Poor response to 18-month lamivudine monotherapy in chronic hepatitis B patients with IgM anti-HBc and acute exacerbation

J. J. Chen, C. Y. Lin, M. J. Sheu, H. T. Kuo, C. S. Sun, L. Y. Tang, S. L. Wang, S. L. Tsai*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Appearance of immunoglobulin class M antibody against hepatitis B core antigen is a predictor of beneficial response to interferon-alpha therapy in chronic hepatitis B patients, but its relationship with the efficacy of lamivudine therapy remains unclear. Aim: To investigate the outcome of lamivudine therapy in chronic hepatitis B patients with immunoglobulin class M antibody against hepatitis B core antigen and acute exacerbation. Methods: Chronic hepatitis B patients with acute exacerbation receiving a national-wide therapeutic trial of 18-month lamivudine monotherapy were enrolled for the analysis. Four consecutive seronegative patients were recruited as individual matching controls of one positive subject. Immunoglobulin class M antibody against hepatitis B core antigen in serum was assayed monthly by an automated microparticle enzyme immunoassay. Results: Fifteen (8.9%) of 167 chronic hepatitis B patients with acute exacerbation were seropositive for IgM anti-HBc. Thus 60 seronegative patients were consecutively recruited as control group. At the end of therapy, two (13.3%) of the 15 seropositive patients achieved a sustained response, significantly lower than 26 (43.3%) of the control group. Conclusions: Appearance of immunoglobulin class M antibody against hepatitis B core antigen in chronic hepatitis B patients with acute exacerbation is a predictor of poor response to lamivudine monotherapy. This is clinically relevant to the decision-making in treating chronic hepatitis B patients with acute exacerbation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)85-90
Number of pages6
JournalAlimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Volume23
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 01 2006
Externally publishedYes

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