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Combination therapy with antiviral drugs and hepatitis B vaccine in incidentally-detected and asymptomatic chronic hepatitis virus B carriers at Bangladesh. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Asymptomatic chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) carriers face risks of liver disease complications but are usually not treated with antiviral drugs due to low immunity in the immune tolerance phase.
  • A study involved 25 patients who received a hepatitis B vaccine alongside daily lamivudine treatment; this combination therapy was safe and showed no liver damage.
  • At the end of the therapy, HBV DNA became undetectable in 16 patients, suggesting that this approach may effectively control HBV in asymptomatic carriers without harming the liver.

Article Abstract

Abstract Asymptomatic chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) carriers are at risk of developing complications of liver disease, but these patients are not recommended for treatment with antiviral drugs. In fact, antiviral drugs are ineffective in these patients in the immune tolerance phase, when they have inadequate levels of host immunity. We postulated that combination therapy of an immune modulator and antiviral drugs may have potential to help these patients. Twenty-five patients with incidentally-detected asymptomatic chronic HBV were immunized with hepatitis B vaccine (10 microg of hepatitis B surface antigen) intramuscularly five times (at 0, 1, 2, 6, and 12 mo) to induce HBV-specific immunity. The patients were also treated with lamivudine (100 mg) daily for 12 mo. The combination therapy was safe for all patients with asymptomatic chronic HBV, and no increases in alanine aminotransferase or liver damage were detected in any patient. Although all of the patients were expressing HBV DNA in their serum before treatment, HBV DNA became undetectable in 16 of 25 patients, and was reduced in 9 of 25 patients at the end of the combination therapy. Combination therapy with the antiviral agent lamivudine and an immune modulator (hepatitis B vaccine) represents a potential therapeutic option for the control of HBV without liver damage in asymptomatic chronic HBV carriers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/vim.2009.0104DOI Listing

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