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Original Article

Rescue therapy with adefovir in decompensated liver cirrhosis patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus

Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2014;20(2):168-176.
Published online: June 30, 2014

1Department of Internal Medicine, Pusan National University College of Medicine, Pusan, Korea.

2Department of Internal Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.

3Department of Internal Medicine, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

4Department of Internal Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

5Department of Internal Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

6Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

7Department of Internal Medicine, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

8Department of Internal Medicine, Yeungnam University College of Medicine, Daegu, Korea.

9Department of Internal Medicine, National Health Insurance Corporation Ilsan Hospital, Goyang, Korea.

10Department of Internal Medicine, Hallym University College of Medicine, Chuncheon, Korea.

11Department of Internal Medicine, Keimyung University College of Medicine, Daegu, Korea.

Corresponding author: Jong Young Choi. Division of Hepatology, Liver Transplantation Center, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, #505 Banpodong, Seocho-gu, Seoul 137-040, Korea. Tel. +82-2-590-2529, Fax. +82-2-3481-4025, jychoi@catholic.ac.kr
• Received: May 21, 2014   • Revised: May 30, 2014   • Accepted: June 5, 2014

Copyright © 2014 by The Korean Association for the Study of the Liver

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Citations

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    Baochi Liu, Mingrong Cheng, Xiaodong Chen, Lei Li, Yanhui Si, Shijia Wang, Ying Wang, Yufang Shi
    Bioscience Reports.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Analysis of the prevalence of drug-resistant hepatitis B virus in patients with antiviral therapy failure in a Chinese tertiary referral liver centre (2010–2014)
    Tian Meng, Xiaofeng Shi, Xuyang Gong, Haijun Deng, Yao Huang, Xuefeng Shan, Youlan Shan, Ailong Huang, Quanxin Long
    Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance.2017; 8: 74.     CrossRef

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Rescue therapy with adefovir in decompensated liver cirrhosis patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus
Clin Mol Hepatol. 2014;20(2):168-176.   Published online June 30, 2014
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Rescue therapy with adefovir in decompensated liver cirrhosis patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus
Clin Mol Hepatol. 2014;20(2):168-176.   Published online June 30, 2014
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Rescue therapy with adefovir in decompensated liver cirrhosis patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus
Image Image Image Image
Figure 1 Flow chart of patients. n, number; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma, LT, liver transplantation; Tx, treatment; ADV, adefovir dipivoxil; HBV, hepatitis B virus.
Figure 2 Change in Child-Pugh class with ADV rescue therapy. (A) Pretreatment Child-Pugh class B; (B) pretreatment Child-Pugh class C.
Figure 3 Cumulative survival curve of the 119 decompensated patients infected with lamivudine-resistant HBV who received ADV rescue treatment (median treatment duration, 33 months).
Figure 4 Cumulative survival curves of patients with sustained virologic suppression (n=67), virologic breakthrough (n=38), and suboptimal response (n=9) who received ADV rescue therapy. Patients with a suboptimal response to ADV treatment exhibited a significantly poorer overall survival rate than those with sustained virologic suppression or with virologic breakthrough (66.7% vs. 98% and 94.7%, respectively; P=0.012).
Rescue therapy with adefovir in decompensated liver cirrhosis patients with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus
Total patients (n=128)
Age (years) 50 (23-71)
Male gender, n (%) 97 (76)
Duration of LAM (months) 37 (6-109)
 ≤ 1 year, n (%) 11 (8.6)
 1 year<, ≤ 2 year, n (%) 24 (18.7)
 2 year<, ≤ 3 year, n (%) 28 (21.9)
 3 year<, n (%) 65 (50.8)
LAM+ADF overlap (months) (n=75) 7.0 (1-25)
Concomitant LAM Tx., n (%)
 Switch without overlapping 53 (41.4)
 Switch with overlapping 68 (53.1)
 Add-on 7 (5.5)
Serum HBV DNA (pg/mL) 236 (0.51-6000)
HBeAg positivity, n (%) 100 (78)
ALT (U/L) 120 (28-2561)
Prothrombin time (INR) 1.5 (1.07-6.23)
Total bilirubin (mg/dl) 3.0 (0.65-29.3)
Albumin (g/L) 2.9 (1.7-4.5)
Serum Creatinine (mg/dl) 0.9 (0.57-11.80)
MELD 15 (9-39)
Child-Pugh score (A/B/C), n (%) 0/76/52 (0/59/41)
History of cirrhotic complication, n (%) 64 (50)
 Ascites 24 (19)
 Variceal bleeding 18 (14)
 Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis 9 (7)
 Hepatic encephalopathy 13 (10)
Baseline Variables CP improvement (n=86) Without CP improvement (n=23)* Univariateanalysis
Multivariate analysis
P value P value OR (95% Confidence interval)
Age (years) 50 (23-71) 51 (38-65) 0.268
LAM duration (months) 32 (6-67) 40 (8-109) 0.100 0.418 1.009 (0.988-1.030)
Overlap period (months) 1 (0-25) 2 (0-19) 0.959
Concomitant LAM Tx., n (%) 0.477
 Switch without overlapping 40 (46.5) 8 (34.8)
 Switch with overlapping 0 (0) 4 (17.4)
 Add-on 46 (53.5) 11 (47.8)
Serum HBV DNA (pg/mL) 241.5 (0.5-6000) 90.8 (2.9-6000) 0.465
ALT (IU/L) 145 (32-2561) 99 (28-820) 0.081 0.550 0.999 (0.996-1.002)
Total bilirubin (mg/dL) 3 (0.7-22.4) 3.3 (0.9-29.3) 0.504
Albumin (g/L) 3.0 (1.7-4.5) 2.6 (2.1-4.3) 0.040 0.903 1.073 (0.348-3.305)
Serum creatinine (mg/dL) 0.9 (0.6-1.5) 0.8 (0.5-11.8) 0.002 0.118 1.310 (0.934-1.836)
Prothrombin time (INR) 1.48 (1.07-3.38) 1.62 (1.18-6.23) 0.001 0.181 1.887 (0.744-4.789)
MELD 15 (9-28) 17 (9-37) 0.001 0.506 0.932 (0.757-1.147)
Child-Pugh score 9 (7-13) 10 (7-13) 0.003 0.427 1.242 (0.728-2.118)
Virologic response, n (%) 0.001 0.001 3.984 (2.262-7.017)
Sustained virologic suppression 55 (63.9) 6 (26.1)
Virologic breakthrough 29 (33.7) 9 (39.1)
Suboptimal response 2 (2.4) 6 (26.1)
Sustained virologic suppression (n=67) Virologic breakthrough (n=38) Suboptimal response (n=9) P value
Age (years) 50 (23-66) 50 (27-71) 51 (38-55) 0.999
LAM duration (months) 37 (8-67) 29 (6-109) 37 (8-52) 0.664
Overlap period (months) 1 (0-25) 2 (0-19) 10 (0-17) 0.326
Concomitant LAM Tx., n (%) 0.852
 Switch without overlapping 28 (41.8) 16 (42.1) 3 (33.3)
 Switch with overlapping 36 (53.7) 21 (55.3) 5 (55.6)
 Add-on 3 (4.5) 1 (2.6) 1 (11.1)
Serum HBV DNA (pg/mL) 236 (0.5-600) 156.5 (3.3-2752.3) 495 (61-3862.6) 0.596
ALT (IU/L) 117 (28-1680) 240 (49-2561) 64 (52-126) 0.002
Total bilirubin (mg/dL) 2.7 (0.7-20.80) 3.4 (0.6-22.4) 2.5 (0.7-4.1) 0.100
Albumin (g/L) 3.1 (1.8-4.5) 2.9 (1.7-4.3) 2.8 (2.2-4.3) 0.078
Serum creatinine (mg/dL) 0.90 (0.60-1.50) 0.9 (0.6-9.8) 0.8 (0.57-1.6) 0.310
Prothrombin time (INR) 1.48 (1.07-3.38) 1.47 (1.12-2.51) 1.49 (1.35-2.17) 0.591
MELD 14.5 (9-27) 17 (10-28) 14 (10-25) 0.112
Child-Pugh score, n (%) 8 (7-13) 9 (7-13) 10 (7-12) 0.162
 Class B 49 (73.1) 21 (55.3) 4 (44.4) 0.074
 Class C 18 (26.9) 17 (44.7) 5 (55.6)
Patients Baseline CP score /Final CP score Baseline MELD score /Final MELD score Follow-up (months) Cause Antiviral response
124 11/15 35/35 1 Variceal bleeding NA
148 12/13 25/45 2 Liver failure NA
161 13/15 30/47 1 Hepatorenal syndrome NA
165 13/13 30/36 2 Liver failure NA
170 12/14 37/41 1 Liver failure NA
197 9/11 15/19 6 HCC and liver failure Undetectable HBV DNA
59 12/13 17/30 6 Hepatic encephalopathy Virologic breakthrough
45 12/13 25/29 12 Hepatorenal syndrome Suboptimal response
42 12/13 22/26 17 Liver failure Virologic breakthrough
14 10/13 16/51 21 Liver failure Suboptimal response
80 9/14 10/21 23 HCC and liver failure Suboptimal response
75 12/13 17/NA 17 Liver failure Virologic relapse
Table 1. Baseline characteristics at the time of ADV treatment

Data are given as median (range) or as number of cases (%).

LAM, lamivudine; ADV, adefovir dipivoxil; Tx, treatment; HBV, hepatitis B virus; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; INR, international normalized ratio; MELD, model for end stage liver disease.

Table 2. Factors associated with Child-Pugh score improvement (≥2 points) following ADV treatment

Data are given as median (range) or as number of cases (%).

CP, Child-Pugh score; OR, odds ratio; LAM, lamivudine; Tx, treatment; HBV, hepatitis B virus; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; INR, international normalized ratio; MELD, model for end stage liver disease.

Virologic data was missing in two patients.

P value was calculated using Cox proportional regression analysis.

Table 3. Comparison of baseline characteristics according to the virologic response to ADV treatment

Data are given as median (range) or as number of cases (%).

LAM, lamivudine; Tx, treatment; HBV, hepatitis B virus; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; INR, international normalized ratio; MELD, model for end stage liver disease.

P value was calculated using one way ANOVA test.

Table 4. Causes of death in 12 patients who died during ADV treatment

CP score, Child-Pugh score; MELD, model for end stage liver disease; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; NA, not available.