| Literature DB >> 19669255 |
Yun-Fan Liaw1, Nancy Leung, Jia-Horng Kao, Teerha Piratvisuth, Edward Gane, Kwang-Hyub Han, Richard Guan, George K K Lau, Stephen Locarnini.
Abstract
Large amounts of new data on the natural history and treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection have become available since 2005. These include long-term follow-up studies in large community-based cohorts or asymptomatic subjects with chronic HBV infection, further studies on the role of HBV genotype/naturally occurring HBV mutations, treatment of drug resistance and new therapies. In addition, Pegylated interferon alpha2a, entecavir and telbivudine have been approved globally. To update HBV management guidelines, relevant new data were reviewed and assessed by experts from the region, and the significance of the reported findings were discussed and debated. The earlier "Asian-Pacific consensus statement on the management of chronic hepatitis B" was revised accordingly. The key terms used in the statement were also defined. The new guidelines include general management, special indications for liver biopsy in patients with persistently normal alanine aminotransferase, time to start or stop drug therapy, choice of drug to initiate therapy, when and how to monitor the patients during and after stopping drug therapy. Recommendations on the therapy of patients in special circumstances, including women in childbearing age, patients with antiviral drug resistance, concurrent viral infection, hepatic decompensation, patients receiving immune-suppressive medications or chemotherapy and patients in the setting of liver transplantation, are also included.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19669255 PMCID: PMC2716890 DOI: 10.1007/s12072-008-9080-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Int ISSN: 1936-0533 Impact factor: 6.047
Definition of frequently used terminology
| Terminology | Definition |
|---|---|
| Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) | |
| High normal | Serum ALT levels between 0.5 and 1 times upper limit of normal reference (ULN). |
| Low normal | Serum ALT ≤ 0.5 times ULN |
| Minimally raised | Serum ALT levels between 1 and 2 times ULN |
| Biochemical response | Normalization of serum ALT levels |
| Chronic HBV infection | HBsAg seropositive ≥ 6 months |
| Clinical breakthrough | Virologic breakthrough with increased ALT levels or worsening histology |
| Drug resistance | |
| Genotypic resistance | Detection of mutations in the HBV genome, known to confer resistance, which develop during antiviral therapy |
| Phenotypic resistance | Decreased susceptibility (in vitro testing) to inhibition by antiviral drugs associated with genotypic resistance |
| Cross resistance | Mutation selected by one antiviral agent that also confers resistance to other antiviral agents |
| Hepatic decompensation | Significant liver function abnormality as indicated by raised serum bilirubin level and prolonged prothrombin time or occurrence of complications such as ascites |
| Hepatitis flare | Increase of serum ALT level to ≥ 5 times ULN |
| Inactive chronic HBV infection | HBsAg (+) anti-HBe (+) with persistent normal serum ALT and HBV-DNA < 2,000 IU/ml (104 copies/ml) |
| Undetectable serum HBV-DNA | Serum HBV-DNA levels below detection limit of a PCR-based assay |
| Virological response | |
| Maintained virologic response | Undetectable serum HBV-DNA and HBeAg seroconversion, if applicable, during therapy |
| Primary treatment failure | Reduction of serum HBV-DNA < 1 log IU/ml at 12 weeks of oral antiviral therapy in a compliant patient |
| Viral breakthrough | >1 log IU/ml increase in serum HBV-DNA from nadir of initial response during therapy as confirmed 1 month later |
| Secondary treatment failure | Viral breakthrough in a compliant patient (due to drug resistance) |
| Sustained virologic response | Serum HBV-DNA < 2,000 IU/ml (104 copies/ml) and HBeAg seroconversion, if applicable, for at least 6 months after stopping therapy |
| Complete response | Sustained virologic response with HBsAg seroclearance |
Comparisons of viral responses among four antiviral agents in treatment-naïve patients with chronic hepatitis B
| Lamivudine | Adefovir dipivoxil | Entecavir | Telbivudine | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| e(+) | e(−) | e(+) | e(−) | e(+) | e(−) | e(+) | e(−) | |
| HBV-DNA (-log) | ||||||||
| Year 1 | 5.4a | 4.5b | 3.6 | 3.7 | 6.9a | 5.0b | 5.7c | 4.4c |
| 5.4c | 4.1c | [1.0] | [1.4] | |||||
| Undetectable | ||||||||
| Year 1 | 36%a | 72%b | 21% | 61% | 67%a | 90%b | 60%c | 88%c |
| 40%c | 71%c | [0%] | [0%] | |||||
| Year 2 | 39%*d | NA | NA | 71% | 80%*d | NA | 56%c | 82%c |
| 39%c | 57%c | |||||||
| Year 3 | 20% | 40% | NA | 77%** | 89%* | NA | NA | NA |
| HBeAg seroconversion | ||||||||
| Year 1 | 18%a | NA | 12% | NA | 21%a | NA | 23%c | NA |
| 22%c | [6%] | |||||||
| Year 2 | 26%* | NA | 29% | NA | 31%* | NA | 30%e | NA |
| 25%e | ||||||||
| Year 3 | 40% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Genotypic resistance | ||||||||
| Year 1 | 13%a | 6%b | 0% | 0%* | 0%a | 0%b | 5%c | 2%c |
| 11%c | 11%c | |||||||
| Year 2 | 38%d | 31% | NA | 3%* | 0%d | NA | 25%e | 11%e |
| 40%e | 26%e | |||||||
| Year 3 | 57% | 57% | NA | 11%* | ∼1% | NA | NA | NA |
a–eData from same randomized controlled trials (a: [86]; b: [87]; c: [90]; d: [88]; e: [64])
Abbreviations: *, cumulative incidence; [·], data of untreated controls; **, HBV-DNA < 1,000 copies/ml
HBV: hepatitis B virus; e: hepatitis B e antigen; NA: not available