| Treatment 
                    for Hepatitis B: When to Start, What to Use, and When to Stop
 
                     
                      |  |   
                      | Hepatitis 
                          B Virus  |  At 
                    the 13th International Symposium on Viral Hepatitis and Liver 
                    Disease held in Washington March 20-24, 2009, invited experts 
                    presented their views on a variety of important issues related 
                    to the treatment and management of hepatitis 
                    B and C.  Dr. 
                    Anna Lok of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor summarized 
                    her opinions on key aspects of therapy for chronic hepatitis 
                    B. Following is a summary of her remarks. Therapy 
                    for Hepatitis B Substantial 
                    advances have been made in the treatment of hepatitis B. However, 
                    current treatments suppress but [do] not eradicate hepatitis 
                    B virus (HBV). Therefore, most patients will require long 
                    durations if not life-long treatment to maintain virus suppression 
                    and to derive continued clinical benefit.  When 
                    to start treatment? With 
                    better understanding of the fluctuating nature of chronic 
                    HBV infection, and improved treatment options, the question 
                    is no longer whom to treat but when should treatment be initiated. 
                    When deciding whether to start or to defer treatment, one 
                    needs to have information on the HBV replication status, and 
                    activity and stage of liver disease at the time of assessment 
                    and the predicted risk of cirrhosis 
                    and hepatocellular carcinoma 
                    (HCC) for that particular patient.  Thus, 
                    treatment should be initiated in patients who have active 
                    or advanced liver disease at presentation or who are predicted 
                    to have a high risk of cirrhosis or HCC in the foreseeable 
                    future. On the other hand, treatment can be deferred in patients 
                    who have quiescent, early stage liver disease, and who are 
                    predicted to have a low risk of cirrhosis and HCC. The latter 
                    patients should continue to be monitored and treatment initiated 
                    when the indications arise. Traditionally, 
                    treatment recommendation is based on evidence of liver disease, 
                    i.e. elevated aminotransferase (ALT), histological evidence 
                    of inflammation or fibrosis, or clinical evidence of cirrhosis. 
                    Recently, it has been suggested that treatment should be based 
                    on virus level. Several cohort studies indicate that persistently 
                    high virus level (lasting several decades) is associated with 
                    increased risk of cirrhosis and HCC.  These 
                    data indicate that the threshold HBV DNA and ALT levels for 
                    initiating treatment should be lower in older patients who 
                    may have been infected for a longer duration. Thus, decisions 
                    regarding hepatitis B treatment should consider clinical features, 
                    ALT, serum HBV DNA, and when available liver histology.  The 
                    decisions are further modified by patients' age, hepatitis 
                    B "e" antigen (HBeAg) status, plans to start a family 
                    in women of reproductive age, occupational requirements, and 
                    patient preference.  Because 
                    current HBV treatments suppress but do not eradicate the virus, 
                    most patients require long durations and often life-long treatment 
                    with associated risks of drug resistance, adverse events, 
                    and costs. Therefore, the decision to initiate treatment should 
                    also take into account the anticipated duration of treatment 
                    and the likelihood of achieving sustained virus suppression 
                    after a finite course of treatment.  Which 
                    treatment? There 
                    are 7 [FDA-] approved therapies for hepatitis B: 2 formulations 
                    of interferon (standard [Roferon A and Intron A] and pegylated 
                    [Pegasys and PegIntron]) and 5 oral nucleoside/nucleotide 
                    analogues: lamivudine [Epivir-HBV], 
                    adefovir [Hepsera], entecavir 
                    [Baraclude], telbivudine 
                    [Tyzeka], and tenofovir [Viread]. 
                     The 
                    initial decision regarding which drug to use involves a choice 
                    between interferon vs. nucleoside/nucleotide. Interferon has 
                    the advantage that it is administered for a finite duration 
                    and is not associated with specific drug-resistant mutations, 
                    but it has to be administered parenterally [by injection], 
                    is associated with many side effects, and is contraindicated 
                    in patients with decompensated liver disease.  Nucleoside/nucleotide 
                    analogues have the advantage that they are administered orally 
                    and have very little side effects, but they have to be administered 
                    for many years which may lead to selection of drug-resistant 
                    mutations. Among the nucleoside/nucleotide analogues, entecavir, 
                    telbivudine, and tenofovir have more potent antiviral activity; 
                    and entecavir and tenofovir have higher genetic barrier to 
                    resistance.  Selection 
                    of the initial therapy is critical as resistance to the first 
                    drug may diminish the response to other drugs due to cross-resistance. When 
                    to stop treatment? In 
                    general, treatment should continue until a patient achieves 
                    therapeutic endpoint. Discontinuation of treatment may be 
                    followed by virologic relapse, hepatitis flare, and hepatic 
                    decompensation. Therefore, all patients must be closely monitored 
                    after treatment is withdrawn.  Interferon 
                    is usually given for a finite duration regardless of response 
                    because immunological effects of interferon may persist after 
                    treatment is discontinued. With pegylated interferon, the 
                    recommended duration is 12 months for both HBeAg positive 
                    and HBeAg negative patients. Whether a shorter course of pegylated 
                    interferon will suffice in HBeAg positive patients with favorable 
                    HBV genotype and if a longer course will result in a higher 
                    rate of sustained virus suppression in HBeAg negative patients 
                    is being studied.  The 
                    endpoint for oral nucleoside/nucleotide analogue therapies 
                    is unclear. For HBeAg positive patients, the general recommendation 
                    is to continue treatment until 6-12 months after HBeAg to 
                    HBe antibody (anti-HBe) seroconversion. Some experts have 
                    argued that HBeAg seroconversion is not an appropriate endpoint 
                    because virus replication persists. However, many studies 
                    have shown that 50%-70% of patients will remain in remission 
                    (low or undetectable serum HBV DNA and normal ALT) for many 
                    years if the above recommendation is followed.  For 
                    HBeAg negative patients, treatment can be stopped in patients 
                    who lose HBsAg, but that happens in roughly 5% of patients 
                    after 5 years of treatment. For patients with underlying cirrhosis, 
                    treatment is usually administered indefinitely. 3/27/09 Reference AS 
                    Lok. Therapy of Hepatitis B. Invited Speaker Abstracts. 13th 
                    International Symposium on Viral Hepatitis and Liver Disease 
                    (ISVHLD). Washington, DC. March 20-24, 2009. Abstract SP-18. Other 
                    Citations 1. 
                    JH Hoofnagle, E Doo, TJ Liang, and others. Management of hepatitis 
                    B: summary of a clinical research workshop. Hepatology 
                    45: 1056-1075. 2007. 2. 
                    AS Lok and BJ McMahon. Chronic hepatitis B. Hepatology 
                    45: 507-539. 2007. 3. 
                    European 
                    Association for the Study of the Liver. EASL clinical practice 
                    guidelines: management of chronic hepatitis B. Journal 
                    of Hepatology 50(2): 227-242. February 2009. 4. 
                    JL Dienstag. Hepatitis B virus infection. New England Journal 
                    of Medicine 359: 1486-1500. 2008. 
                                                   
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