Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| interferon alfa-2b | Intron A |
| interferon alfa-n3 | Alferon N |
| interferon beta-1b | Betaseron |
| interferon gamma-1b | Actimmune |
How It Works
Interferon can kill viruses and prevent them from reproducing. It
also stimulates the body's
immune system to fight viruses, including the human
papillomavirus (HPV) that causes
genital warts.
Interferon is given by injection just under the skin at the base of
the wart. A common injection schedule is three injections a week for 3 weeks or
two injections a week for 8 weeks, depending on the type of interferon. You are
treated in your health professional's office or clinic.
Why It Is Used
Interferon will not be the medicine your health professional
recommends first for genital warts. Interferon may be used when other
treatments (medicine or surgery) have failed or are not possible.
Interferon should not be used during pregnancy because it may harm
the fetus.
How Well It Works
Studies have shown that interferon injected into the base of a wart
is an effective treatment.1
Side Effects
Interferon injected into warts has more flu-like side effects such
as:
- Fever and chills.
- Muscle
aches.
- Pain at the injection site.
- Hives.
- A
temporary decrease in white blood cells, which fight infection in the
body.
- A decrease in the blood component that helps blood to clot
(platelets).
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference
is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
Interferon injected into a vein (systemic) has many side effects.
But you are less likely to have side effects if the interferon is injected into
the wart. It is not known if interferon given in a vein treats genital warts
effectively.1
Research studies are continuing to look at how interferon can be
used together with other treatments.
Genital warts may go away on their own. Also, treating genital
warts may not cure a human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The virus may remain
in the body in an inactive state after warts are removed. A person treated for
genital warts may still be able to spread the infection. Condoms may help
reduce the risk of HPV infection.
The benefits and effectiveness of each type of treatment need to be
compared with the side effects and cost. Discuss this with your health
professional.
Complete the
new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you understand this medication.