The effect of lamivudine therapy in hepatic decompensation during acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B
- PMID: 12586298
- DOI: 10.1016/s0168-8278(02)00419-1
The effect of lamivudine therapy in hepatic decompensation during acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B
Abstract
Background/aims: Severe acute exacerbation (AE) of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) can lead to hepatic decompensation and death. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of lamivudine therapy in hepatic decompensation during such AEs.
Methods: In a 10-month period, a total of 60 consecutive AE patients with jaundice and prolonged prothrombin time over 3s were treated with lamivudine 150 mg daily. As a historical control, another 31 CHB patients with AE resulting in hepatic decompensation hospitalized in an immediate past 6-month period were enrolled for comparison.
Results: Patients in both groups were comparable in clinical and biochemical features. After a median treatment period of 6 weeks (range 1-48 weeks), all of the 25 patients with pretherapy bilirubin level < 20 mg/dl in the treatment group survived, while five (25%) of 20 patients in the control group died (P=0.013; odds ratios, 2.667; 95% confidence interval, 1.787-3.979). However, the mortality rate was similar in patients with pretherapy bilirubin level > or =20 mg/dl in both groups.
Conclusions: These results suggest that lamivudine may prevent fatality in CHB patients with hepatic decompensation if therapy starts early enough or before serum bilirubin level rise over 20 mg/dl, but helps little if serum level already risen over that level.
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