2.Therapeutic Effect of Adefovir Dipivoxil on Recurrent or de novo Infection of Hepatitis B Virus after Liver Transplantation: A Preliminary Report.
Keon Kuk KIM ; Ki Hun KIM ; Shin HWANG ; Chul Soo AHN ; Deok Bog MOON ; Tae Yong HA ; Sung Gyu LEE
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2005;45(3):174-180
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Anti-viral therapy using hepatitis B immune globulin and lamivudine could not prevent HBV recurrence after liver transplantation (LT) completely. Adefovir dipivoxil is a acyclic nucleotide phosphate analogue and known to have potent anti-HBV effect. In this study, we analyzed the therapeutic effect of adefovir for recurrent or de novo HBV infection after LT. METHODS: From December 2002 to October 2004, adefovir was administered in 12 post-LT patients of HBV infection (11 recurrent and 1 de novo infection). In these patients, lamivudine and other combined therapies were used before the introduction of adefovir. Thereafter, adefovir combined with lamivudine was administered to all patients. RESULTS: The duration of adefovir administration was 5.5-18 (median, 15.5) months. The median values of serum AST and ALT levels were significantly reduced from 86+/-80 IU/L and 140+/-103 IU/L, respectively before the adefovir administration to 42+/-19 IU/L and 38+/-33 IU/L after 2 months of administration. This trend of improved liver function persisted throughout the follow-up period. HBeAg seroconversion was achieved in 4 of 10 patients (40%) and HBsAg seroconversion was observed in 1 of 10 patients (10%). HBV DNA levels have decreased to undetectable levels by hybridization assay in 6 of 7 patients within the first 2 months of therapy. Nephrotoxicity and hypophosphatemia were not found in all of these patients. CONCLUSIONS: Based on this preliminary result, adefovir dipivoxil seems to be an effective and safe antiviral agent leading to viral inhibition and clinical improvement in post-LT patients with recurrent or de novo HBV infection.
Adenine/administration & dosage/*analogs & derivatives
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Adult
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Antiviral Agents/*administration & dosage
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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English Abstract
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Female
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Hepatitis B, Chronic/*drug therapy
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Humans
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Lamivudine/administration & dosage
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*Liver Transplantation
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Phosphonic Acids/*administration & dosage
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Recurrence
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Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors/administration & dosage
3.Clinical trial of sequential antiviral therapy for patients with chronic hepatitis B in China.
Chun-liang LEI ; Xiao-mou PENG ; Xiao-ping TANG ; Zhan YANG ; Hui-min FAN ; Xiao-zhen YUAN
Chinese Journal of Experimental and Clinical Virology 2004;18(1):69-72
OBJECTIVETo establish a sequential antiviral regime and evaluate its efficacy in patients with chronic hepatitis B using a controlled trial.
METHODSSeventy-four patients with chronic hepatitis B were divided into 3 groups: 30 cases were enrolled in the sequential antiviral group in which patients received eight-week treatment with thymosin alpha1 (1.6 mg/time, subcutaneous injection, 2 times/week), six-month treatment with interferon (500 MU/ times, muscle inject, every other day) begun in the fifth week of the therapeutic course, and lamivudine treatment (100 mg/days) begun 2 months later after HBeAg seroconversion or just after the withdrawal of interferon to more than eighteen months. Fourteen cases were enrolled in combination group in which patients received six-month treatment with interferon and thymosin alpha1 simultaneously in the same manner as in sequential antiviral group. Thirty cases were enrolled in lamivudine group in which patients received more than eighteen-month treatment with lamivudine.
RESULTSThe temporary rates of HBeAg seroconversion and normalization of alanine aminotransferase (effective rate) in sequential antiviral group, combination group and lamivudine group were 76.7%, 78.6% and 13.3%, respectively. The effective rates of sequential group and combination group were very similar, and significantly higher than that of lamivudine group (P less than 0.01). Long-term efficacy rates were 76.7%, 57.1% and 16.7% among the three groups, respectively. The long-term effective rate of sequential group was relatively higher. The rate of liver damage sensitive period in sequential antiviral group and combination group was 47.7%. The time of onset was from 2 to 8 weeks after the treatment begun, earlier than that from 6 to 8 weeks after the beginning of interferon alone in the literature.
CONCLUSIONSequential antiviral therapy had much higher rates of long-term HBeAg seroconversion, undetectable HBV DNA and normalization of alanine aminotransferase with good cost-effectiveness. Its mechanism to promote the antiviral effect might be dependent on the immunoregulatory action of thymosin alpha1 in the earlier period and the specific inhibition of HBV DNA replication by lamivudine in the later period of the therapeutic course.
Adjuvants, Immunologic ; administration & dosage ; Antiviral Agents ; administration & dosage ; China ; Drug Therapy, Combination ; Hepatitis B, Chronic ; drug therapy ; Humans ; Interferon-alpha ; administration & dosage ; Lamivudine ; administration & dosage ; Thymosin ; administration & dosage ; analogs & derivatives ; Treatment Outcome
5.Comparison of peg-interferon monotherapy to peg-interferon and nucleoside analogue combination therapy for hepatitis B: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Mao-ying LI ; Xue-lan YUAN ; Da-zhi ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2012;20(6):442-447
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of pegylated-interferon (Peg-IFN) treatment as monotherapy or in combination with nucleoside analogues (NAs) for treating chronic hepatis B (CHB) infection.Searches of PubMed, OVID, EMBASE, and the Chinese Medical (WanFang, CNKI, and VIP) databases were conducted to identify all relevant randomized controlled trials published since January 1990. Twelve studies comparing Peg-IFN monotherapy to NA combination therapy (lamivudine (LAM), n =8); adefovir (ADV), n = 4) met the inclusion criteria (treatment duration, range: 48-52 weeks; follow-up, range: 24 weeks to three years). Meta-analysis was performed with RevMan 5.0 using the fixed-effects and random-effects models. Patients who had received combination therapy had a higher biochemical response rate at the end of treatment than those who had received monotherapy (51.1% vs. 38.9%, odds ratio (OR) = 1.63, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.33-2.01, P less than 0.01). Subgroup analysis of Peg-IFN combination therapies with LAM or ADV indicated that neither NA type significantly enhanced the increased efficacy of combination therapy compared to monotherapy. The combination therapy subgroups also had higher virologic response rates at the end of treatment than the monotherapy subgroups (LAM: 65.9% vs. 34.9%, OR = 3.57, 95% CI: 1.83-6.95, P less than 0.01; ADV: 74.6% vs. 46.2%, OR = 3.66, 95% CI: 2.13-6.30, P less than 0.01). Moreover, the combination therapy group had a higher sustained biochemical response rate at the end of follow-up than the monotherapy group (47.6% vs. 42.1%, OR = 1.28, 95% CI: 1.05-1.55, P less than 0.05). The LAM combination therapy subgroup had a significantly higher biochemical response rate than the monotherapy subgroup, but there was no significant difference between the LAM and ADV combination therapy subgroups. At the end of follow-up, the ADV combination therapy subgroup had a significantly lower rate of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) than the monotherapy subgroup, but there was no significant difference between the ADV and LAM combination therapy subgroups for HbeAg reduction. The combination therapy group and monotherapy group showed no statistically significant differences in HBsAg reduction or occurrence of severe adverse events. Peg-IFN/NA combination therapy produces a higher biochemical response rate in CHB patients than PEG-IFN monotherapy. Moreover, Peg-IFN/ADV combination therapy produces a greater reduction in HBeAg than Peg-IFN monotherapy.
Adenine
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administration & dosage
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analogs & derivatives
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Antiviral Agents
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administration & dosage
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adverse effects
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therapeutic use
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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Hepatitis B, Chronic
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Interferons
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administration & dosage
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adverse effects
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therapeutic use
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Lamivudine
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administration & dosage
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Nucleosides
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administration & dosage
;
adverse effects
;
therapeutic use
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Organophosphonates
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administration & dosage
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Polyethylene Glycols
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administration & dosage
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adverse effects
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therapeutic use
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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
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Treatment Outcome
6.Treatment Outcomes of Clevudine versus Lamivudine at Week 48 in Naive Patients with HBeAg Positive Chronic Hepatitis B.
In Hee KIM ; Seok LEE ; Seong Hun KIM ; Sang Wook KIM ; Seung Ok LEE ; Soo Teik LEE ; Dae Ghon KIM ; Chang Soo CHOI ; Haak Cheoul KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(5):738-745
The authors assessed the efficacy and antiviral resistance of 48-week clevudine therapy versus lamivudine in treatment of naive patients with HBeAg positive chronic hepatitis B. In this retrospective study, a total of 116 HBeAg positive patients, who received 30 mg of clevudine once daily (n=53) or 100 mg of lamivudine once daily (n=63) for 48 weeks, were included. At week 48, clevudine therapy produced a significantly greater mean reductions in serum HBV DNA levels from baseline than lamivudine therapy (-5.2 vs. -4.2 log(10)IU/mL; P=0.005). Furthermore, a significantly higher proportion of patients on clevudine achieved negative serum HBV DNA by PCR (<13 IU/mL) at week 48 (60.4% vs. 38.1%; P=0.025). The incidence of virologic breakthrough in the clevudine group was significantly lower than in the lamivudine group (9.4% vs. 25.4%; P=0.031). However, rates of alanine aminotransferase normalization and HBeAg loss or seroconversion were similar in the two groups (83.0% vs. 81.0%, 11.3% vs. 11.1%; P=0.813, 1.000, respectively). In conclusion, clevudine is more potent for viral suppression and lower for antiviral resistance at week 48 than lamivudine in treatment of naive patients with HBeAg positive chronic hepatitis B.
Adult
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Antiviral Agents/administration & dosage
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Arabinofuranosyluracil/administration & dosage/*analogs & derivatives
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Drug Resistance, Viral
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Female
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Hepatitis B e Antigens/*blood
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Hepatitis B, Chronic/diagnosis/*drug therapy/*immunology
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Humans
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Lamivudine/*administration & dosage
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Male
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Treatment Outcome
7.Efficacy of lamivudine and adefovir de novo combination therapy or after mono-therapy in chronic hepatitis B patients.
Xiao-Jun MA ; Xiao-Ping CHEN ; Xue-Fu CHEN ; Wen-Li CHEN ; Jing HUANG ; Ren CHEN ; Xiao-Dan LUO ; Hong-Ying MA
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2012;20(2):98-102
To investigate the efficacy of 104 weeks of lamivudine (LAM) and adefovir (ADV) de novo combination therapy, as compared to optimized combination therapy administered after 48 weeks of treatment with lamivudine or adefovir mono-therapy, in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients. A total of 174 patients with CHB were equally divided among three treatment groups: LAM mono-therapy; ADV mono-therapy; and LAM + ADV combination therapy. The patients in the LAM + ADV group were treated with LAM plus ADV for 104 consecutive weeks. The patients in the LAM or the ADV groups were first treated for 48 weeks with LAM or ADV, respectively, after which the patient's virological response was assessed. According to the results, the patient was continued on mono-therapy or switched to combination therapy for the subsequent 56 weeks. Virological and biochemical examinations were carried out at weeks 48 and 104. The rates of undetectable HBV DNA in the LAM mono-therapy, ADV mono-therapy, and LAM-ADV combination therapy groups at week 48 were 68%, 50%, and 84%, and at week 104 were 80%, 72%, and 95%, respectively. For the same groups, the virus breakthrough rates at week 48 were 15%, 0%, and 0%, and at week 104 were 18%, 2%, and 0%, respectively. Statistical analysis showed significant differences for the rate of undetectable HBV DNA between LAM + ADV group and LAM group at week 48 (x2 = 4.473, P= 0.034) and at week 104 (x2 = 5.795, P = 0.016), LAM + ADV group and ADM group at week 48 (x2 = 14.802, P less than 0.001) and week 104 (x2 = 5.547, P = 0.001). The hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion rates at week 48 were 15% (x2 = 4.543, P = 0.033), 13% (x2 = 4.035, P = 0.045) and 38%, and at week 104 were 21% (x2 = 4.438, P = 0.035), 17% (x2 = 4.223, P = 0.04) and 44%, respectively, among patients positive for HBeAg. Statistical analysis showed that the differences among the three groups for each of these parameters were statistically significant (all, P less than 0.05). When compared with LAM or ADV mono-therapy followed by LAM+ADV at week 48, the LAM plus ADV de novo combination therapy for 104 weeks provided CHB patients with better virological and serological responses and a lower drug resistance rate.
Adenine
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administration & dosage
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analogs & derivatives
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therapeutic use
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Adult
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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Female
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Hepatitis B, Chronic
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Lamivudine
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administration & dosage
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therapeutic use
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Organophosphonates
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administration & dosage
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therapeutic use
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Prospective Studies
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Treatment Outcome
8.Evolution of hepatitis B virus quasispecies during lamivudine-entecavir sequential therapy.
Lin LIU ; Ying-Zi TANG ; Jun-Gang LI ; Ji-Jun ZHOU ; Xiao-Hong WANG ; Yu-Ming WANG
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2010;18(6):423-427
OBJECTIVESTo study the evolution of HBV quasispecies under the pressures of lamivudine (LAM) - entecavir (ETV) sequential therapy and its clinical significance.
METHODSConsecutive serum samples from 2 patients underwent LAM-ETV sequential therapy were extensively studied for HBV quasispecies composition and evolution, using PCR-cloning-sequencing method. Maximum likelihood trees were built to analyze the genetic relationship between representative sequences. Correlation between HBV quasispecies evolution and serological/virological data was analyzed to determined the clinical significance of the evolution of HBV quasispecies during prolonged nucleotide analog therapy.
RESULTSVirological breakthrough was observed in both patients. Patient I acquired sustained virological response after switching to ETV rescue therapy, whereas Patient II suffered from virological breakthrough after 72 weeks of ETV therapy. Each virological breakthrough was accompanied with the replacement of previous drug susceptible dominant quasispecies with a drug resistant variant, indicating a close correlation between quasispecies composition and drug susceptibility. The rtL180M+S202G+M204V triple mutant, which was most likely a descendant of the LAM resistant rtL180M+M204V variant, was closely correlated with ETV resistant in Patient II.
CONCLUSIONQuasispecies composition of HBV is closely correlated with nucleotide analog susceptibility. ETV resistant variant can emerge from a LAM resistant viral population. Dynamic monitoring of HBV quasispecies composition is of great importance during nucleotide analog therapy.
Antiviral Agents ; administration & dosage ; therapeutic use ; DNA, Viral ; genetics ; Drug Resistance, Viral ; Evolution, Molecular ; Guanine ; administration & dosage ; analogs & derivatives ; therapeutic use ; Hepatitis B ; drug therapy ; virology ; Hepatitis B virus ; drug effects ; genetics ; Humans ; Lamivudine ; administration & dosage ; therapeutic use
10.Advances in treatment of chronic hepatitis B.
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2005;34(2):95-97
Adenine
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administration & dosage
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analogs & derivatives
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therapeutic use
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Animals
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Antiviral Agents
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therapeutic use
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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Genetic Therapy
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Hepatitis B, Chronic
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drug therapy
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virology
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Humans
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Interferon-alpha
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administration & dosage
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therapeutic use
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Lamivudine
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therapeutic use
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Organophosphonates
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administration & dosage
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therapeutic use
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Phytotherapy