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Long-term Entecavir therapy reverses fibrosis and cirrhosis in chronic hepatitis B patients

Published on August 17, 2010 at 7:27 PM · No Comments

Researchers from this international study found that patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection who received at least 3 years of cumulative entecavir (antiviral) therapy achieved substantial histologic improvement and regression of fibrosis or cirrhosis. Full details of the study appear in the September issue of Hepatology, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD).

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), chronic hepatitis B afflicts an estimated 800,000–1.4 million people in the U.S. It is an even greater problem globally, affecting approximately 350 million people. An estimated 15%–25% of people with this chronic disease develop serious liver problems, including liver damage, cirrhosis, liver failure, or liver cancer, and an estimated 620,000 persons worldwide die from HBV-related liver disease each year.

Viral replication is now recognized as the key driver of liver injury and disease progression, and the primary aim of treatment is long-term suppression of hepatitis B viral replication to undetectable levels. Entecavir is a potent HBV antiviral drug that in previous trials has demonstrated superior virologic, histologic and biochemical outcomes in nucleoside-naïve patients after treatment periods ranging from 48 weeks to 3 years, with minimal emergence of resistance. The present study confirms these results.

The study evaluated nucleoside-naïve patients from two Phase III entecavir studies—hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive and HBeAg-negative—who subsequently entered an open-label rollover study and received entecavir for a total duration of at least 3 years. HBeAg is found in serum during acute and chronic HBV infection and indicates that the virus is replicating and the infected person has high levels of HBV DNA.

During the Phase III program, patients received an entecavir dose of 0.5 mg daily and during the long-term rollover study, all patients received 1.0 mg of entecavir daily. Some patients received concurrent lamivudine (100 mg daily) for a brief period of time early in the rollover study before continuing on entecavir monotherapy (1.0 mg daily) after the protocol was amended.

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