| Literature DB >> 33976009 |
Faisal A Abaalkhail1, Waleed K Al-Hamoudi2, Abdullah Khathlan3, Saad Alghamdi4, Mohammed Alghamdi5, Saleh A Alqahtani6, Faisal M Sanai7.
Abstract
Infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains an important public health problem with a high burden worldwide. The Saudi Association for the Study of Liver diseases and Transplantation formed a working group to develop HBV practice guidelines in Saudi Arabia. The methodology used to develop these guidelines was based on reviewing the available evidence, local data, and major international practice guidelines on the management of HBV. The aim of these guidelines is to assist healthcare providers in the management of HBV in Saudi Arabia. These updated guidelines summarize the latest local studies performed on HBV epidemiology, major changes in the prevalence of this virus, and advances in disease management.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral; HBV; epidemiology; guidelines; hepatitis B virus; liver disease; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 33976009 PMCID: PMC8265399 DOI: 10.4103/sjg.sjg_539_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Saudi J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1319-3767 Impact factor: 2.485
Grading of recommendations
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| A | Recommendation based on high-quality evidence: at least one high-quality randomized controlled trial or at least one high-quality meta-analysis. |
| B | Recommendation based on medium-quality evidence: high-quality cohort study, case-control study or systematic review. |
| C | Recommendation based on weak evidence: case series or case report. |
| D | Recommendation based only on expert opinion. |
Natural history and assessment of patients with chronic HBV infection based upon HBV and liver disease markers[1,3]
| Phases | HBsAg/HBeAg | HBV DNA | ALT | Liver inflammation | Old terminology and Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PHASE 1Chronic HBV infection | High/Positive | High (>107 IU/mL) | Normal | None/minimal | “Immune tolerant” |
| PHASE 2 | High-Intermediate/Positive | Lower (104-107 IU/mL) | Increased | Moderate/severe | “Immune reactive |
| PHASE 3 | Low/Negative | Low or undetectable (<2,000 IU/mL)a | Normal | None | “Inactive carrier” |
| PHASE 4 | Intermediate/Negative | Fluctuating levels (>2,000 IU/mL) | Fluctuating levels/Elevated* | Moderate/severe | “HBeAg negative chronic hepatitis” |
| PHASE 5 | Negative/Negative | Undetectable (<10 IU/mL) | Normal | None (HCC risk if cirrhosis has developed before HBsAg loss) | “HBsAg negative/anti-HBc positive” |
aHBV DNA levels can be between 2,000 and 20,000 IU/ml in some patients without signs of chronic hepatitis. *Persistently or intermittently
Figure 1Factors that affect the risk of developing HCC in diagnosed CHB patients
High-risk individuals who should be screened for chronic hepatitis B virus infection
| Expatriate individuals as part of their pre-employment assessment |
| Healthcare workers |
| Household contacts of HBV carriers |
| Sexual contacts of HBV carriers or individuals with high risk sexual behavior |
| Dialysis patients |
| History of intravenous drugs |
| Individuals with abnormal liver enzymes |
| Pregnant women |
| Inmates |
| Individuals needing immunosuppressive or cancer chemotherapy |
| HCV- or HIV-infected individuals |
| Blood or organ donors |
Pretreatment assessment of HBV (adapted from[1])
| Relevance for HBV management | Pretreatment assessment |
|---|---|
| Assessment of severity of liver disease to identify patients for treatment and HCC surveillance | Physical examination |
| Determination of the phase of chronic HBV infection | HBeAg and anti-HBe detection |
| Establishing diagnosis, the phase of the infection, the decision to treat and subsequent monitoring of patients | HBV DNA serum levels |
| In HBeAg-negative chronic HBV infection and in patients to be treated with interferon-alfa (IFNα) | Serum HBsAg quantification |
| Determining other causes of chronic liver disease | Hepatitis D |
Endpoints of HBV treatment
| Recommendations | Grade of recommendation |
|---|---|
| Main endpoint | A |
| Valuable endpoint | B |
| Additional endpoint | B |
| Optimal endpoint | B |
aAchieved in most patients with long-term suppression of HBV replication. bIndicates profound suppression of HBV replication and viral protein expression
Figure 2Algorithm for the management of HBV infection