| Literature DB >> 34070832 |
Cesare Mazzaro1, Luigino Dal Maso2, Laura Gragnani3, Marcella Visentini4, Francesco Saccardo5, Davide Filippini6, Pietro Andreone7, Anna Linda Zignego3, Valter Gattei1, Giuseppe Monti5, Massimo Galli8, Luca Quartuccio9.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) chronic infection causes progressive liver damage, although about 20% of patients develop extrahepatic manifestations such as cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (CV). Clinical manifestations range from mild to moderate (purpura, asthenia, arthralgia) to severe (leg ulcers, peripheral neuropathy, glomerulonephritis, non-Hodgkin lymphoma). A comprehensive review of therapeutic options for HBV-related CV is lacking. Nucleos(t)ide analogues (NA) suppress HBV replication in 90-100% of cases and induce clinical response in most patients with mild-to-moderate CV. Plasma exchange can be performed in patients with severe CV and should be considered in severe or life-threatening cases combined with high doses of corticosteroids and antiviral treatment. A cautious use of rituximab can be considered only in association with NA treatment in refractory cases. A review of the literature and an analysis of data collected by six centers of the Italian Group for the Study of Cryoglobulinemia on 18 HBV-CV nucleotide/nucleoside analogues (NAs)-treated patients were carried out.Entities:
Keywords: cryoglobulinemia; entecavir; hepatitis B virus; tenofovir; vasculitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34070832 PMCID: PMC8226459 DOI: 10.3390/v13061032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Summary of the clinical-serological and virological characteristics reported by the main studies on HBV-related CV.
| First Author, Year, Ref. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Boglione et al. 2015 [ | Mazzaro et al. 2016 [ | Li et al. (2017) [ | |
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| Female/male | ¾ | 10/7 | 4/8 |
| Age/years, median (range) | 60 (49–65) | 56 (45–70) | 47(29–68) |
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| Purpura, n (%) | 3 (43) | 17 (100) | 7 (58) |
| Arthralgias, n (%) | 0 | 12 (71) | 3 (25) |
| Raynaud’s phenomenon, n (%) | 0 | 3 (14) | 0 |
| Sicca Syndrome, n (%) | 0 | 2 (9) | 0 |
| Skin Ulcers, n (%) | 2 (29) | 1 (6) | 0 |
| Peripheral neuropathy, n (%) | 4 (57) | 5 (29) | 2 (17) |
| Glomerulonephritis, n (%) | 0 | 3 (18) | 12 (100) |
| Gastrointestinal vasculitis, n (%) | 0 | 0 | 2 (17) |
| Chronic hepatitis, n (%) | NA | 8 (47) | NA |
| Cirrhosis, n (%) | NA | 5 (29) | NA |
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| |||
| MC type II/type III | NA | 15/2 | 3/9 |
| Cryocrit %, median (range) | 3.4 (2.5–6) | 3 (1–14) | NA |
| Rheumatoid Factor IU/mL, median (range) | NA | 119 (88–5850) | 694 (67–2730) |
| C4 mg/dl, median (range) | NA | 8.0 (4–31) | 6.0 |
| ALT IU/mL, median (range) | 79 (68–105) | 71 (39–82) | 44 (10–102) |
| Creatinine mg/dl, median (range) | NA | 1.0 (0.7–1.2) | 2.8 (0.0–9.8) |
| HBV-DNA positive, n (%) | 7 (100) | 17 (100) | 12 (100) |
| HBsAg positive, n (%) | 7 (100) | 17 (100) | 10 (83) |
MC, mixed cryoglobulinemia; NA, data not available.
Nucleotide analogues (NAs) therapy in patients with HBV-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis.
| Author, Year | Pts n. | Antiviral Agent, Dose Duration, Weeks (w), (n) | Other Treatment, (n) | Negative | Laboratory | Clinical Manifestations, (n) | Immune Response/ | Cryoglobulinemic Vasculitis Response,(n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before Treatment | After Treatment | |||||||
| Cakir et al. 2006 [ | 1 | Lamivudine 100 mg/day = 76 w; Adefovir 10 mg/day = 108 w | 100% | Cryocrit: Pos; RF:1110; C4:7; ALT: 125; | Purpura, Fatigue, Arthralgia, Cirrhosis | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura; Fatigue Arthralgias; | |
| Kawakami et al. 2008 [ | 1 | Entecavir 0.5 mg/day | 100% | Cryocrit: Pos | Purpura, Neuropathy, | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: purpura, Neuropathy | |
| Enomoto et al. 2008 [ | 1 | Entecavir 0.5 mg/day = 20 w | 100% | Cryocrit: Pos | Purpura, Chronic hepatitis | Ccryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura | |
| Conca et al. 2009 [ | 1 | Lamivudine 100mg/day = 4 w; Lamivudine 50 mg/day = 232 w | 100% | Cryocrit: 7; RF: 876; C4:0.4; ALT:247 | Purpura, Cirrhosis | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura | |
| D’Amico et al. 2013 [ | 2 | Tenofovir 245 mg/day = 200 w, (1); Entecavir 0.5 mg/day = 204 w, (1) | 100% | Type III; Cryocrit: Pos; RF: Pos; C4:Pos | Purpura, (2); Neuropathy, (2); Chronic hepatitis,(2); | Cryocrit: Neg(2) | CR: Purpura, (2); | |
| Boglione et al. 2013 [ | 7 | Telbivudine 600 mg/day = 48 w, (7) | 100% | Cryocrit: 3.4; ALT: 79 | Purpura, (3); neuropathy, (4); Skin ulcer, (2); Chronic hepatitis, (7) | Cryocrit: 1% (0-2) ALT median: 33 (22–44) | CR: Purpura,(3); Neuropathy, (2); | |
| Viganò et al. 2014 [ | 1 | Entecavir 0.5 mg/72 h = 108 w | 100% | Cryocrit: 3; RF: Pos; C4: 5; ALT: 178; creatinine: 3.4 mg/dl; proteinuria: 2.5 g/24 h | Purpura, Fatigue, GN, Cirrhosis | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura; Fatigue; GN | |
| Yamazaki et al. 2014 [ | 1 | Entecavir 0.5 mg/day = 28 w | CS+PE, | 100% | Type II; Cryocrit: 2%; C4: 1; ALT: 4; creatinine: 4.0 mg/dl | Purpura, Skin ulcer, GN | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura, skin ulcers; |
| Terrier et al. | 3 | Lamivudine 100 mg/day, (1); Entecavir 0.5 mg/day, (2); | PE+CS+RTX, (1); PE+CYC+CS+RTX, (1) | 100%2 | Type II; Cryocrit: pos; C4: 0.24 | Purpura, (2); Arthralgia, (2); GN, (3); Chronic hepatitis, (3) | Cryocrit: Neg (1) | CR: Purpura, (2); Arthralgia, (2); GN, (3); |
| Visentini et al. 2016 [ | 1 | Tenofovir 245 mg/day = 52 w | 100% | Type II; Cryocrit: pos; RF: pos; C4 low level | Purpura, Chronic hepatitis | Cryocrit: Neg | CR: Purpura | |
| Mazzaro et al. 2016 [ | 7 | Entecavir nr = 192 w, (5); Adefovir nr = 48 w, (1); Lamivudine = 192 w, (1) | CS alone previous NAs, (1) | 100% | Type II, 7; Cryocrit: 3; RF: 200; C4: 8; ALT: 72 | Purpura, 7; Arthralgia, 7; Skin ulcer, 1; Chronic hepatitis, 6; Cirrhosis, 1 | Cryocrit median: 1% | CR: Purpura, (7); Arthralgia, (5); Skin Ulcer, (1); |
| Li et al. 2017 [ | 9 | Entecavir nr = 64 w, (7); Lamivudine nr = 24 w, (2) | CS alone, 3; CS+CYC, 1; CS+PE+RTX, (1); CS+PE+MMF, (1) | 100% | Type II, 3; Type III, 6; Cryocrit: 1900 mg/L RF: 824; C4: 6; ALT: 48; Creatinine: 2.2 mg/dl; Proteinuria: 5.0 g/day | Purpura, (4); Arthralgia, (2); Neuropathy, 2; Gastrointestinal, 2; GN, 9; | Creatinine median: 1.0 mg/dl; | CR: Purpura, (2); Arthralgia, (2); GN, (2); Neuropathy, (2); |
Legend: RF, rheumatoid factor, normal range: 0–25 IU/mL; C4, complement fraction C4, normal range: 10–40 mg/dl; ALT, alanine aminotransferase, normal range: 6–36 IU/L; GN, Glomerulonephritis, CS, Corticosteroids, CYC, cyclophosphamide, RTX, Rituximab, MMF, mycophenolate mofetil, PE, plasma exchange.
Nucleotide analogues (NAs) therapy in 18 patients with HBV-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis.
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| 10/8 |
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| 59 (33–81) |
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| HBV-DNA positive, n (%) | 18 (100) |
| HBV-DNA IU/mL, median | 6630 |
| MC type II/type III | 17/1 |
| Cryocrit %, median (range) | 4 (1–70) |
| RF IU/mL, median (range) | 181 (10–5850) |
| C4 mg/dl, median (range) | 9 (2–31) |
| ALT IU/mL, median (range) | 51 (21–638) |
| Creatinine mg/dl, median (range) | 1.0 (0.6–1.3) |
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| Purpura, n (%) | 18 (100) |
| Arthralgias, n (%) | 11 (61) |
| Skin Ulcers, n (%) | 3 (17) |
| Sjögren’s syndrome, n (%) | 5 (28) |
| Peripheral neuropathy, n (%) | 11 (61) |
| Glomerulonephritis, n (%) | 1 (6) |
| NHL | 2 (11) |
| Chronic hepatitis, n (%) | 4 (22) |
| Cirrhosis, n (%) | 1 (6) |
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| Entecavir | 11 (78) |
| Tenofovir | 6 (67) |
| Lamivudine | 1 (58) |
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| |
| Peg-IFN alone | 3 (17) |
| CS-associated NAs | 4 (22) |
| PE-associated NAs | 4 (22) |
| RTX-associated NAs | 2 (11) |
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| 18 (100) |
| Cryocrit %, median (range) | 1 (0–14) |
| RF IU/mL, median (range) | 181 (10–5850) |
| C4 mg/dl, median (range) | 7 (1–24) |
| ALT IU/mL, median (range) | 16 (12–34) |
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| |
| Purpura, n (%) | 14 (78) |
| Arthralgia, n (%) | 8 (44) |
| Skin Ulcers, n (%) | 2 (11) |
| Sjögren’ssyndrome, n (%) | 2 (11) |
| Peripheral neuropathy, n (%) | 6 (33) |
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| |
| Purpura, n (%) | 4 (22) |
| Arthralgia, n (%) | 3 (17) |
| Peripheral neuropathy, n (%) | 5 (28) |
| Glomerulonephritis, n (%) | 1 (6) |
| NHL | 2 (11) |
Legend: CS, Corticosteroids, CYC, cyclophosphamide, RTX, Rituximab, PE, plasma exchange, NHL, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, RF, rheumatoid factor. Normal range: RF (0–25 IU/mL); C4 (10–40 mg/dl); ALT (6–36 IU/L).
Clinical features and pathologic counterpart in cryoglobulinemic vasculitis.
| Clinical Features | Most Common Pathologic Features | |
|---|---|---|
| Mild disease | Lower limb purpura | Small vessel leucocytoclastic vasculitis |
| Fatigue | ||
| Arthralgia | ||
| Low-grade fever | ||
| Moderate-to-severe disease | Widespread purpura | |
| Sensory–motor peripheral neuropathy | ||
| Mononeuritis | Vasa nervorum vasculitis | |
| Renal failure | Type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis | |
| Skin ulcers | Small vessel necrotizing vasculitis | |
| Life-threatening disease | Alveolar haemorrhage | Pulmonary capillaritis |
| Abdominal vasculitis | ||
| Rapid progressive renal failure | Type I membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis with widespread crescentic extracapillary proliferation | |
| Central nervous system vasculitis | ||
| Hyperviscosity syndrome |
Figure 1Therapeutic management of HBV-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis.