Reuters Health Information: Short course of HBIG plus long-term antivirals may prevent HBV reinfection after transplant
Short course of HBIG plus long-term antivirals may prevent HBV reinfection after transplant
Last Updated: 2017-05-19
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A very short course of hepatitis
B immunoglobulin (HBIG) after liver transplantation, along with
long-term antiviral therapy, may prevent hepatitis B virus (HBV)
reinfection, a retrospective study suggests.
"We believe our approach of providing HBIG in the
immediate/early transplant period is important to protect the
new liver from infection,� said Dr. Norah A. Terrault from the
University of California, San Francisco.
�This is in contrast to use of antivirals alone (as
championed by the Hong Kong group with excellent results), which
may prevent disease (by suppressing virus that reinfects the new
liver) but may not prevent reinfection,� she told Reuters Health
by email. �Both approaches are associated with high efficacy,
but prevention of reinfection may offer the opportunity in
future to discontinue prophylaxis.�
Combining antiviral drugs and HBIG is the mainstay of HBV
prophylaxis, but there is no consensus regarding the duration of
use and dose of HBIG as a component of such prophylaxis.
Dr. Terrault's team at UCSF modified their HBV prophylaxis
protocol to a five-day course of HBIG combined with long-term
antiviral therapy in HBV monoinfected patients with low viremia
levels before transplantation.
Patients received HBIG 5000 IU intravenously in the
anhepatic phase of liver transplantation and then daily for five
days postoperatively (six doses total) and received antiviral
therapy indefinitely.
The 42 patients included in the report, online April 18 in
Transplantation, were followed a median 3.1 years after liver
transplantation; the cumulative incidence of hepatitis B surface
antigen (HBsAg) recurrence was 2.9% at one, three, and five
years post-liver transplantation.
Only one patient became HBV DNA positive, and that patient
had recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma.
Two patients died during follow-up, one from metastatic
hepatoma and one from infection and multiorgan failure.
�This is a simple and highly effective prophylactic regimen
- just 5 days of HBIG with long-term antivirals - that we feel
transplant programs can adopt,� Dr. Terrault said. �Currently,
many programs give longer duration HBIG (which increases total
cost of prophylaxis).�
�Additionally, we found that the only patients who showed
evidence of HBV post-transplant (N=2) were those who had
recurrence of liver cancer,� she said. �This has been shown by
others, but suggests that rather than the new liver being
infected, the HBV detected is the liver cancer.�
Dr. James Y. Y. Fung from the University of Hong Kong, who
recently reported on the effectiveness of entecavir monotherapy
for preventing HBV reactivation after liver transplantation,
told Reuters Health by email, "In fact, the paradigm for
antiviral therapy after liver transplantation for chronic
hepatitis B has gradually shifted from long-time high-dose HBIG,
to low-dose HBIG, to shortened-duration HBIG, and even HBIG-free
completely. Long-term data from Hong Kong has demonstrated that
oral antiviral alone without HBIG can prevent recurrent graft
hepatitis with excellent long-term survival.�
�Limited-duration HBIG and long-term antiviral therapy is
highly effective and is associated with good long-term survival,
especially for those with low or non-detectable viral load at
the time of transplant,� he concluded. �As antiviral therapy is
widely available these days, most patients, apart from those
with severe acute flares, will fall into this category.�
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2rylOFW
Transplantation 2017.
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