Majallah-i Dānishgāh-i ̒Ulūm-i Pizishkī-i Qum (Sep 2007)

Treatment of chronic hepatitis B

  • G. Montazeri,
  • M. R. Ghadir,
  • Rohban M,
  • Estakhri A

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
pp. 61 – 70

Abstract

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Background and objectives:The primary goal of therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B is durable suppression of HBV DNA to the lowest possible level. The threshold of HBV DNA level to initiate therapy is ≥ 105 copies /ml for patients with HBe antigen–positive and ≥ 104 copies /ml for patients with HBe antigen-negative chronic hepatitis B. Interferon α2b, lamivudine and adefovir dipivoxil are FDA-approved and could all be used as an initial first-line therapy in chronic hepatitis B. It was shown that adding lamivudine to either conventional interferon or peg-interferon did not increase the efficacy of treatment. Also, addition of lamivudine to adefovir had no additional effect in compensated patients. Response rate is about 30-40% with first-line drugs. Peg-interferon, which recently received FDA approval, was associated with an increased response rate. Further long-term studies are required in order to use Peg-interferon as a wide-scale first-line treatment. Treatment strategy is changing towards using prolonged combination therapy with evolving nucleoside analogues with or without an immunomodulatory agent, aiming to eradicate cccDNA. Keywords: Hepatitis; Hepatitis, Chronic; Hepatitis B Virus; Hepatitis-Therapy

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