Hiya - I know there are some people here who know the mathematics for this and can tell you what they are. You need to go down to zero by week 12 for the treatment to be considered a good enough chance for a cure and therefore continued. Ask your doctor what your drop means in terms of the 2 log drop needed. Your doctor is quoting standard practice.
At week 4 you want to see at least a 1-log decrease, which means reducing your viral load by 90% (NINETY percent).
90% of 3,000,000 = 270,000 at Week 4. This is what you would want to see for the best chance of a cure. If your viral load continues to decrease at this rate you will be UND (undetected virus) at Week 12. Not having UND at 4 weeks means you are not a rapid responder but not necessarily a slow responder either. The speed of your response to the treatment is an indicator of treatment success but not the sole indicator - just one of many variables. 1b has a slightly better response to your particular treatment than 1a but not a key difference.
Other people will know more.
I'm not sure about the math either, but I'll answer so that your post will get moved up so the really smart ones will see it. We've got people on here who have been studying hep c for YEARS.
A 2 log drop from 3,000,000 IU/ml would be 30,000 IU/ml.
The 12 weeks PCR should show either undetectable or be a 2 log drop from your starting viral load. Otherwise the odds of success are not good enough to continue with standard treatment. Some studies show that slow responders who extend treatment increase their odds of achieving SVR - primarily be reducing relapse.
I think you have a good chance to achieve the 2 log drop by week 12 - I certainly hope you will.
Good luck,
Mike
As usual, Michael is exactly correct. I am one of the people who extended treatment because I had a two log drop but stilll had a few virons left at week 12. I extended to 72 and have been cured for over 3 years. You still have six weeks so get going and kill those suckers!!!!!!!
Unfortunately since my last post, I was not responsive to the treatment. I do however start a new aggressive treatment this weds. Prayers are appreciated. God bless!
Sorry treatment didn't work last time. good to hear you are trying again. hopefully with one of the new drugs that came out earlier this year.
best of luck
Yes, it's a combination therapy of Interferon, Ribavirin and a New drug... I am nervous but I want to beat this!1
It is always kind of nice when an old thread has a conclusion.
I am sorry you didn't clear first time but it is looking like there are a lot of successes with the new PI's.
Good luck
frijole
I actually forgot that I joined the community, it's great to have support!