.ultimatelifeclinic.com) in March, 2020. Their
    treatment totally reversed the virus. I did another blood test after
    the 6 months long treatment and tested negative to the virus. Amazing
    treatment! This treatment is a breakthrough for all HBV carriers..

    ReplyDelete