You no longer have to compromise your patient's best chance to optimize outcomes and potentially achieve a cure
Choose a winning combination: regular monitoring + earlier INFERGEN® (Interferon alfacon-1) therapy may help improve the odds for success
Vigilant
monitoring of response to early interferon treatment helps to optimize outcomes.
Approximately 50% of HCV patients fail their initial course of therapy, prompting consideration for re-treatment.
1,2
Initiating INFERGEN therapy for HCV patients with a suboptimal response at 12 weeks represents a novel strategy to potentially eradicate HCV.
- The likelihood of a patient achieving SVR is, in part, determined by early virologic response (EVR).3

For all genotypes:
4
- Patients that are viral negative at week 12 have a 75% chance of achieving SVR.
- Patients that have detectable virus at week 12 have a 21% chance of achieving SVR.
- Patients with <2 log10 drop have only a 3% chance of achieving SVR.
- Not achieving viral negativity by week 12 translates into a 79% chance of treatment failure.

For genotype 1 patients:
5
- Data demonstrate that the earlier a patient achieves viral negativity (4, 8, 12 weeks), the more likely they are to achieve an SVR (87%, 70%, 38% respectively).
- Disappointing rates of SVR were encountered in viremic patients with a ≥2-log decline of viremia at treatment week 12: no single patient cleared HCV after 48 weeks of therapy, whereas only 7.5% of such patients responded after the treatment was prolonged to 72 weeks.5
Next:
Regular monitoring