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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nucleoside analogues are promising agents for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B infection (HBV-DNA-positive by hybridization assay). The drug being studied most intensively is Lamivudine (Zeffix) which has recently been approved in Germany. When given orally once daily (100 mg) Lamivudine is well-tolerated and suppresses HBV-DNA to undetectable levels in the majority of patients. Since relapse is frequent when medication is stopped long-term treatment (at least until seroconversion of HBeAg) is warranted. Indications for lamivudine monotherapy are patients with chronic hepatitis B in which interferon (IFN) is contraindicated or patients who did not respond to a previous course of interferon. Further indications are the HBV-DNA-positive
cirrhosis
prior to liver transplantation (OLT) and the HBV-reinfection after OLT. The main problem of long-term monotherapy with lamivudine is viral resistance. The clinical impact of the resistant mutants is often not clear. Withdrawal or even continuation of the medication may be acceptable approaches. Other nucleoside analogues like Entecavir or
Adefovir
are currently being tested in clinical studies. Famciclovir was investigated preferably in patients with decompensated liver disease or HBV-reinfection after OLT. Because of conflicting results the drug should only be used under study conditions. In IFN-naive patients with chronic hepatitis B (and compensated liver disease) alpha-interferon is still the first-line therapy. With a standard course of interferon 30-40% of the patients become seronegative for HBeAg as compared with 16-17% when treated with lamivudine for twelve months. Combination of lamivudine and interferon is not more effective than IFN alone. In the future combined antiviral treatment is likely to replace monotherapy.
...
PMID:[New developments in therapy of chronic hepatitis B. When are nucleoside analogs indicated?]. 1068 49
Patients with decompensated hepatitis B virus (HBV)
cirrhosis
have a poor prognosis due to the development of progressive liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma. Lamivudine appears to be a safe and effective antiviral agent, which may improve or stabilize liver disease in selected patients with advanced
cirrhosis
and active HBV replication. However, viral resistance can develop with prolonged treatment and some patients with advanced
cirrhosis
may not experience any discernible benefit. The use of hepatitis B immunoglobulin prophylaxis with or without lamivudine has resulted in excellent survival and a low rate of graft reinfection in patients who undergo liver transplantation for decompensated HBV
cirrhosis
.
Adefovir
and entecavir are newer antiviral agents that have activity against both wild-type and lamivudine-resistant HBV. Additional studies of individual or combination antiviral agents are urgently needed to improve further the prospects for the large number of patients worldwide with decompensated HBV
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Management of patients with decompensated HBV cirrhosis. 1261 54
Among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals, the prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) seropositivity is approximately 10-fold higher than in the general population. HIV/hepatitis B virus (HBV)-coinfected patients have an increased risk of
cirrhosis
and liver-disease-related death. The strategy and management of anti-HBV therapy in HIV-infected persons must take into consideration both viral infections. Among HIV/HBV-coinfected patients, lamivudine promptly inhibits HBV replication. The emergence of resistance to lamivudine has been documented in HBV strains.
Adefovir
has been shown to be effective in the treatment of lamivudine-resistant HBV in HIV/HBV-coinfected patients. Tenofovir has recently been shown to have significant activity against both HIV and HBV. HBsAg seropositivity has been identified as an independent predictor of highly active antiretroviral therapy-related hepatotoxicity. However, further research is needed to determine the exact role of HBV and the mechanisms involved in antiretroviral-associated hepatotoxicity in HBV/HIV-coinfected patients.
...
PMID:Antiretroviral therapy and HIV/hepatitis B virus coinfection. 1498 81
The success of orthotopic liver transplantation for patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) disease has been compromised by reinfection. Prophylaxis has dramatically lowered the rate of reinfection and increased patient survival. Long-term treatment with hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIg), although expensive, is effective. New antiviral nucleoside analogs have also been evaluated. In patients with
cirrhosis
and replicative HBV infection, lamivudine before transplantation and in combination with HBIg post transplantation reduces reinfection, but the rate of resistance mutation is rather high, reaching 25% at 2 years.
Adefovir
has been used as a rescue therapy and prior to transplantation in lamivudine-resistant patients, significantly improving liver function and reducing HBV DNA levels. Patients with active viral replication should receive preoperative antiviral therapy with lamivudine. HBIg therapy may be discontinued in selected patients after transplantation, albeit with caution, because low levels of HBV DNA have persisted. Antiviral therapy has improved the prognosis after graft infection.
...
PMID:Management of hepatitis B in liver transplantation patients. 1519 2
Nucleot(s)ide analogues are making milestones in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) as safe oral therapy. FDA approved lamivudine in adult patients in 1998, adefovir dipivoxil in 2002, and entecavir in March 2005. Lamivudine is effective in viral suppression, ALT normalization, and improvement in histology in both HBeAg positive and HBeAg negative / HBV DNA positive patients. HBeAg seroconversion rates correlate directly with pretreatment ALT levels at 18-30% after one year of therapy. Hepatitis flares may occur if lamivudine is stopped before HBeAg seroconversion. Lamivudine resistant YMDD mutants emerge at a rate of 15-20% per year of therapy; often associated with the rebound viraemia, relapse of hepatitis or even hepatic decompensation. Durability of response off lamivudine therapy is not satisfactory and may be dependent on duration of therapy post-seroconversion. Lamivudine is well tolerated with few serious adverse events, even in patients with decompensated
cirrhosis
. Long term therapy in viraemic patients with advanced fibrosis or
cirrhosis
delays clinical progression. Adefovir dipivoxil is an oral prodrug of adefovir. 10 mg daily is effective in suppressing both wild-type HBV and YMDD mutants, normalising ALT and improving histology. Adefovir dipivoxil has been shown to be well tolerated in longterm therapy. Renal toxicity reported in higher dosages is rarely seen except among patients with creatinine clearance less than 50 ml/min.
Adefovir
resistance may emerge and the overall rate is much lower than lamivudine, reaching 18% after 4 years of therapy.
Adefovir
-resistant mutants (rt N236T) are susceptible to lamivudine and entecavir. Little data is available for durability of response off therapy. Entecavir is an oral nucleoside analogue with a recommended dosage of 0.5 mg daily for nucleoside-naive patients, and 1 mg daily for lamivudine-refractory patients. It is a potent antiviral and may also reduced intrahepatitic cccDNA. Entecavir resistance so far has only been detected in lamivudine resistant patients in the one-year studies. Patient counseling is very important to decide on the choice among available therapeutic options. The assessment of the risks/benefits of each option should be carefully explained to individual patient.
...
PMID:Chronic hepatitis B--treatment with nucleoside analogues. 1610 69
When assessing patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, consider the state of viral replication, the immune response and whether viral mutations could be present, as well as evidence for liver disease or extrahepatic manifestations. In wild-type infections, loss of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), gain of anti-HBe and disappearance of HBV DNA from serum indicate immunosuppression of viral replication, or 'nonreplicative chronic HBV infection'. This 'healthy carrier' state must be distinguished from HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B (CHB) resulting from precore and core promoter mutations. HBeAg-negative CHB is common with genotypes D (Mediterranean region, south Asia) and C (north Asia) infections. Age, disease activity (alanine aminotransferase level) and severity (fibrosis stage,
cirrhosis
) influence treatment decisions. Following the marginal effectiveness of interferon and often temporary effectiveness of lamivudine due to drug resistance, treatment of CHB is entering a new era.
Adefovir
, entecavir, tenofovir, telbivudine and clevudine have equal or superior antiviral efficacy to lamivudine, whereas several agents are effective against lamivudine-resistant HBV. Pegylated-interferon (peginterferon) is superior to conventional interferon for obtaining sustained immunosuppression of HBV without drug resistance. Antiviral suppression of HBV replication for 2-5 years reverses hepatic fibrosis, prevents
cirrhosis
and, when
cirrhosis
is established, improves liver function, prevents hepatic decompensation and lowers the risk of liver cancer. Before embarking on immunosuppressive chemotherapy or organ transplantation in patients with chronic HBV infection, it is important to start antiviral therapy to prevent hepatitis flares. Antiviral therapy can be effective against membranous glomerulonephritis and polyarteritis nodosa caused by HBV. Further improvements in treatment of CHB are needed to prevent drug resistance and permanently suppress viral replication by eradicating viral templates or stimulating host immune responsiveness to HBV.
...
PMID:Management of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: a new era of disease control. 1647 64
Chronic hepatitis B develops in 3 phases: immune tolerance, where viral replication is strong and there is little or no fibrosis; immune activity phase with low viral replication and rapidly developing fibrosis as well as an elevated risk of
cirrhosis
; low viral replication and remission, with a risk, nonetheless, of reactivation. Antiviral treatment is indicated in patients with moderate or severe levels of either fibrosis or activity (necrotic and inflammatory lesions). Standard interferon treatment produces a prolonged response rate on the order to 20-40%; side effects are frequent but generally mild and reversible when treatment stops. Pegylated interferon (standard interferon conjugated with polyethylene glycol) has substantially better efficacy and comparable tolerance. Lamivudine (a nucleoside analog) has several advantages over interferon: oral administration, excellent tolerance, and rapid antiviral effect. Its principal disadvantage is the frequency of resistant mutations.
Adefovir
and entecavir have oral administration, are well tolerated and associated with a low incidence of resistance. They induce a sustained response after withdrawal of therapy in only a minority of patients and therefore the treatment needs to be indefinitely administered in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:[Treatment of chronic hepatitis B]. 1649 37
The Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a DNA virus that can cause both acute and chronic liver disease in humans. Approximately 350-400 million people are affected worldwide and up to one million deaths occur annually from
cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma. When
cirrhosis
and liver failure develop, the definitive treatment of choice remains orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). In the past, an unacceptable HBV recurrence rate with a high rate of graft loss was noted. The use of Hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) has resulted in improved patient and graft survival rates. The addition of the nucleoside analog Lamivudine (LAM) to HBIG has improved these survival curves to an even greater degree. Prolonged use of LAM will almost invariably lead to the development of viral mutations resistant to the drug. There are now several other nucleoside and nucleotide analogs (
Adefovir
, Entecavir, Tenofovir, and Truvada) available for the clinician to utilize against these resistant strains. It should be possible to prevent recurrence in most, if not all, post-transplant patients and also to significantly reduce viral loads with normalization of transaminases in those who have developed recurrent infection. The antiviral regimen should be robust and minimize the risk of breakthrough mutations. A prudent approach may be the implication of combination antiviral therapy. This review summarizes the efficacy of previous regimens utilized to prevent and treat recurrent HBV following OLT. Particular attention will be paid to the newer nucleoside and nucleotide analogs and the direction for future strategies to treat HBV in the post transplant setting.
...
PMID:Prevention and treatment of recurrent Hepatitis B after liver transplantation: the current role of nucleoside and nucleotide analogues. 1660 49
In patients with compensated hepatitis B virus (HBV)
cirrhosis
, active viral replication correlates significantly with the risk of hepatic flare, decompensation, and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The 5-year survival of patients with compensated
cirrhosis
was reported to be 80 to 85%, and is significantly lower in patients with replicative HBV. Both interferon and maintenance lamivudine therapy have been shown to reduce the risk of decompensation or HCC and prolong survival in responders. A finite course of interferon is recommended as the first-line agent. For patients who had a contraindication for or who have failed interferon therapy, direct antiviral(s) can be considered for long-term treatment. Once decompensation occurs, mortality increases remarkably. Early treatment with nucleoside analogues should be instituted. Lamivudine therapy is associated with rapid viral suppression, improvement in Child-Pugh scores, and improved survival, but drug resistance is a major problem and is associated directly with a poor clinical outcome.
Adefovir
or entecavir is preferred in patients with decompensated
cirrhosis
who require long duration of treatment, due to the lower rate of development of resistance.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus-related cirrhosis: natural history and treatment. 1667 92
Chronic hepatitis B is a common disease and approximately 20% of infected patients with compensated
cirrhosis
will decompensate over 5 years. If untreated, the survival of decompensated
cirrhosis
is poor (15% at 5 years). The extent of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication, as assessed by serum HBV-DNA level, is a strong predictor of the risk of disease progression and hepatocellular carcinoma. This provides a rationale for antiviral therapy to arrest progression of liver disease. Lamivudine is a pyrimidine analogue that inhibits HBV-DNA reverse transcriptase. It decreases HBV replication, normalises alanine aminotransferase levels and reduces hepatic inflammation and fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B. This article will focus on the use of lamivudine in patients with HBV-
cirrhosis
. In patients with compensated HBV-
cirrhosis
, a randomised, placebo-controlled trial has shown that lamivudine significantly reduced the rate of disease progression and hepatocellular carcinoma development over a 3-year period. In patients with decompensated
cirrhosis
, treatment with lamivudine can produce spectacular improvements of liver function, but the improvement is slow and a clinical benefit is usually not observed until after at least 3-6 months of treatment. A major drawback of lamivudine treatment is the development of resistance, observed in 15-20% of patients after 1 year and up to 70% after 5 years of continued treatment. Thus, patients with HBV-
cirrhosis
treated with lamivudine should have regular monitoring of serum HBV-DNA levels and prompt institution of additional antiviral therapy if viral breakthrough is observed.
Adefovir
, tenofovir and entecavir have demonstrated efficacy in patients with lamivudine resistance. In patients with decompensated
cirrhosis
, in whom the development of resistance can be fatal, combination therapy (such as lamivudine plus adefovir) may prove more effective than monotherapy and this issue needs further study.
...
PMID:Lamivudine treatment in patients with chronic hepatitis B and cirrhosis. 1692 9
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