Eron L J, Judson F, Tucker S, Prawer S, Mills J, Murphy K, Hickey M, Rogers M, Flannigan S, Hien N
N Engl J Med. 1986 Oct 23;315(17):1059-64. doi: 10.1056/NEJM198610233151704.
Current therapy for condylomata acuminata (genital warts) is not consistently effective. Therefore, we conducted a randomized, double-blind trial to compare interferon alpha-2b with placebo in the treatment of this disorder. Our rationale was that interferon has both antiproliferative and antiviral properties. The placebo or interferon (1 X 10(6) IU) was injected directly into one to three warts three times weekly for three weeks. The injections were well tolerated by both groups of patients. The side effects of fever, chills, myalgia, headache, fatigue, and leukopenia occurred more commonly in the interferon group than in the placebo group, but such effects rarely disrupted daily routines. Only 13 of 296 patients (4 percent) discontinued therapy because of side effects (11 in the interferon group and 2 in the placebo group). Twenty-six other patients were excluded from analysis because of a loss to follow-up or other deviations from protocol, thus leaving 257 patients in the final evaluation. At one week after the completion of therapy, interferon had produced a large and significantly greater reduction in mean wart area (a 62.4 percent decrease), as compared with placebo (a 1.2 percent increase in mean area) (P less than 0.001). At the conclusion of the study (13 weeks after the completion of therapy), the mean wart area was still decreased 39.9 percent below the initial size in the interferon group, whereas it had increased by 46 percent over base-line measurements in the placebo group (P less than 0.001). At the same time, all treated warts had completely cleared in 36 percent of the interferon recipients and in 17 percent of the placebo recipients (P less than 0.001), whereas treated warts progressed in 13 percent of the interferon recipients and in 50 percent of the placebo recipients (P less than 0.001). We conclude that injection of interferon alpha-2b directly into genital warts appears to be an effective and fairly well-tolerated form of therapy.
目前尖锐湿疣(生殖器疣)的治疗方法并非始终有效。因此,我们进行了一项随机双盲试验,比较α-2b干扰素与安慰剂治疗这种疾病的效果。我们的理论依据是干扰素具有抗增殖和抗病毒特性。安慰剂或干扰素(1×10⁶国际单位)每周三次直接注射到一至三个疣体中,共注射三周。两组患者对注射的耐受性都很好。发热、寒战、肌痛、头痛、疲劳和白细胞减少等副作用在干扰素组比安慰剂组更常见,但这些影响很少扰乱日常生活。296例患者中只有13例(4%)因副作用而停止治疗(干扰素组11例,安慰剂组2例)。另外26例患者因失访或其他不符合方案的情况被排除在分析之外,最终有257例患者参与最终评估。治疗结束后一周,与安慰剂组相比(平均面积增加1.2%),干扰素使疣体平均面积大幅且显著减少(平均减少62.4%)(P<0.001)。在研究结束时(治疗结束后13周),干扰素组的疣体平均面积仍比初始大小减少39.9%,而安慰剂组比基线测量值增加了46%(P<0.001)。同时,36%接受干扰素治疗的患者和17%接受安慰剂治疗的患者所有治疗的疣体完全清除(P<0.001),而13%接受干扰素治疗的患者和50%接受安慰剂治疗的患者治疗的疣体进展(P<0.001)。我们得出结论,直接向生殖器疣内注射α-2b干扰素似乎是一种有效且耐受性较好的治疗方式。