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Volume 133, Issue 5, Pages 1445-1451 (November 2007)


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Low Resistance to Adefovir Combined With Lamivudine: A 3-Year Study of 145 Lamivudine-Resistant Hepatitis B Patients

Pietro Lampertico, Mauro Viganò, Elena Manenti, Massimo Iavarone, Erwin Sablon, Massimo ColomboCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 18 April 2007; accepted 29 August 2007. published online 03 September 2007.

Refers to article:
Hepatitis B: Explosion of New Knowledge
Emmet B. Keeffe
Gastroenterology
November 2007 (Vol. 133, Issue 5, Pages 1718-1721)
Full Text | Full-Text PDF (104 KB)

Background & Aims: Adefovir monotherapy is an established treatment modality for lamivudine-experienced patients with chronic hepatitis B, but it carries a significant risk of resistance in the long term. We assessed whether this risk could be overcome by adefovir-lamivudine combination therapy. Methods: A total of 145 lamivudine-resistant patients with chronic hepatitis B (73% cirrhotics, 86% hepatitis B e antigen negative, 92% genotype D) were treated with adefovir 10 mg in addition to lamivudine 100 mg. Liver function tests and hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA (Versant 3.0) were assessed bimonthly, whereas adefovir-related mutations were searched by INNO-LiPA assay at baseline and at yearly intervals. Results: During 42 months (range, 12–74), 116 patients (80%) cleared serum HBV DNA, 67 (84%) had normalized alanine aminotransferase levels, and 145 (100%) remained free of virologic and clinical breakthroughs, independently of the degree of HBV suppression. The rtA181V/T was the only adefovir-related mutation detected, which occurred in 6 patients at baseline (4%; 1 rtA181V and 5 rtA181T) and in an additional 3 patients (2%; all rtA181T) during treatment. In all these 9 patients, HBV DNA levels progressively declined during therapy to become undetectable in 7 (78%). The 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-year cumulative rates of de novo rtA181T were 1%, 2%, 4%, and 4%, respectively. None of the cirrhotic patients clinically decompensated, but 11 (12%) developed hepatocellular carcinoma. Conclusions:: Under prolonged adefovir-lamivudine therapy, patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B were unlikely to develop genotypic resistance to adefovir and had durable prevention of virologic and clinical breakthrough.

Abbreviations used in this paperADV, adefovir dipivoxil, LMV, lamivudine, PCR, polymerase chain reaction

 “A. M. and A. Migliavacca” Center for Liver Disease, Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Fondazione Policlinico, Mangiagalli e Regina Elena, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

 Infectious Disease Unit, Innogenetics NV, Ghent, Belgium

Corresponding Author InformationAddress requests for reprints to: Massimo Colombo, MD, 1st Division of Gastroenterology, Fondazione IRCCS Maggiore Hospital, Policlinico, Mangiagallii, Regina Elena, University of Milan, Via F. Sforza 35 - 20122 Milan, Italy. fax: (39) 0250320410.

 Supported in part by Consorzio Interuniversitario Trapianti d’Organo, Rome, and FIRST 2006, University of Milan.

 The authors report no conflict of interest.

PII: S0016-5085(07)01640-X

doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2007.08.079


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