| Literature DB >> 20305758 |
Sang Hoon Ahn1, Henry L Y Chan, Pei-Jer Chen, Jun Cheng, Mahesh K Goenka, Jinlin Hou, Seng Gee Lim, Masao Omata, Teerha Piratvisuth, Qing Xie, Hyung Joon Yim, Man-Fung Yuen.
Abstract
Recent guidelines of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the European Association for the Study of the Liver, and the Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver 2008 update of the "Asian-Pacific consensus statement on the management of chronic hepatitis B" offer comprehensive recommendations for the general management of chronic hepatitis B (CHB). These recommendations highlight preferred approaches to the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of CHB. Nonetheless, the results of recent studies have led to an improved understanding of the disease and a belief that current recommendations on specific therapeutic considerations, including CHB treatment initiation and cessation criteria, particularly in patient populations with special circumstances, can be improved. Twelve experts from the Asia-Pacific region formed the Asia-Pacific Panel Recommendations for the Optimal Management of Chronic Hepatitis B (APPROACH) Working Group to review, challenge, and assess relevant new data and inform future updates of CHB treatment guidelines. The significance of and controversy about reported findings were discussed and debated in an expert meeting of the Working Group in Beijing, China, in November 2008. This review paper attempts to identify areas requiring improved CHB management and provide suggestions for future guideline updates, with special emphasis on treatment initiation and duration.Entities:
Keywords: ALT; Chronic hepatitis B (CHB); HBV DNA; Hepatitis B virus (HBV); Interferon alfa; Nucleoside/nucleotide analog
Year: 2010 PMID: 20305758 PMCID: PMC2836441 DOI: 10.1007/s12072-010-9163-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Int ISSN: 1936-0533 Impact factor: 6.047
Treatment initiation: whom to treat?
| Current, stringent treatment initiation criteria may exclude HBV-infected patients at high risk of HCC from treatment |
| Routine invasive liver biopsy poses clinical limitations, with variable validity as well as potential patient compliance issues; alternative noninvasive means of assessing liver fibrosis are required |
| Symptomatic patients must be treated as early as possible |
| For asymptomatic patients refusing liver biopsy, noninvasive fibrosis assessment should be considered and appropriate risk prediction/calculation completed |
| Noninvasive fibrosis assessments should be further studied for routine use, instead of liver biopsy, before decisions are made to initiate or cease treatment |
| An improved treatment assessment algorithm or risk calculator, incorporating all HCC risk factors and common liver parameters, is required to aid hepatologists in redefining treatment initiation criteria |
Treatment cessation: for how long?
| Existing treatment end points have not been demonstrated to sufficiently prevent reactivation or disease progression |
| Achieving treatment goals and defining appropriate clinical treatment end points are often difficult |
| Treatment end points are constantly evolving as the understanding of CHB natural history and factors associated with disease progression improves |
| HBsAg seroclearance is currently the single preferred treatment end point for inclusion in future recommendations and more research is required to determine its likelihood in specific patient populations |
| HBeAg seroconversion may continue to be an appropriate end point accompanied by undetectable HBV DNA for certain patients with a low, predetermined risk of HCC development |
| The duration of consolidated treatment after HBeAg seroconversion requires further study with newer antiviral agents, and routine patient monitoring for relapse should remain mandatory upon treatment cessation in all CHB patients |