If you work on the front lines of medical care treating patients with hepatitis, you may not have time to review all the hepatitis research that enters the medical literature every month. Here’s a quick look at some notable news items and journal articles published over the past month, covering a variety of the major hepatitis viruses.
A study in Hepatology has provided a preclinical risk assessment paradigm with which to better understand cardiovascular drug-drug interaction risk for hepatitis C–virus infected patients treated with sofosbuvir in combination with other direct acting antivirals and the antiarrhythmic drug amiodarone.
A Japanese study found that, although levels of Wisteria floribunda agglutinin-positive Mac-2-binding protein could be a useful indicator of liver fibrosis in patients with hepatitis B or C infection, WFA+-M2BP levels in the two groups significantly differed, even in the same degree of fibrosis.
Interferon-free, guideline-tailored therapy with direct-acting antivirals is highly effective and safe for hepatitis C virus–associated mixed cryoglobulinemia patients, according to a recent study.
Another recent study found that pegylated interferon (PegIFN) intensification in hepatitis B “e” antigen (HBeAg)-positive coinfected patients did not lead to increased clearance rates of HBeAg or hepatitis B surface antigen quantification (qHBsAg), despite faster declines of antigen levels while on PegIFN.
A study in HIV Medicine found that, under real-life conditions, treatment of patients infected with hepatitis C virus and of patients coinfected with HCV/HIV with all-oral direct-acting antiviral combinations led to high and similar rates of sustained virological response 12 weeks after the end of therapy.
Hepatitis B virus coinfection was the most important risk factor for liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in HIV-infected patients, and should be diagnosed early in HIV care to optimize treatment outcomes, a recent study showed.
Immunity persisted 24 months after a single dose of inactivated hepatitis A vaccine and live attenuated hepatitis A vaccine was administered to school-age children, according to a study published in Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics.
A hepatitis C treatment scale-up strategy in Rhode Island could reduce cirrhosis cases and liver-related deaths by 78.9% and 72.4%, respectively, by 2030, according to a study in Epidemiology and Infection.
Viral blipping is a frequent event during nucleoside analogue treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection, a study found, although it did not lead to any clinically significant outcomes and thus may not require more frequent blood work and patient visits in clinical practice.
A study of liver and spleen stiffness in hepatitis C virus–infected patients – with advanced liver disease and sustained virologic response after interferon-free treatment – found that improvement of liver stiffness may be due to reduced necroinflammation, and to a lesser extent regression of cirrhosis. Improvement was more pronounced between therapy baseline and end of treatment than therapy baseline and 24 weeks after end of treatment.
From 2000 to 2011, 4,346 adults who died in New York City had a report of a hepatitis B virus infection (0.7%), according to a study in Epidemiology and Infection. Of the HBV-infected decedents, 1,074 (25%) were HIV coinfected. Fifty-five percent of HBV monoinfected and 95% of HBV/HIV coinfected decedents died prematurely, the researchers found.
Prison-based hepatitis C virus treatment achieves outcomes similar to those of community-based treatment, according to a study in the Journal of Viral Hepatitis, with those not released or transferred during treatment doing particularly well.
Treatment interventions to curb the hepatitis C virus epidemic among HIV-infected men who have sex with men are effective if high-risk behavior does not increase as it has during the last decade, according to a study in Hepatology.
The results of an international quality control study underline the urgent need to improve methods used to monitor hepatitis Delta virus viremia.
An investigation of a hepatitis E virus genotype 4 outbreak in Zhejiang Province, China, found that the outbreak was most likely caused by contaminated tap water rather than food.
A German study found that short treatment with 8 weeks of sofosbuvir and ledipasvir seems highly effective and safe in well-selected hepatitis C virus mono- and HIV/HCV-coinfected patients in a real-world setting.
A study of historical events fueling the cross-continental spread of hepatitis C virus epidemics said drivers for the epidemic were the advent of intravenous medical therapies and devices, growth in the heroin trade, and population mixing during armed conflicts.
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