1,179 research outputs found

    Suppression of HBV by Tenofovir in HBV/HIV coinfected patients : a systematic review and meta-analysis

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    Background: Hepatitis B coinfection is common in HIV-positive individuals and as antiretroviral therapy has made death due to AIDS less common, hepatitis has become increasingly important. Several drugs are available to treat hepatitis B. The most potent and the one with the lowest risk of resistance appears to be tenofovir (TDF). However there are several questions that remain unanswered regarding the use of TDF, including the proportion of patients that achieves suppression of HBV viral load and over what time, whether suppression is durable and whether prior treatment with other HBV-active drugs such as lamivudine, compromises the efficacy of TDF due to possible selection of resistant HBV strains. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis following PRISMA guidelines and using multilevel mixed effects logistic regression, stratified by prior and/or concomitant use of lamivudine and/or emtricitabine. Results: Data was available from 23 studies including 550 HBV/HIV coinfected patients treated with TDF. Follow up was for up to seven years but to ensure sufficient power the data analyses were limited to three years. The overall proportion achieving suppression of HBV replication was 57.4%, 79.0% and 85.6% at one, two and three years, respectively. No effect of prior or concomitant 3TC/FTC was shown. Virological rebound on TDF treatment was rare. Interpretation: TDF suppresses HBV to undetectable levels in the majority of HBV/HIV coinfected patients with the proportion fully suppressed continuing to increase during continuous treatment. Prior treatment with 3TC/FTC does not compromise efficacy of TDF treatment. The use of combination treatment with 3TC/FTC offers no significant benefit over TDF alone

    Suppression of HBV by Tenofovir in HBV/HIV Coinfected Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

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    Background:Hepatitis B coinfection is common in HIV-positive individuals and as antiretroviral therapy has made death due to AIDS less common, hepatitis has become increasingly important. Several drugs are available to treat hepatitis B. The most potent and the one with the lowest risk of resistance appears to be tenofovir (TDF). However there are several questions that remain unanswered regarding the use of TDF, including the proportion of patients that achieves suppression of HBV viral load and over what time, whether suppression is durable and whether prior treatment with other HBV-active drugs such as lamivudine, compromises the efficacy of TDF due to possible selection of resistant HBV strains.Methods:A systematic review and meta-analysis following PRISMA guidelines and using multilevel mixed effects logistic regression, stratified by prior and/or concomitant use of lamivudine and/or emtricitabine.Results:Data was available from 23 studies including 550 HBV/HIV coinfected patients treated with TDF. Follow up was for up to seven years but to ensure sufficient power the data analyses were limited to three years. The overall proportion achieving suppression of HBV replication was 57.4%, 79.0% and 85.6% at one, two and three years, respectively. No effect of prior or concomitant 3TC/FTC was shown. Virological rebound on TDF treatment was rare.Interpretation:TDF suppresses HBV to undetectable levels in the majority of HBV/HIV coinfected patients with the proportion fully suppressed continuing to increase during continuous treatment. Prior treatment with 3TC/FTC does not compromise efficacy of TDF treatment. The use of combination treatment with 3TC/FTC offers no significant benefit over TDF alone

    Multi organ assessment of compensated cirrhosis patients using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging

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    Background and Aims: Advancing liver disease results in deleterious changes in a number of critical organs. The ability to measure structure, blood flow and tissue perfusion within multiple organs in a single scan has implications for determining the balance of benefit versus harm for therapies. Our aim was to establish the feasibility of Magnetic Resonance Imaging to assess changes in compensated cirrhosis (CC), and relate this to disease severity and future liver related outcomes (LROs). Methods: 60 CC patients, 40 healthy volunteers and 7 decompensated cirrhotics were recruited. In a single scan session, MRI measures comprised phase-contrast MRI vessel blood flow, arterial spin labelling tissue perfusion, T1 longitudinal relaxation time and volume assessment of liver, spleen and kidneys, heart rate and cardiac index. We explore MRI parameters with disease severity and differences in baseline MRI parameters in those 11 (18%) of CC patients who had future LROs. Results: In the liver compositional changes were reflected by increased T1 in progressive disease (p<0.001) and an increase in liver volume in CC (p=0.006), with associated progressive reduction in liver (p < 0.001) and splenic (p<0.001) perfusion. A significant reduction in renal cortex T1 and increase in cardiac index and superior mesenteric arterial (SMA) blood flow was seen with increasing disease severity. Baseline liver T1 (p=0.01) and perfusion (p< 0.01), and renal cortex T1 (p<0.01) were significantly different in CC patients who subsequently developed negative LROs. Conclusions: MRI allows the contemporaneous assessment of organs in liver cirrhosis in a single scan without the requirement of contrast agent. MRI parameters of liver T1, renal T1, hepatic and splenic perfusion, and SMA blood flow were related to risk of LROs

    Characterization of a prothrombotic phenotype using thrombin generation and thrombin activity in cirrhosis and portal hypertension

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    Background: Patients with advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD) may develop a prothrombotic phenotype that seems to be more pronounced with more severe liver dysfunction. An imbalance of endogenous pro- and anticoagulants is not fully captured by routine coagulation assays. Methods: In a cohort of ACLD patients undergoing hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement, we assessed thrombin generation (TGA) using two commercially available assays (Technothrombin and Thrombinoscope) with and without addition of soluble thrombomodulin (TM), as well as thrombin activity, alongside a panel of coagulation parameters. Results: The cohort encompassed 37 patients (median age 55.3 years, mean HVPG 16 ± 5 mm Hg). In the TM-modified Thrombinoscope TGA, the endogenous thrombin generation potential (ETP) was significantly increased in Child-Pugh-Score (CPS) B/C patients (N = 23, 62 %) compared to CPS A patients (N = 14, 38 %) (ETP: 546 nM∗min (443–696) vs. 404 nM∗min (289–573), p = 0.028). Using the Technothrombin TGA without TM, patients with CPS B/C had decreased ETP compared to CPS A patients (ETP: 2792 ± 1336 nM∗min vs. 5040 ± 816 nM∗min, p &lt; 0.001) and with addition of TM (final concentration: 5 nM; ETP: 2545 ± 1327 nM∗min vs. 4824 ± 929 nM∗min, p &lt; 0.001). Thrombin activity levels were 0.6pM in median (0.2–1.6pM) and above the level of detectability (0.10pM) in 94.6 % of patients but were not correlated to severity of cirrhosis (CPS A 0.7pM vs CPS B/C 0.4pM, p = 0.377) nor to parameters of TGA. Conclusion: Thrombin plasma levels are elevated in liver disease patients without apparent correlation to TGA or severity of cirrhosis. TGAs can be modified with TM to enable protein C-dependent anticoagulation, but result in differences with regard to severity of liver disease.</p

    Characterization of a prothrombotic phenotype using thrombin generation and thrombin activity in cirrhosis and portal hypertension

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    Background: Patients with advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD) may develop a prothrombotic phenotype that seems to be more pronounced with more severe liver dysfunction. An imbalance of endogenous pro- and anticoagulants is not fully captured by routine coagulation assays. Methods: In a cohort of ACLD patients undergoing hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) measurement, we assessed thrombin generation (TGA) using two commercially available assays (Technothrombin and Thrombinoscope) with and without addition of soluble thrombomodulin (TM), as well as thrombin activity, alongside a panel of coagulation parameters. Results: The cohort encompassed 37 patients (median age 55.3 years, mean HVPG 16 ± 5 mm Hg). In the TM-modified Thrombinoscope TGA, the endogenous thrombin generation potential (ETP) was significantly increased in Child-Pugh-Score (CPS) B/C patients (N = 23, 62 %) compared to CPS A patients (N = 14, 38 %) (ETP: 546 nM∗min (443–696) vs. 404 nM∗min (289–573), p = 0.028). Using the Technothrombin TGA without TM, patients with CPS B/C had decreased ETP compared to CPS A patients (ETP: 2792 ± 1336 nM∗min vs. 5040 ± 816 nM∗min, p &lt; 0.001) and with addition of TM (final concentration: 5 nM; ETP: 2545 ± 1327 nM∗min vs. 4824 ± 929 nM∗min, p &lt; 0.001). Thrombin activity levels were 0.6pM in median (0.2–1.6pM) and above the level of detectability (0.10pM) in 94.6 % of patients but were not correlated to severity of cirrhosis (CPS A 0.7pM vs CPS B/C 0.4pM, p = 0.377) nor to parameters of TGA. Conclusion: Thrombin plasma levels are elevated in liver disease patients without apparent correlation to TGA or severity of cirrhosis. TGAs can be modified with TM to enable protein C-dependent anticoagulation, but result in differences with regard to severity of liver disease.</p
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