| Literature DB >> 35329913 |
Abstract
In 1977 the viral Delta agent was discovered and subsequently characterized as the hepatitis Delta virus (HDV). HDV infection is associated with HBV infection since the defective HDV needs HBV to infect and replicate in the liver. Even if not a frequent cause of chronic liver disease, HDV infection is responsible for an aggressive progression of hepatitis towards advanced liver disease. At present, no FDA approved treatment exists for this specific form of hepatitis. Interferon alfa has been recommended as off-label therapy by major scientific societies (AASLD, EASL and APASL) and has proved effective in about one quarter of patients. In recent years, new therapeutic approaches have been studied, and EMA has approved a new drug (bulevirtide) for Delta hepatitis. In this review, we encompass the 45-year journey of managing Delta hepatitis and address the most recent developments in treating this severe and aggressive liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: HDV; bulevirtide; cirrhosis; hepatitis Delta; infection; interferon; myrcludex-B; therapy; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35329913 PMCID: PMC8953848 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11061587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Hepatitis Delta Virus infection and therapeutic targets of currently available and experimental new drugs (adapted from Liver Int. 2021, 41 (Suppl. 1), 30–37, used with permission).
Available and experimental drugs for the treatment of Delta hepatitis. Combination therapy trials are underway (Bulevirtide + Peg-IFN-α, Lonafarnib + Peg-IFN-α, NAPs + Peg-IFN-α).
| Drug (Route) | Action | Dosage/Duration | Expected Response Rates (%) | Use in Decompensated Cirrhosis | Recommended by | Approved by |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peg-IFN-α (s.c.) | Immune modulation/enhancement | 180 mcg weekly/12–18 months | 23–43 | No | AASLD, EASL, APASL | None |
| Bulevirtide (s.c.) | HDV cell entry inhibition | 2 mg daily/long-term | 37–55 | No (recommended), Yes (real-life evidence) | NICE | EMA |
| Lonafarnib (oral) | HDV prenylation inhibition | 50 mg + RTV bid/24–48 weeks | No data available | No data available | None | None |
| NAPs (REP 2139) (i.v.) | HBsAg release inhibition | 500 mg/15 weeks | 33 | No data available | None | None |
(Abbreviations: Peg-IFN: pegylated interferon, s.c.: subcutaneous, i.v.: intravenous, RTV: ritonavir, AASLD: American association for the study of liver diseases, EASL: European association for the study of the liver, APASL: Asian pacific association for the study of the liver, NICE: National institute for health and care excellence, EMA: European medicines agency).