Reuters Health Information: REFILE-Recommended treatments for alcoholic hepatitis "fail to keep patients alive"
REFILE-Recommended treatments for alcoholic hepatitis "fail to keep patients alive"
Last Updated: 2015-04-22
(Inserts missing word "findings" as third word of para 3.)
By Reuters Staff
LONDON (Reuters) - Two key drugs recommended in
international guidelines and used to treat alcoholic hepatitis
are failing to increase patients' survival and leave death rates
among patients "alarmingly high," researchers said on Wednesday.
In a trial involving more than 1,000 patients, the generic
medicines - prednisolone and pentoxifylline - were found to make
no significant reduction in death rates over 28 days, over 90
days or even over a year.
Publishing their findings online April 22 in the New England
Journal of Medicine, scientists from Imperial College London
said they highlighted an urgent need for more research into how
to prevent and treat alcohol-related liver disease.
Mark Thursz, a professor in Imperial's department of
medicine, said that while the drugs are widely used, but "the
evidence supporting them comes from a few relatively small
trials."
This latest study - involving 1,053 patients being treated
at 65 hospitals across Britain - was four times larger than any
previous trial in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis, so
gives a clearer picture of how effective the drugs are, he said.
In the study, the 1,053 were split into four groups, each
receiving two treatments: prednisolone and pentoxifylline,
prednisolone and placebo, pentoxifylline and placebo, or two
placebos.
Overall, 16% of patients died within 28 days of starting
treatment. At 90 days, 29% of patients had died, and after a
year, 56% had either died or had a liver transplant. There were
no statistically significant differences in death rates between
the groups.
"We were surprised to find neither treatment had a
significant effect on survival after the first month, and the
mortality rate after one year is alarmingly high," Thursz said.
He said one reason why the drugs might not improve survival
rates was that they increase the risk of infection. Another is
that many patients return to drinking, he said, leading to
further hepatitis attacks or liver cirrhosis.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1DesJ44
N Engl J Med 2015.
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