| Literature DB >> 25690950 |
Alok Gupta1, Sachin Punatar1, Jayant Gawande1, Bhausaheb Bagal1, Libin Mathew1, Vivek Bhat2, Sadhana Kannan3, Navin Khattry1.
Abstract
Reactivation of remote hepatitis B infection (RHBI) is an important cause of morbidity in hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) patients. We analyzed the prevalence of RHBI in 205 patients who underwent HCT in our centre, serological events related to hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation and role of lamivudine prophylaxis in HCT patients with RHBI. The prevalence of RHBI was 14% (28/205 patients). Of these 28 patients, 15 received lamivudine prophylaxis (14 anti-HBcIgG positive and 1 only anti-HBs positive) while 13 did not receive lamivudine prophylaxis (12 anti-HBs positive and 1 anti-HBcIgG positive). None in prophylaxis group developed HBV reactivation while 12 of 13 in no-prophylaxis group reactivated (P < 0.001). The rate of HBV reactivation was 10% (21/205 patients), which included 9 patients with no evidence of RHBI pre-transplant. We conclude that lamivudine prophylaxis protects against HBV reactivation in HCT patients with evidence of RHBI. Lamivudine prophylaxis should be used not only in patients with anti-HBcIgG positivity but also in those with isolated anti-HBs positivity pre-transplant given the high rate of HBV reactivation in these patients. HBV serology cannot identify all cases with RHBI and therefore does not preclude HBV reactivation post-transplant.Entities:
Keywords: HBV reactivation; hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; hepatitis B virus; lamivudine prophylaxis; remote HBV infection
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25690950 DOI: 10.1002/hon.2195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hematol Oncol ISSN: 0278-0232 Impact factor: 5.271