| Literature DB >> 31540223 |
Mariantonietta Pisaturo1, Margherita Macera2, Loredana Alessio3, Federica Calò4, Nicola Coppola5,6,7.
Abstract
The US Food and Drug Administration issued a black box warning related to the risk of reactivation of overt/occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection during direct acting-antivirals (DAA) treatment. This review evaluated the prevalence of HBV reactivation after hepatitis C virus (HCV) pharmacological suppression and hypothesized the management and prevention of this reactivation. During and after DAA-based treatment, reactivation of HBV infection is common in patients with detectable serum HBsAg (from 2% to 57%) and very low (less than 3%) in individuals with isolated anti-HBc antibodies. The severity of hepatic damage may range from HBV reactivation without hepatitis to fulminant hepatic failure requiring liver transplantation. Thus, HBsAg-positive patients should receive nucleo(s)tide analog (NA) treatment or prophylaxis at the same time as DAA therapy. For those patients with occult B infection, there are no sufficient recommendations to start prophylactic treatment. Reactivation of overt or occult HBV infection during or after eradication of HCV infection is an issue to consider, and additional studies would help to determine the best management of this virological and clinical event.Entities:
Keywords: HBV/HCV dual infection; HBsAg; occult HBV infection; occult HBV reactivation; overt HBV reactivation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31540223 PMCID: PMC6784257 DOI: 10.3390/v11090850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Studies evaluating hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation in anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive patients treated with Interferon-based therapy.
| Author, References | Study | Country | Anti HCV Therapy | Sample Size | Definition of Overt Reactivation | Reactivation Overt HBV Infection N/% | Definition of Occult Reactivation | Reactivation Occult HBV Infection N/% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potthoff et al. [ | Prospective multicenter study | Germany | Peg-IFN plus rbv 48 weeks | 6 active HBV | Increase of HBV-DNA >2000 UI/mL | 4 (31%) inactive HBV patients with undetectable HBV DNA became HBV-DNA detectable | // | // |
| Liu et al. [ | Prospective multicenter study | Taiwan | Peg-IFN plus rbv | 68 HBV-DNA >200 UI/Ml | Increase HBV-DNA >=200 UI/mL | 28 (36.4%) HBV-DNA <200 UI/mL Reactivation | // | // |
| Yu et al. | Clinical Trials | Taiwan | Peg-IFN plus rbv | 62 active HBV | Increase HBV-DNA >=200 UI/mL | 47 (61.8%) patients with inactive HBV developing hepatitis B reappearance | // | // |
| Szymanek-Pasternak [ | Retrospective study | Poland | Peg-IFN plus rbv | 99 occult HBV | Not determined | // | No data | 0 (0%) reactivation HBV |
Studies evaluating HBV reactivation in anti-HCV-positive patients treated with DAA-based therapy.
| Author, References | Study | Country | Sample Size | Definition of Reactivation | Reactivation Overt HBV Infection N/% | Reactivation Occult HBV Infection N/% | Anti-HCV Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang et al. [ | Observational study | China | 10/124 | For overt infection, “Hepatitis” was defined as a more than 2-fold increase of ALT on two consecutive determinations at least five days apart, from the nadir during DAA therapy and follow-up. | 3(30%) | 0 | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Yeh et al. [ | Observational study | Taiwan | 7/57 | For overt HBV infection: at least 1 log10 IU/mL increase from baseline for those with baseline detectable HBV DNA or a reappearance of HBV DNA for those with baseline undetectable HBV DNA. | 4(57%) | 0 | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Mucke et al. [ | Cohort study | Europe | 9/263 | Increase or reappearance of HBV DNA | 5(55%) | 0 | Multiple IFN-free regimens PLUS 1 IFN based regimen |
| Londono et al. [ | Cohort study | Spain | 10/64 | >1 log increase in HBV-DNA levels | 5(50%) | 1(1.6%) | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Belperio et al. [ | Cohort study | United States | 377/22479 | >1000 IU/mL increase in HBV DNA or HBsAg detection in a person who was previously negative | 8(2.1%) | 1(0.004%) | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Doi et al. [ | Cohort study | Japan | 4/155 | Reappearance of serum HBV DNA ≥20 IU/mL following baseline undetectable HBV DNA or detectable but <20 IU/mL, or a ≥10-fold increase in HBV DNA compared with baseline | 2(50%) | 3(2%) | Ledipasvir/sofosbuvir or sofosbuvir plus ribavirin |
| Liu et al. [ | Observational study | Taiwan | 12/81 | Reappearance of serum HBV DNA ≥100 IU/mL in patients with baseline undetectable viral load, or ≥2 log10 IU/mL increase in patients with baseline detectable viral load | 2 | 0 | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Macera et al. [ | Observational study | Italy | 29/0 | Increase in ALT serum values of at least 2-fold the baseline values and as the development of signs or symptoms of hepatic decompensation, associated to a virological HBV reactivation | 5(17%)/29 | 0 | Multiple IFN-free regimens |
| Sulkowski et al. [ | Cohort study | Taiwan and Korea | 0/103 | Reappearance or rise of HBV DNA in the serum of a patient with previously inactive or resolved HBV infection | 0 | 0 | Sofosbuvir + ledipasvir |
Figure 1Management of HBV infection during and after DAA-based treatment. Footnotes: NA, nucleo(s)tide analog.