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      Is the tenofovir based therapy almighty for previous treatment failure in chronic hepatitis B?

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          Abstract

          See Article on Page 241 During the past decade, management of drug resistant chronic hepatitis B (CHB) has been a major issue [1,2]. A series of new antiviral agents has been developed, which provided new treatment options as well as new resistance issues. Hence, to avoid multidrug resistance [2], combination of antiviral agents without cross resistance has been recommended [3]. However, combination of the less potent drug did not produce a better efficacy while the incidence of additional resistance has decreased [3-5]. A more potent drug was needed for a better antiviral response. Tenofovir disproxil fumarate (TDF) is a nucleotide analogue which has a strong antiviral effect in treatment naïve as well as treatment experienced CHB patients for a long term periods [6,7]. Also its therapeutic efficacy is much improved than that of adefovir (ADV) [7]. Therefore it is natural that combination therapy containing TDF show higher response rates than ADV-based therapies for management of drug resistance. Previously, TDF plus ETV therapy was evaluated in Western countries [8], and subsequently in Korea as well (Table 1) [9-11]. This combination therapy showed a better virologic response compared with ADV plus ETV therapy in refractory or suboptimal responders to lamivudine (LMV) plus ADV combination in a retrospective study conducted in Korea (at 12 month, 84.8% vs. 26.7%, respectively, P<0.001) [11]. The study included 58.7% of multidrug resistant CHB patients. Single arm studies of TDF-ETV combination were reported with a retrospective and a prospective design in Korea [9,10]. Virologic response was achieved in approximately 80% of patients within a year. Furthermore, the antiviral efficacy was not influenced by the type of prior therapies and baseline resistance mutations in both studies [9,10]. In the current issue, Kim et al. introduced an interesting data regarding management of suboptimal responders to ETV-ADV combination therapy [12]. They observed the patients for a long term period up to 3 years after initiating ETV-ADV combination therapy for LMV, ADV, and/or ETV resistance. In addition, the authors evaluated the responses of TDF based therapy which was introduced in case of refractory to the ETV-ADV combination. Among 48 patients enrolled, 12 patients achieved virologic response within 3 years, and 26 patients switched to the TDF based therapies due to suboptimal response despite long term ETV-ADV combination therapy. Ten patients received TDF monotherapy, of whom 9 achieved virologic response while 9 patients received TDF combination therapy (TDF-LMV in 7 and TDF-ETV combination in 2 patients), of whom 8 achieved virologic response. The authors subsequently performed in vitro susceptibility test using replicons obtained from 4 patients. Interestingly, albeit weak, replication was detected in the case of TDF monotherapy while no replication was observed under TDF-ETV combination therapy. In this study, the response rate of ETV-ADV therapy was relatively low (12 out of 48 patients in 3 years) in the patients with multiple lines of treatment failure as expected, and it is consistent with previous report [13]. When comparing the TDF based therapies for ADV-ETV suboptimal responders, TDF monotherapy was efficacious and seemed not to be inferior to the TDF based combination therapies (90% vs 89%, respectively). As mentioned above, the high efficacy of TDF-based combination therapy has been reported from Korea [9-11,14]. However, several additional data comparing TDF monotherapy and TDF-ETV combination therapy highlighted that monotherapy is as efficacious as combination therapy even for multiple drug resistance (Table 1) [15-18]. For example, virologic response was achieved in 71% of patients with TDF monotherapy while in 73% of patients with TDF-ETV combination therapy (P>0.99) after 48 weeks in the presence of ETV resistance [17]. Likewise, in another prospective study which included ADV-resistant CHB patients, virologic response rate was 62% in the TDF monotherapy group after 96 weeks while 63.5% in the sequential 48-week TDF-ETV combination therapy and subsequent 48-week TDF monotherapy group (P=0.88) [18]. Also, type of resistant mutation did not significantly affect the outcome under TDF monotherapy [15,16]. In contrast, there is a discrepancy between Kim et al’s. [12] in vitro study finding and these clinical data, in terms of incomplete suppression of mutant HBV by TDF monotherapy. The HBV mutant clones retained no known TDF-resistant mutation, but efficacy of TDF was limited. The sequences denoted only LMV-resistant mutations together with several multiple site amino acid substitutions of which the significance has not been proved. As we still don’t have experience of TDF resistance in HBV mono-infected patients, so it would be worth evaluating effect of individual substitutions on viral replication fitness under various antiviral agents including TDF. Otherwise, it would be difficult to acknowledge the role of the substitutions found in the clones. Clinical course of patients with drug resistance is troublesome, not only because of decreased virologic response, but also because of lack of serologic response. Most of the patients included in Kim et al. [12] study were HBeAg positive, i.e. 97.9% in overall patients. As they mentioned, response guided therapy using HBsAg as well as HBeAg quantification could be helpful. In addition, immune responses may need to be boostered in a separate manner. For example, combination of pegylated interferon [19], toll like receptor agonist [20], therapeutic vaccine [21], or other new emerging therapy might be helpful. Otherwise, end point of treatment will not be able to be reached in CHB patients who have experienced multiple drug resistance.

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          Combination of Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate and Peginterferon α-2a Increases Loss of Hepatitis B Surface Antigen in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B.

          Patients chronically infected with the hepatitis B virus rarely achieve loss of serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) with the standard of care. We evaluated HBsAg loss in patients receiving the combination of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) and peginterferon α-2a (peginterferon) for a finite duration in a randomized trial.
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            Results of a phase III clinical trial with an HBsAg-HBIG immunogenic complex therapeutic vaccine for chronic hepatitis B patients: experiences and findings.

            Even though various experimental therapeutic approaches for chronic hepatitis B infection have been reported, few of them have been verified by clinical trials. We have developed an antigen-antibody (HBsAg-HBIG) immunogenic complex therapeutic vaccine candidate with alum as adjuvant (YIC), aimed at breaking immune tolerance to HBV by modulating viral antigen processing and presentation. A double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase II B clinical trial of YIC has been reported previously, and herein we present the results of the phase III clinical trial of 450 patients. Twelve doses of either YIC or alum alone as placebo were administered randomly to 450 CHB patients and they were followed for 24weeks after the completion of immunization. The primary end point was HBeAg seroconversion, and the secondary end points were decrease in viral load, improvement of liver function, and histology. In contrast to the previous phase II B trial using six doses of YIC and alum as placebo, six more injections of YIC or alum resulted in a decrease of the HBeAg seroconversion rate from 21.8% to 14.0% in the YIC group, but an increase from 9% to 21.9% in the alum group. Decrease in serum HBV DNA and normalization of liver function were similar in both groups (p>0.05). Overstimulation with YIC did not increase but decreased its efficacy due to immune fatigue in hosts. An appropriate immunization protocol should be explored and is crucial for therapeutic vaccination. Multiple injections of alum alone could have stimulated potent inflammatory and innate immune responses contributing to its therapeutic efficacy, and needs further investigation. Copyright © 2013 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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              No detectable resistance to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate after 6 years of therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B.

              One major challenge in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B is to maintain long-term viral suppression without promoting the selection of drug-resistant mutations. We analyzed data from 347 hepatitis B e antigen-negative and 238 hepatitis B e antigen positive patients receiving tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in an open-label, longterm extension of two phase 3 studies. To date, resistance analyses have been completed for patients receiving up to 288 weeks (6 years) of TDF. Population sequencing of hepatitis B virus (HBV) polymerase/reverse transcriptase (pol/RT) was attempted for all patients at baseline, and any patient who remained viremic (HBV DNA 400 copies/mL [69 IU/mL]) at week 288 or at the end of treatment with TDF (n552) or emtricitabine(FTC)/TDF (n57). Phenotypic analyses were performed in HepG2 cells using recombinant HBV containing patient pol/RT sequences. Approximately half of the patients on open-label treatment who qualified for genotyping had pol/RT sequence changes compared to baseline (23/52 [44%] on TDF, 4/7 [57%] on FTC/TDF). Most changes were at polymorphic sites and none were associated with TDF resistance. Virologic breakthrough occurred infrequently and was associated with nonadherence to study medication in the majority of cases (12/16, 75%). Per protocol, 57 patients (10%)were eligible to switch to FTC/TDF; the majority had HBV DNA <400 copies/mL at their last study visit regardless of whether they switched to FTC/TDF (n534) or maintained TDF monotherapy (n517). No patient exhibited persistent viremia (HBV DNA never <400 copies/mL) after week 240. TDF monotherapy maintains effective suppression of HBV DNA through 288 weeks of treatment with no evidence of TDF resistance.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clin Mol Hepatol
                Clin Mol Hepatol
                CMH
                Clinical and Molecular Hepatology
                The Korean Association for the Study of the Liver
                2287-2728
                2287-285X
                June 2016
                25 June 2016
                : 22
                : 2
                : 238-240
                Affiliations
                Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Medical College, Ansan, Korea
                Author notes
                Corresponding author : Hyung Joon Yim Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Internal Medicine, Korea University Ansan Hospital, 123 Jeokgeum-ro, DanwonGu, Ansan 15355, Korea Tel: +82-31-412-6565, Fax: +82-31-412-5582 E-mail: gudwns21@ 123456medimail.co.kr
                Article
                cmh-2016-0103
                10.3350/cmh.2016.0103
                4946400
                27377908
                ac8ef675-cef6-4dc1-a8df-fa6f4824637c
                Copyright © 2016 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.

                History
                : 6 May 2016
                : 10 June 2016
                Categories
                Editorial

                Gastroenterology & Hepatology
                chronic hepatitis b,tenofovir,treatment failure,resistance,suboptimal

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