Has losartan been tested with tx drugs to insure it doesn't interfere with destroying HCV?
I've been taking norvasc (amlodipine besylate) and atenolol for about 5 years. I recently read that both of these drugs can be quite harmful to your liver, especially with HCV. 6 years ago I had a biopsy with no fibrosis after 22-25 years of disease. A couple of months ago my latest biopsy showed stage 2 fibrosis. I wonder if the blood pressure medication contributed to the fibrosis. I realize it may just be the amount of time I've had this disease, but I've been wondering about this. I always ask my doctors about medications and liver disease, but always get the answer that most drugs are not good for your liver.
You have probably seen me mention this before in other threads, but the ARB class hypertensive drugs (Cozaar, Losartan, etc.) are not only showing great promise for reversing fibrosis, and are being actively studied in that regard...but they have also condicted studies showing significant impact on Erectile Dysfunction (which is frequently a consequence of HCV and/or tx). Another area that I have seen discussed, but have been unable to locate any specific studies, is that of mood and depression. Several articles seem to indicate that Cozaar (the ARB class) seems to decrease depression, and appears to have a positive impact on day to day mood.
To me this seems to indicate that the whole area of fibrosis and atherosclerosis/ inflammation and high blood pressure, may be co-related. With drugs that address the underlying factors causing high blood pressure, we may be addressing other problems as well....like ongoing fibrosis, ED, depression, fatigue...and who knows, this may also have an impact on common sx like Fibromyalgia, and other painful conditions.
Drugs could be further developed, using the current ARB's as a foundation, that would aggressively address issues like fibrosis, inflammation, etc. Maybe, if many of these medical issues are really co-related (and we are finding more and more that high BP is related to ED, which also correlates to depression, etc.) then by addressing the major underlying mechanism, we end up benefitting all of the conditions simultaneously!
Let's hope that the bigger studies bear this out. I asked my doctor, almost two years ago, to put me on Cozaar for my high BP which developed right after successfully ending tx six years ago. I had read articles about its effect on ED and mood, but I became aware of the drug's fibrosis impact later. I am hoping that my stage II fibrosis will retreat over a few years to stage I or better. Maybe the mild, on and off ED issues will resolve as well. I have already seen changes in this issue, and also feel that my mood has improved over the past year or so.
DoubleDose
I asked my doctor about losartin(Coozar) while i have portal hypertension.he replied,now they are studying & believe that losartin can reduce fibrosis with hepatic patients who cleared the viruses.
The two studies that I know about were done at Mayo Clinic and UMass. Both showed improvement in fibrosis in people with detectable HCV/RNA. I hope to talk to Ray Chung about this next month at AASLD.
One thing that is encouraging is that the losartin fibrosis improvement has been shown going back to 2000.
I take this drug for regular hypertension-have done since before I heard of anti-fibrotic potential.
If it really reverses advanced fibrosis in the face of active Hep C in upto 50% of patients it deserves a larger study.
The problem with these small study breakthroughs is that most of them cant aren't sufficiently reproducible.
The causes of the fibrosis shouldn't matter because stopping the angiotensin II by losartan(cozaar) or vasotec should stop the myofibroblasts that are creating and maintaining the fibrosis.
I thought they had tested it in alcoholics also with good results. I could be wrong but I thoiught I'd read a study like this.
Ev
Can someone explain to me whether cozaar reduces fibrosis only in the prescence of chronic Hep C or whether patients who have cleared can also benefit?
I have read the data but the answer is not there as all the study participants had active infection.
Maybe someone with a better understanding of pharma-kinetics than I can extrapolate the answer.
I mainly posted that so others with Hep C and other liver diseases would know that there is a treatment for fibrosis that seems worthy of a trial and if you need high blood pressure medications there are some that may help the fibrosis as well as the high blood pressure.
I think after this month, that will be 3 months on losartin(cozaar), I will see how my blood work is then add vasotec to the cozaar wait 3 months check my blood work and make a decision on dropping cozaar for vasotec.
It was first published as far as I can see that losartan reduces fibrosis in 2000, that sure seems much to long a time lag between discovery and clinical use and I'm sure it is that way across medicine. It seem that too much knowledge has led to gridlock in our medical delivery. At least the Internet offers a tool to communicate discoveries faster.
On second thought, perhaps you should discuss that with your doctor. It makes sense that it would work as well but even with the angiotensin blockers some are better blood pressure reduces than others. So perhaps there may be something we are "missing" in believing they would work as well.
It should work. Mayo Clinic was involved in some of that testing and they used Diovan. the angiotensin drugs all work the same on fibrosis.