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Low‐dose interferon alpha combined with zidovudine in patients with AIDS‐associated Kaposi's sarcoma

41

Citations

28

References

1993

Year

Abstract

Forty patients with AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) treated with the combination of interferon alpha-2b (IFN-alpha) 10-20 MU day-1 and zidovudine (ZDV), 500-800 mg day-1, were evaluated for safety and efficacy. Eighteen patients (45%) had an overall response (CR+PR) at 3 months and a response persisting for a median of 14 (3-27) months. Patients with a CD4 count of less than 300 mm-3, prior to opportunistic infections or constitutional symptoms, were less likely to respond. However, between 28.5% and 36% of patients with a low CD4 count did respond to combined therapy. This is higher than would be predicted from single agent IFN-alpha therapy. Twelve of 28 patients (42.8%) receiving 10 MU day-1 of IFN-alpha (low dose) had an overall response. In addition, patients tolerated this dose of IFN-alpha better, presenting fewer flu-like symptoms and displayed a trend toward less anaemia. p24 antigen decreased in six out of nine evaluable cases, four of whom were treated with low-dose IFN-alpha. Low-dose IFN-alpha plus ZDV seems to be a useful and well-tolerated therapy for KS with antitumoral and antiviral activity. Patients without 'bad prognostic markers' are most likely to show improvement.

References

YearCitations

1989

474

1983

358

1984

330

1988

263

1987

234

1989

217

1990

216

1986

203

1991

193

1989

192

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