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Editorial Board: Emmet B. Keeffe, MD (Chair); Anna Lok, MD; Brian McMahon, MD; Albert Min, MD;
Myron Tong, MD; Naoky Tsai, MD; Bruce Tung, MD |
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HBV
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Timely Information for Practicing Physicians |
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November
2004
Peginterferon alfa-2a versus lamivudine in HBeAg-negative
patients. HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B
is a late stage of infection characterized by progressive liver disease. Current consensus guidelines recommend
treatment with interferon alfa or nucleoside/nucleotide analogues. However, these therapies are associated with
poor sustained response rates and/or the development of resistance. Peginterferon alfa-2a has yielded superior
outcomes to interferon alfa in patients with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B
(Cooksley, J Viral Hepatitis, 2003). The
current multicenter, partially double-blind study conducted by Patrick
Marcellin and others randomized HBV patients who had been negative for HBeAg for
at least 6 months to receive either peginterferon alfa-2a (180 ug once weekly)
plus placebo (n = 177), peginterferon alfa-2a plus lamivudine (100 mg daily) (n
= 179), or lamivudine alone (n = 181).
Patients were treated for 48 weeks and followed for another 24
weeks. Sustained suppression of HBV DNA
to <400 copies/mL occurred in 19%, 20%, and 7% of patients treated with
peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo, combination therapy, and lamivudine alone,
respectively (p <0.001 for both peginterferon vs. lamivudine and combination
therapy vs. lamivudine). A significantly
greater percentage of peginterferon-treated patients had normalization of
alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels compared to patients treated with lamivudine
alone. In addition, 12 patients who
received peginterferon versus
no patients in the lamivudine alone treatment group had loss of HBsAg. This study showed that patients with
HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B treated with peginterferon alfa-2a had
higher sustained response rates than those receiving lamivudine. Moreover, the
addition of lamivudine to peginterferon therapy did not improve the sustained
response rate. Additional follow-up is
needed to determine the durability of response. (Marcellin P, et al. N Engl J Med 2004; 351:1206-1217)
Dose-finding study of once-daily
oral telbivudine in HBeAg-positive patients with chronic HBV infection. Current therapy
for chronic hepatitis B is suboptimal as a result of limited durable response
rates, cumulative viral resistance, and/or poor tolerability. Telbivudine has potent antiviral activity
against HBV in vitro and in the woodchuck model and has a promising
preclinical safety profile. In thi
NATURAL HISTORY OF HBV INFECTION
Follow-up of patient
LIVER
TRANSPLANTATION (OLT)
Improved outcome. During the 1990s important innovations, such as the use of
hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) and lamivudine, have improved the outcome of
patients undergoing OLT for HBV-related disease. In order to examine the effects of these
innovations, Ray Kim et al. at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester performed a
retrospective analysis of data collected by the United Network for Organ
Sharing for all adult patients who underwent primary OLT in the US between 1987
and 2002. Patients were divided into the
following 3 eras: Era 1, 1987-1991 (n = 6,708 [675 with HBV]); Era 2, 1992-1996
(n = 13,995 [1,005 with HBV]); and Era 3, 1997-2002 (n = 20,730 [1,723 with
HBV]). The survival of HBV patients was
greater in Era 2 versus
Era 1 and in Era 3 versus
Era 2. No difference in survival was
detected between patients with HBV infection and those with all other
diagnoses. Multivariate analysis
identified the effect of these eras to independently predict survival. Fulminant disease and Asian race had no
effect on patient survival. These
findings demonstrate the importance of the implementation of therapeutic
innovations over the past 15 year
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