TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustained clinical improvement of a patient with decompensated Hepatitis B virus-related cirrhosis after treatment with lamivudine monotherapy
AU - Nagasaki, Futoshi
AU - Ueno, Yoshiyuki
AU - Yamamoto, Takeshi
AU - Nakagomi, Yu
AU - Kido, Osamu
AU - Kakazu, Eiji
AU - Matsuda, Yasunori
AU - Kogure, Takayuki
AU - Yamagiwa, Yoko
AU - Kikuchi, Kumiko
AU - Fukushima, Koji
AU - Kanno, Noriatsu
AU - Niitsuma, Hirofumi
AU - Shimosegawa, Tooru
PY - 2006/9
Y1 - 2006/9
N2 - Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, which causes liver cirrhosis and hèpatocellular carcinoma, remains a major health problem in Asian countries. Recent development of vaccine for prevention is reported to be successful in reducing the size of chronically infected carriers, although the standard medical therapies have not been established up to now. In this report, we encountered a patient with decompensated HBV-related cirrhosis who exhibited the dramatic improvements after antiviral therapy. The patient was a 50-year-old woman. Previous conventional medical treatments were not effective for this patient, thus this patient had been referred to our hospital. However, the administration of lamivudine, a reverse transcriptase inhibitor, for 23 months dramatically improved her liver severity. During this period, no drug resistant mutant HBV emerged, and the serum HBV-DNA level was continuously suppressed. These virological responses were also maintained even after the antiviral therapy was discontinued. Moreover, both hepatitis B surface antigen and e antigen were observed to have disappeared in this patient. The administration of lamivudine to patients with HBV-related cirrhosis, like our present case, should be considered as an initial medical therapeutic option, especially in countries where liver transplantation is not reliably available.
AB - Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, which causes liver cirrhosis and hèpatocellular carcinoma, remains a major health problem in Asian countries. Recent development of vaccine for prevention is reported to be successful in reducing the size of chronically infected carriers, although the standard medical therapies have not been established up to now. In this report, we encountered a patient with decompensated HBV-related cirrhosis who exhibited the dramatic improvements after antiviral therapy. The patient was a 50-year-old woman. Previous conventional medical treatments were not effective for this patient, thus this patient had been referred to our hospital. However, the administration of lamivudine, a reverse transcriptase inhibitor, for 23 months dramatically improved her liver severity. During this period, no drug resistant mutant HBV emerged, and the serum HBV-DNA level was continuously suppressed. These virological responses were also maintained even after the antiviral therapy was discontinued. Moreover, both hepatitis B surface antigen and e antigen were observed to have disappeared in this patient. The administration of lamivudine to patients with HBV-related cirrhosis, like our present case, should be considered as an initial medical therapeutic option, especially in countries where liver transplantation is not reliably available.
KW - Chronic hepatitis
KW - HBV
KW - Lamivudine
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U2 - 10.1620/tjem.210.29
DO - 10.1620/tjem.210.29
M3 - Article
C2 - 16960342
AN - SCOPUS:33748597946
VL - 210
SP - 29
EP - 36
JO - Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
JF - Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
SN - 0040-8727
IS - 1
ER -