In comparison with healthy controls, CD patients were found to have an active angiogenic profile, as detected by significant alterations in levels of angiogenesis soluble markers. These patients did not differ in serum levels of angiogenic factors according to phenotypic disease behavior.
We describe the case of a patient with a diagnosis of Crohn’s disease and accidental infection during abdominal surgery by hepatitis C virus (HCV) who received combination therapy with pegylated interferon-α2b (1.5 µg/kg weekly) plus ribavirin (10.6 mg/kg daily) for histologically demonstrated chronic hepatitis C. After 48 weeks treatment, serum transaminase levels were normal and viremia (HCV RNA) was negative (end-of-treatment response); 24 weeks later (follow-up period), a sustained virological response was demonstrated. The tolerance to combination antiviral therapy was good, without intestinal symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease recurrence. We conclude that current antiviral therapies with immunomodulatory effects may be helpful and safe for patients with inflammatory bowel disease infected by hepatitis C virus.
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