Literature DB >> 19280622

Long-term monitoring shows hepatitis B virus resistance to entecavir in nucleoside-naïve patients is rare through 5 years of therapy.

Daniel J Tenney1, Ronald E Rose, Carl J Baldick, Kevin A Pokornowski, Betsy J Eggers, Jie Fang, Michael J Wichroski, Dong Xu, Joanna Yang, Richard B Wilber, Richard J Colonno.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection who develop antiviral resistance lose benefits of therapy and may be predisposed to further resistance. Entecavir (ETV) resistance (ETVr) results from HBV reverse transcriptase substitutions at positions T184, S202, or M250, which emerge in the presence of lamivudine (LVD) resistance substitutions M204I/V +/- L180M. Here, we summarize results from comprehensive resistance monitoring of patients with HBV who were continuously treated with ETV for up to 5 years. Monitoring included genotypic analysis of isolates from all patients at baseline and when HBV DNA was detectable by polymerase chain reaction (> or = 300 copies/mL) from Years 1 through 5. In addition, genotyping was performed on isolates from patients experiencing virologic breakthrough (> or = 1 log(10) rise in HBV DNA). In vitro phenotypic ETV susceptibility was determined for virologic breakthrough isolates, and for HBV containing novel substitutions emerging during treatment. The results over 5 years of therapy showed that in nucleoside-naïve patients, the cumulative probability of genotypic ETVr and genotypic ETVr associated with virologic breakthrough was 1.2% and 0.8%, respectively. In contrast, a reduced barrier to resistance was observed in LVD-refractory patients, as the LVD resistance substitutions, a partial requirement for ETVr, preexist, resulting in a 5-year cumulative probability of genotypic ETVr and genotypic ETVr associated with breakthrough of 51% and 43%, respectively. Importantly, only four patients who achieved < 300 copies/mL HBV DNA subsequently developed ETVr.
CONCLUSION: Long-term monitoring showed low rates of resistance in nucleoside-naïve patients during 5 years of ETV therapy, corresponding with potent viral suppression and a high genetic barrier to resistance. These findings support ETV as a primary therapy that enables prolonged treatment with potent viral suppression and minimal resistance.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19280622     DOI: 10.1002/hep.22841

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  237 in total

Review 1.  Entecavir: a review of its use in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B in patients with decompensated liver disease.

Authors:  Gillian M Keating
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2011-12-24       Impact factor: 9.546

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Journal:  Gut Liver       Date:  2010-03-25       Impact factor: 4.519

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Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2018-09-24       Impact factor: 5.191

9.  A different inhibitor is required for overcoming entecavir resistance: a comparison of four rescue therapies in a retrospective study.

Authors:  Guosheng Yuan; Chengguang Hu; Yuchen Zhou; Junwei Liu; Huaping Huang; Yuan Li; Dinghua Yang; Fuyuan Zhou; Yong-Yuan Zhang; Yuanping Zhou
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2017-06-18       Impact factor: 4.335

10.  Covalently closed-circular hepatitis B virus DNA reduction with entecavir or lamivudine.

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Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2015-04-21       Impact factor: 5.742

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