| Literature DB >> 29599899 |
Ranjit Chauhan1, Shilpa Lingala2, Chiranjeevi Gadiparthi2, Nivedita Lahiri3, Smruti R Mohanty4, Jian Wu5, Tomasz I Michalak1, Sanjaya K Satapathy6.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is a major global health problem affecting an estimated 350 million people with more than 786000 individuals dying annually due to complications, such as cirrhosis, liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Liver transplantation (LT) is considered gold standard for treatment of hepatitis B virus (HBV)-related liver failure and HCC. However, post-transplant viral reactivation can be detrimental to allograft function, leading to poor survival. Prophylaxis with high-dose hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) and anti-viral drugs have achieved remarkable progress in LT by suppressing viral replication and improving long-term survival. The combination of lamivudine (LAM) plus HBIG has been for many years the most widely used. However, life-long HBIG use is both cumbersome and costly, whereas long-term use of LAM results in resistant virus. Recently, in an effort to develop HBIG-free protocols, high potency nucleos(t)ide analogues, such as Entecavir or Tenofovir, have been tried either as monotherapy or in combination with low-dose HBIG with excellent results. Current focus is on novel antiviral targets, especially for covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), in an effort to eradicate HBV infection instead of viral suppression. However, there are several other molecular mechanisms through which HBV may reactivate and need equal attention. The purpose of this review is to address post-LT HBV reactivation, its risk factors, underlying molecular mechanisms, and recent advancements and future of anti-viral therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Antivirals; Hepatitis B immunoglobulin; Hepatitis B virus; Liver transplantation; Prophylaxis; Reactivation; Recurrence
Year: 2018 PMID: 29599899 PMCID: PMC5871856 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v10.i3.352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol
Recurrence of hepatitis B virus in different genotypes
| Girlanda et al[ | ||||
| A | 15 | 56 | 4 (27) | 2 (13) |
| D | 13 | 67 | 7 (54) | 5 (38) |
| A/D | 12 | 43 | 4 (33) | 2 (17) |
| A/C | 2 | 66 | 1 (50) | 0 |
| E | 2 | 45 | 1 (50) | 1 (50) |
| C | 1 | 106 | 1 (100) | 0 |
| Devarbhavi et al[ | ||||
| A | 10 | 56 | 3 (30) | 1 (10) |
| C | 6 | 22.5 | 3 (50) | 1 (10) |
| D | 5 | 15 | 3 (60) | 1 (10) |
| E | 1 | 1 | 0 | Lost follow-up |
| Gaglio et al[ | ||||
| A | 28 | 24 | 3 (10.7) | 3 (10.7) |
| B | 8 | 24 | 1 (12.5) | 1 (12.5) |
| C | 18 | 24 | 1 (5.5) | 5 (5.5) |
| D | 6 | 24 | 0 | 0 |
| Lo et al[ | ||||
| B | 43 | 36 | 4 (2) | 7 (17) |
| C | 74 | 36 | 21 (15) | 7.5 (11) |
HBV: Hepatitis B virus.
Figure 1Stepwise approach of anti-hepatitis B core positive grafts allocated to recipients based on their hepatitis B serology. In chronic hepatitis B patients with HBsAg positive and who receive Anti-HBc positive liver grafts should be treated with HBIG and nucleoside analogs. If the recipient is HBsAg negative and Anti-HBc positive and/or anti HBs positive, NA is used for prophylaxis based on anti HBc and anti HBs serologies. No prophylaxis is recommended for anti-HBc positive and anti-HBs positive liver in LT recipient without HBsAg positive serology. These patients should be followed with periodic HBV DNA level guided by ALT to monitor for any relapse. In Hepatitis B naïve patients, NA is recommended for prophylaxis. HBIG: Hepatitis B Immunoglobulin; HBsAg: Hepatitis B surface antigen; Anti-HBs: Hepatitis B surface antibody; Anti-HBc: Hepatitis B core antibody.
The results of combination therapy of low-dose hepatitis B immunoglobulin and nucleos(t)ide analogues and the effects of withdrawal of hepatitis B immunoglobulin from combination therapy
| Angus et al[ | 32 LAM | 400 IU or 800 IU/d for 1 wk from LT followed by 400 IU or 800 IU/monthly thereafter | 18.4 | 3.1% HBsAg + and 0% HBV DNA+ |
| Gane et al[ | 147 LAM | 400 IU or 800 IU/d for 1 wk followed by 400 IU or 800 IU/monthly thereafter | 62 | 1% at 1 yr and 4% at 5 yr. Baseline HBV DNA was associated with HBV recurrence |
| Karademir et al[ | 33 LAM, 2 LAM + ADV | All patients received 4000 IU of intramuscular HBIG during surgery, 2000 IU intramuscular daily thereafter, until the HBsAb titer > 200 IU/mL and the HBsAg was seronegative, followed by lifelong 1200 to 2000 IU HBIG on-demand if HBsAb titer fell below 100 IU/mL | 16 | 5.7% (2 of 35 patients) had HBV DNA recurrence. They were LAM resistant |
| Iacob et al[ | 42 LAM | 10000 IU within anhepatic phase and daily within the first postoperative week, followed by 2500 IU on demand | 21.6 | HBV recurrence rate was 4.8% after a median of 1.8 yr |
| Jiang et al[ | 254 LAM | 2000 IU in anhepatic phase, followed by 800 IU/d for first day then weekly for the rest of 3 wk in the first post-operative month, then 800 IU monthly | 41.2 | 1-, 3- and 5-yr HBV recurrence rates were 2.3%, 6.2% and 8.2%, respectively 5 cases have YVDD mutations |
| Nath et al[ | 14 LAM + ADV | 1000 IU HBIG in anhepatic phase 1000 IU/daily for week 1, then HBIG withdrawn, replaced with oral ADV | 14.1 | 7.1% |
| Saab et al[ | 18 LAM + HBIG, 16 LAM to LAM + ADV | Randomized trial Patients treated with low dose HBIG + LAM ≥ 1-yr post LT 18 patients continued HBIG 16 patients discontinued HBIG and ADV added | 21 | 0% in HBIG + LMV 6.1% in LMV + ADV Recurrent case: HBsAg + /HBV DNA (-) |
| Saab et al[ | 19 LAM to LAM + ADV, 41 LAM to LAM + TDF, 1 ETV to ETV + ADV | All patients treated with low dose HBIG + LAM ≥ 1-yr post-LT. All patients discontinued HBIG | 15 | 3.3% recurrent cases: HBsAg (+)/HBV DNA (-) |
| Radhakrishnan et al[ | 42 (ETV (12%), TDF (83%), or TDF/FTC (5%) | HBIG 5000 IU given in anhepatic phase and daily for 5 d together with nucleos(t)ide analogues after LT and then continued indefinitely. | 36 | 1- and 3-year cumulative incidences of recurrence, defined by positive serum HBsAg of 2.9% |
| Chen et al[ | 50 (ETV before and after LT) | Two doses of HBIG-First dose anhepatic phase (10000 IU) and other dose (10000 IU) during surgery (additional doses as needed to maintain HBIG level > 300 IU/mL from 6 wk to 12 mo) | 36 | 0% recurrence at 3 years defined as reappearance of HBsAg and HBV DNA level |
| Cholangitas et al[ | 34 (LAM = 2, AFV = 1, ETV = 9, TDF = 12) | HBIG 1000-10000 IU bolus during anhepatic phase, followed by daily × 7 d, and then monthly 1000-2000 IU intramuscularly for 6-12 mo post-LT and then discontinued NA were continued indefinitely | 28 | 5.8% recurrence defined as reappearance of serum HDV in LT recipients with detectable serum HBsAg and/or HBV DNA |
| Wesdorp et al[ | 17 (15 of 17 converted from LAM/ADV to TDF/FTC) | All received HBIG ± (10000 IU given during anhepatic phase followed by a 4-7 d course of 10000 IU of IV HBIG daily, and then monthly intramuscularly for > 6 mo and then switched to TDF/FTC | 24 | No recurrence defined by HBsAg and HBV-DNA positivity. However, 6.7% had isolated HBsAg recurrence |
| Stravitz et al[ | 21 (Patients were initially on LAM = 11, ETV = 4, AFV = 2, LAM + ADV = 2, LAM + ADV = 2. All patients were converted to TDF/FTC) | HBIG ± nucleos(t)ide > 6 mo, then substituted with TDF/FTC | 31 | 0% recurrence of HBV DNA after switching to TDF/FTC |
| Taperman et al[ | 37 patients were randomized to TDF/FTC plus HBIG ( | HBIG ± nucleos(t)ide for 24 wk, then randomized to TDF/FTC plus HBIG ( | 72 | 0% recurrence of HBV DNA in both arms |
| Gane et al[ | 20 patients with initial HBIG for 7 d and then switched to LAM+ ADV | HBIG 800 intramuscularly given immediately after LT and the daily for 7 d and then switched to LAM/ADV | 57 | 0% recurrence defined as reappearance of HBsAg and HBV DNA |
| McGonigal et al[ | 4 (ETV = 2, LAM = 1, TDF = 1) | HBIG + NA for more than one year and switched to TDF/FTC | 15 | 0% recurrence of HBsAg and HBV DNA |
| Angus et al[ | 34 patients randomized after 12 mo of HBIG +LAM to ADV ( | Low dose HBIG × 12 mo along with LAM | 4.4 yr for the LAM/ADV and 4.6 yr for the HBIG/LAM group | 1 of 15 (6%) in the LAM/ADV and 0 of 15 (0%) in the HBIG/LAM group had HBsAg positive at last follow up |
HBIG: Hepatitis B immunoglobulin; HBV: Hepatitis B virus; HBsAg: Hepatitis B surface antigen; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus; HDV: Hepatitis delta virus; LAM: Lamivudine; LT: Liver transplantation; ETV: Entecavir; TDF: Tenofovir.
Hepatitis B immunoglobulin-free regimens in preventing recurrence of hepatitis B virus infection after liver transplantation
| Fung et al[ | 265 | 59 | ETV | At 1, 3, 5, and 8 yr of follow up, 85%, 88%, 87.0%, and 92% were negative for HBsAg, respectively | At 1, 3, 5 and 8 yr of follow up, 95%, 99%, 100%, and 100% had undetectable HBV DNA, respectively |
| Fung et al[ | 362 | 53 | LAM = 176 (49%), ETV = 142 (39%), and 44 (12%) were on combination therapy (Either LAM or ETV) plus nucleotide analog (either ADV or TDF) | HBsAg seronegativity at 1, 3, 5 and 8 yr was 80%, 82%, 82% and 88% | HBV DNA suppression to undetectable levels at 1, 3, 5 and 8 yr was 94%, 96%, 96%, and 98%. Rate of HBV DNA suppression for LAM, combination therapy, and ETV at 1 yr was 97%, 94%, and 95%, respectively |
| Fung et al[ | 80 | 26 | ETV | The cumulative rate of HBsAg loss was 86% and 91% after 1 and 2 yr, respectively | 95% with undetectable HBV DNA and 5% had low level viremia |
| Wadhawan et al[ | 75 | 21 | 19 patients received a combination of LAM+ADV, 42 received entecavir, 12 received TDF, and 2 received a combination of ETV + TDF | The cumulative probabilities of clearing HBsAg were 90% and 92% at 1 and 2 yr after transplantation, respectively | Nine patients were HBsAg-positive with undetectable DNA at the last follow-up. The recurrence rate in our series was 8% (6/75) |
HBV: Hepatitis B virus; HBsAg: Hepatitis B surface antigen; LAM: Lamivudine; ETV: Entecavir; TDF: Tenofovir.
Figure 2Generalized concept of overt and occult hepatitis B virus infections based on the data from the woodchuck model of hepatitis B, their long-term outcomes, and associated risk factors for hepatitis B virus reactivation following liver transplant. Based on experimental infection in the woodchuck model (Mulrooney-Cousins PM, Michalak TI, 2015[92]). 1Serologically silent infection: HBsAg, anti-HBc and anti-HBs negative; HBV DNA positive; 2Serologically silent infection: HBsAg negative, anti-HBc positive, anti-HBs positive or negative; HBV DNA positive; 3Serologically evident infection: HBsAg and anti-HBc positive, anti-HBs negative. HBV DNA positive. SOI: Secondary occult infection; POI: Primary occult infection; LT: Liver transplant; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; HBV: Hepatitis B virus; HDV: Hepatitis D virus; HBsAg: HBV surface antigen; anti-HBc: Antibodies to HBV core antigen; anti-HBs: Antibodies to HBV surface antigen.
Figure 3Proposed algorithm for hepatitis B prophylaxis in liver transplant patients. In chronic hepatitis B patients Entecavir (if no prior Lamivudine therapy) or Tenofovir (adjusted to renal function) is recommended as the first line therapy. Based on HBV DNA level at the time of transplant and risk factors, HIBG should be initiated, if associated risk factors for HBV recurrence post LT. High risk patients include drug resistant HBV, HIV co-infection, HDV co-infection, HCC. This group of patients receive high dose IV HBIG 10000 IU given during the anhepatic phase followed by low dose HBIG to achieve target anti HBs > 100 IU/mL along with NAs. HBIG is discontinued once HBV DNA is undetectable and loss of HBsAg is achieved. HBIG: Hepatitis B immunoglobulin; HBV: Hepatitis B virus; HBsAg: Hepatitis B surface antigen; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus; HDV: Hepatitis delta virus; LAM: Lamivudine; LT: Liver transplantation.
Figure 4Immunostaining. A: Recurrent hepatitis B virus infection leading to cirrhosis in a post-liver transplantation patient. Figure shows cirrhotic nodules with cholestasis but no appreciable inflammation; B: Immunostaining for hepatitis B core antigen shows strong nuclear accumulation of antigen in a small proportion of hepatocytes indicating active virus propagation.