64 results on '"Norah Terrault"'
Search Results
2. Reproductive health and liver disease: a patient-friendly summary of the 2021 AASLD guidance
- Author
-
Cynthia Levy, Carla W. Brady, Norah Terrault, Matthew J. Stotts, and Monika Sarkar
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Patient Pages - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Hepatitis B virus reactivation associated with new classes of immunosuppressants and immunomodulators: A systematic review, meta-analysis, and expert opinion
- Author
-
George V. Papatheodoridis, Vasileios Lekakis, Thodoris Voulgaris, Pietro Lampertico, Thomas Berg, Henry L.Y. Chan, Jia-Horng Kao, Norah Terrault, Anna S. Lok, and K. Rajender Reddy
- Subjects
Hepatitis B virus ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,Receptors, Chimeric Antigen ,Hepatology ,Hepatitis B ,Antiviral Agents ,Adjuvants, Immunologic ,Humans ,Cytokines ,Virus Activation ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Expert Testimony ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
HBV reactivation (HBVr) can be prevented by nucleos(t)ide analogues (NAs). We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis on the risk of HBVr associated with new classes of immunosuppressive and immunomodulatory therapies and developed guidance on NA prophylaxis. An expert panel reviewed the data and categorised the risk of HBVr associated with each class of drugs into low (1%), intermediate (1-10%), and high (10%). Our search uncovered 59 studies, including 3,424 HBsAg+ and 5,799 HBsAg-/anti-HBc+ patients, which met our eligibility criteria. Based on medium-high quality evidence, immune checkpoint inhibitors, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, cytokine inhibitors, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell immunotherapies, and corticosteroids were associated with high HBVr risk in HBsAg+ patients; cytokine inhibitors, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell immunotherapies, and corticosteroids with intermediate risk in HBsAg-/anti-HBc+ patients; and anti-tumour necrosis factor agents and immune checkpoint inhibitors with low risk in HBsAg-/anti-HBc+ patients. Provisional recommendations are provided for drugs with low quality evidence. NA prophylaxis is recommended when using drugs associated with a high HBVr risk, while monitoring with on-demand NAs is recommended for low-risk drugs - either approach may be appropriate for intermediate-risk drugs. Consensus on definitions and methods of reporting HBVr, along with inclusion of HBsAg+, and HBsAg-/anti-HBc+ patients in clinical trials, will be key to gathering reliable data on the risk of HBVr associated with immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory therapies.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Influence of hepatitis C viral parameters on pregnancy complications and risk of mother-to-child transmission
- Author
-
Tatyana Kushner, Maya Djerboua, Mia J. Biondi, Jordan J. Feld, Norah Terrault, and Jennifer A. Flemming
- Subjects
Ontario ,Hepatology ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,RNA ,Female ,Viremia ,Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
With the World Health Organization plan for hepatitis C elimination by the year 2030, and recent guideline recommendations to screen all women during pregnancy for HCV, data on HCV in pregnancy are needed to determine the association of HCV viremia with adverse pregnancy outcomes and mother-to-child transmission (MTCT).This retrospective cohort study was performed in Ontario, Canada, using population-based administrative healthcare data. Individuals were stratified based on whether they had active HCV viremia during pregnancy or resolved viremia at time of pregnancy. Peak HCV viral load was determined. Logistic regression was used to determine the association of viremia with adverse pregnancy outcomes; maternal HCV RNA levels were evaluated as a predictor of MTCT.We identified a total of 2,170 pregnancies in 1,636 women who were HCV RNA positive prior to pregnancy; 1,780 (82%) pregnancies occurred in women who were HCV RNA positive during pregnancy. Patients who were HCV RNA positive during pregnancy were more likely to have preterm delivery (18% vs. 12%, p = 0.002), intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (4% vs.2%, p = 0.003), and post-partum hemorrhage (9% vs. 5%, p = 0.013), and less likely to have gestational diabetes (6% vs. 10%, p = 0.008) than those with resolved infection. Only 511 (29%) infants had screening consistent with guidelines after birth; there was an estimated 3.5% risk of MTCT. HCV RNA ≥6.0 logActive HCV viremia among individuals with a history of HCV infection significantly increases adverse pregnancy outcomes. Few infants are screened for MTCT. Higher HCV RNA is associated with increased risk of MTCT.The prevalence of hepatitis C has increased in women of child-bearing age and has important implications for women who become pregnant and their infants. We evaluated the effect that hepatitis C has on pregnancy outcomes as well as the rate of hepatitis C transmission to infants in a large database with linked mother-infant records. We found that active hepatitis C during pregnancy increased the risk of pregnancy complications. We also identified very low rates of testing of infants born to mothers with hepatitis C, but found higher rates of hepatitis C transmission to infants in mothers with higher virus levels.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Health disparities in chronic liver disease
- Author
-
Ani Kardashian, Marina Serper, Norah Terrault, and Lauren D. Nephew
- Subjects
Hepatology - Abstract
The syndemic of hazardous alcohol consumption, opioid use, and obesity has led to important changes in liver disease epidemiology that have exacerbated health disparities. Health disparities occur when plausibly avoidable health differences are experienced by socially disadvantaged populations. Highlighting health disparities, their sources, and consequences in chronic liver disease is fundamental to improving liver health outcomes. There have been large increases in alcohol use disorder in women, racial and ethnic minorities, and those experiencing poverty in the context of poor access to alcohol treatment, leading to increasing rates of alcohol-associated liver diseases. Rising rates of NAFLD and associated fibrosis have been observed in Hispanic persons, women aged 50, and individuals experiencing food insecurity. Access to viral hepatitis screening and linkage to treatment are suboptimal for racial and ethnic minorities and individuals who are uninsured or underinsured, resulting in greater liver-related mortality and later-stage diagnoses of HCC. Data from more diverse cohorts on autoimmune and cholestatic liver diseases are lacking, supporting the need to study the contemporary epidemiology of these disorders in greater detail. Herein, we review the existing literature on racial and ethnic, gender, and socioeconomic disparities in chronic liver diseases using a social determinants of health framework to better understand how social and structural factors cause health disparities and affect chronic liver disease outcomes. We also propose potential solutions to eliminate disparities, outlining health-policy, health-system, community, and individual solutions to promote equity and improve health outcomes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reply: People living with HIV and NAFLD and updated guidance on NAFLD screening
- Author
-
Mary E. Rinella and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Reply: ELF in the risk stratification of NAFLD
- Author
-
Mary E. Rinella and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Use of HBV RNA and hepatitis B core-related antigen to predict change in serological status and disease activity in CHB
- Author
-
Marc G. Ghany, Wendy C. King, Amanda S. Hinerman, Anna SF. Lok, Mauricio Lisker-Melman, Raymond T. Chung, Norah Terrault, Harry L.A. Janssen, Mandana Khalili, William M. Lee, Daryl T.Y. Lau, Gavin A. Cloherty, and Richard K. Sterling
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Prevalence, Risk Profiles, and National Implications of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Pregnant Individuals
- Author
-
Tatyana Kushner, Marcia Lange, Pamela A. Argiriadi, Rachel Meislin, Keith Sigel, Norah Terrault, Emma Rosenbluth, Carin Carroll, Theresa Worthington, Shaelyn O’Hara, Joanne Stone, Scott Friedman, Sonam Rosberger, Deborah Feldman, and Rhoda Sperling
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Healthcare affordability and effects on mortality among adults with liver disease from 2004-2018 in the United States
- Author
-
Divya Ayyala-Somayajula, Jennifer L. Dodge, Albert Farias, Norah Terrault, and Brian P. Lee
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Portrait of Regional Trends in Liver Transplantation for Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis in the United States
- Author
-
Liyun, Yuan, Courtney L, Hanlon, Norah, Terrault, Saleh, Alqahtani, Hani, Tamim, Michelle, Lai, and Behnam, Saberi
- Subjects
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Hepatology ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Risk Factors ,Liver Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,United States ,Liver Transplantation ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is one of the most common etiologies of liver transplantation (LT) in the United States. We investigated regional trends in waitlist candidates, LT rates, and recipient survival among patients with NASH.Using the United Network for Organ Sharing database by Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network regions, we investigated waitlist registration, LT rates, and survival for NASH between January 2004 and December 2019.The absolute number and percentage of total LT performed for NASH increased substantially in all Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network regions. In 2019, region 11 had the highest percentage of NASH-related LT with 31.4% followed by region 10 (25.3%) and region 8 (23.1%). Between 2015 and 2019, region 5 had the highest rising percentage in LT for NASH at 208%, followed by region 1 (194%) and region 4 (183%). The proportion of NASH hepatocellular carcinoma (NASH-HCC) was the highest in region 9 at 37.7% and lowest in region 10 (19.2%), region 3 (20.6%), and region 11 (20.8%). In multivariate analysis, diabetes (HR 1.18, P0.001), dialysis before LT (hazard ratio [HR] 1.53, P0.001), HCC (HR 1.19, P0.00), portal vein thrombosis (HR 1.24, P0.001), donor age (HR 1.026, P = 0.03), and recipient age (HR 1.24, P =0.001) were associated with worse survival.LT for patients with NASH has dramatically increased across all regions since 2004, but with substantial heterogeneity among regions in the proportion with HCC and post-LT survival. Identifying contributing factors to these regional differences is warranted.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A multi-society Delphi consensus statement on new fatty liver disease nomenclature
- Author
-
Rinella, Mary E, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, Ratziu, Vlad, Francque, Sven M, Sanyal, Arun J, Kanwal, Fasiha, Romero, Diana, Abdelmalek, Manal F, Anstee, Quentin M, Arab, Juan Pablo, Arrese, Marco, Bataller, Ramon, Beuers, Ulrich, Boursier, Jerome, Bugianesi, Elisabetta, Byrne, Christopher, Castro Narro, Graciela E, Chowdhury, Abhijit, Cortez-Pinto, Helena, Cryer, Donna, Cusi, Kenneth, El-Kassas, Mohamed, Klein, Samuel, Eskridge, Wayne, Fan, Jiangao, Gawrieh, Samer, Guy, Cynthia D, Harrison, Stephen A, Kim, Seung Up, Koot, Bart, Korenjak, Marko, Kowdley, Kris, Lacaille, Florence, Loomba, Rohit, Mitchell-Thain, Robert, Morgan, Timothy R, Powell, Elisabeth, Roden, Michael, Romero-Gómez, Manuel, Silva, Marcelo, Singh, Shivaram Prasad, Sookoian, Silvia C, Spearman, C Wendy, Tiniakos, Dina, Valenti, Luca, Vos, Miriam B, Wong, Vincent Wai-Sun, Xanthakos, Stavra, Yilmaz, Yusuf, Younossi, Zobair, Hobbs, Ansley, Villota-Rivas, Marcela, Newsome, Philip NVeeral Ajmeral, William Alazawi, Maryam Alkhatry, Naim Alkhouri, Alina Allen, Michael Allison, Khalid Alswat, Mario R Alvares-da-Silva, Michele Alves-Bezerra, Matthew J Armstrong, Diego Arufe, Pablo Aschner, Gyorgy Baffy, Meena Bansal, Pierre Bedossa, Renata Belfort, Thomas Berg, Annalisa Berzigotti, Michael Betel, Cristiana Bianco, Clifford Brass, Carol L Brosgart, Elizabeth Matthews Brunt, Maria Buti, Steve Caldwell, Rotonya Carr, Teresa Casanovas, Laurent Castera, Cyrielle Caussy, Eira Cerda, Naga Chalasani, Wah Kheong Chan, Phunchai Charatcharoenwitthaya, Michael Charlton, Amanda Cheung, Daniela Chiodi, Ray Chung, David Cohen, Kathleen Corey, Helma P Cotrim, Javier Crespo, Anuradha Dassanayake, Nicholas Davidson, Robert De Knegt, Victor De Ledinghen, Münevver Demir, Sebastian Diaz, Anna Mae Diehl, Bruce Dimmig, Melisa Dirchwolf, Ajay Duseja, Karel Dvorak, Mattias Ekstedt, Reda El Wakil, María Lucía Ferraz, Scott Friedman, Michael Fuchs, Amalia Gastaldelli, Anja Geerts, Andreas Geier, Marcos Girala, George Goh, Nicolas Goossens, Isabel Graupera, Hannes Hagström, Zachary Henry, Bela Hunyady, Alan Hutchison, Scott Isaacs, François Jornayvaz, Cynthia Kemp, Denise Kile, Won Kim, David Kleiner, Rohit Kohli, Marcelo Kugelmas, Joel Lavine, Mariana Lazo, Nathalie Leite, Adelina Lozano, Panu Luukkonen, Paula Macedo, Dina Mansour, Christos Mantzoros, Giulio Marchesini, Sebastián Marciano, Kim Martinez, Lyudmila Vladimirova Mateva, Jose M Mato, Alexis McCary, Luca Miele, Ivana Mikolasevic, Veronica Miller, Rosalba Moreno, Cynthia Moylan, Atsushi Nakajima, Jean Charles Nault, Suzanne Norris, Mazen Noureddin, C P Oliveira, Arlin Ong, Martín Padilla, Raluca Pais, Arturo Panduro, Manas K Panigrahi, George Papatheodoridis, Serena Pelusi, Marlene Pérez, Juanita Perez Escobar, Gianluca Perseghin, Mario Pessoa, Salvatore Petta, Massimo Pinzani, Monica Platon Lupsor, Atoosa Rabiee, Stefano Romeo, Yaron Rotman, Ian Rowe, Riina Salupere, Sanjaya Satapathy, Jörn M Schattenberg, Wendy Schaufert, Bernd Schnabl, Lynn Seim, Lawrence Serfaty, David Shapiro, Ashwani K Singal, Lubomir Skladany, Norbert Stefan, Jonathan Stine, Shikha Sundaram, Gianluca Svegliati-Baroni, Gyonzgi Szabo, Frank Tacke, Tawesak Tanwandee, Giovanni Targher, Norah Terrault, Brent Tetri, Maja Thiele, Baron Tisthammer, Aldo Torre Delgadillo, Michael Trauner, Emmanuel Tsochatzis, Laurens Van Kleef, Saskia Van Mil, Lisa VanWagner, Jose Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, Mette Vesterhus, Eduardo Vilar-Gomez, Kymberly Watt, Julia Wattacheril, Fonda Wilkins, José Willemse, Amany Zekry, Shira Zelber-Sagi, Mary E, R, Jeffrey V, L, Vlad, R, Sven M, F, Arun J, S, Fasiha, K, Diana, R, Manal F, A, Quentin M, A, Juan Pablo, A, Marco, A, Ramon, B, Ulrich, B, Jerome, B, Elisabetta, B, Christopher, B, Graciela E, C, Abhijit, C, Helena, C, Donna, C, Kenneth, C, Mohamed, E, Samuel, K, Wayne, E, Jiangao, F, Samer, G, Cynthia D, G, Stephen A, H, Seung Up, K, Bart, K, Marko, K, Kris, K, Florence, L, Rohit, L, Robert, M, Timothy R, M, Elisabeth, P, Michael, R, Manuel, R, Marcelo, S, Shivaram Prasad, S, Silvia C, S, C Wendy, S, Dina, T, Luca, V, Miriam B, V, Vincent, W, Stavra, X, Yusuf, Y, Zobair, Y, Ansley, H, Marcela, V, Newsome, NVeeral Ajmeral, P, Alazawi, W, Alkhatry, M, Alkhouri, N, Allen, A, Allison, M, Alswat, K, R Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alves-Bezerra, M, J Armstrong, M, Arufe, D, Aschner, P, Baffy, G, Bansal, M, Bedossa, P, Belfort, R, Berg, T, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Brass, C, L Brosgart, C, Matthews Brunt, E, Buti, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Casanovas, T, Castera, L, Caussy, C, Cerda, E, Chalasani, N, Kheong Chan, W, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Charlton, M, Cheung, A, Chiodi, D, Chung, R, Cohen, D, Corey, K, P Cotrim, H, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, De Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Diaz, S, Mae Diehl, A, Dimmig, B, Dirchwolf, M, Duseja, A, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El Wakil, R, Lucía Ferraz, M, Friedman, S, Fuchs, M, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, Girala, M, Goh, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Hagström, H, Henry, Z, Hunyady, B, Hutchison, A, Isaacs, S, Jornayvaz, F, Kemp, C, Kile, D, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Kohli, R, Kugelmas, M, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lozano, A, Luukkonen, P, Macedo, P, Mansour, D, Mantzoros, C, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Vladimirova Mateva, L, M Mato, J, Mccary, A, Miele, L, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, V, Moreno, R, Moylan, C, Nakajima, A, Charles Nault, J, Norris, S, Noureddin, M, P Oliveira, C, Ong, A, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Panduro, A, K Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Pelusi, S, Pérez, M, Perez Escobar, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Pinzani, M, Platon Lupsor, M, Rabiee, A, Romeo, S, Rotman, Y, Rowe, I, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, M Schattenberg, J, Schaufert, W, Schnabl, B, Seim, L, Serfaty, L, Shapiro, D, K Singal, A, Skladany, L, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Szabo, G, Tacke, F, Tanwandee, T, Targher, G, Terrault, N, Tetri, B, Thiele, M, Tisthammer, B, Torre Delgadillo, A, Trauner, M, Tsochatzis, E, Van Kleef, L, Van Mil, S, Vanwagner, L, Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Watt, K, Wattacheril, J, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Zekry, A, Zelber-Sagi, S, and Vincent Wai-Sun, W
- Subjects
steatotic liver disease ,MASLD ,alcohol ,steatohepatiti ,MetALD ,NASH ,nonalcoholic ,Delphi ,Fatty liver disease ,NAFLD ,cardiometabolic ,nomenclature ,mafld ,type 2 diabetes ,MED/13 - ENDOCRINOLOGIA - Abstract
Unlabelled: The principal limitations of the terms nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) are the reliance on exclusionary confounder terms and the use of potentially stigmatising language. This study set out to determine if content experts and patient advocates were in favour of a change in nomenclature and/or definition. Methods: A modified Delphi process was led by three large pan-national liver associations. Consensus was defined a priori as a supermajority (67%) vote. An independent committee of experts external to the nomenclature process made the final recommendation on the acronym and its diagnostic criteria. Results: A total of 236 panellists from 56 countries participated in four online surveys and two hybrid meetings. Response rates across the 4 survey rounds were 87%, 83%, 83% and 78%, respectively. 74% of respondents felt that the current nomenclature was sufficiently flawed to consider a name change. The terms 'non-alcoholic' and 'fatty' were felt to be stigmatising by 61% and 66% of respondents, respectively. Steatotic liver disease (SLD) was chosen as an overarching term to encompass the various aetiologies of steatosis. The term steatohepatitis was felt to be an important pathophysiological concept that should be retained. The name chosen to replace NAFLD was metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). There was consensus to change the definition to include the presence of at least one of five cardiometabolic risk factors. Those with no metabolic parameters and no known cause were deemed to have cryptogenic SLD. A new category, outside pure MASLD, termed MetALD was selected to describe those with MASLD who consume greater amounts of alcohol per week (140 to 350g/week and 210 to 420g/week for females and males respectively). Conclusions: The new nomenclature and diagnostic criteria are widely supported, non-stigmatising and can improve awareness and patient identification.
- Published
- 2023
13. Efficacy and Safety of Bepirovirsen in Chronic Hepatitis B Infection
- Author
-
Man-Fung, Yuen, Seng-Gee, Lim, Robert, Plesniak, Keiji, Tsuji, Harry L A, Janssen, Cristina, Pojoga, Adrian, Gadano, Corneliu P, Popescu, Tatyana, Stepanova, Tarik, Asselah, Gheorghe, Diaconescu, Hyung Joon, Yim, Jeong, Heo, Ewa, Janczewska, Alexander, Wong, Nevin, Idriz, Michio, Imamura, Giuliano, Rizzardini, Koichi, Takaguchi, Pietro, Andreone, Manuela, Arbune, Jinlin, Hou, Sung Jae, Park, Andrei, Vata, Jennifer, Cremer, Robert, Elston, Tamara, Lukić, Geoff, Quinn, Lauren, Maynard, Stuart, Kendrick, Helene, Plein, Fiona, Campbell, Melanie, Paff, Dickens, Theodore, Norah, Terrault, and Gastroenterology & Hepatology
- Subjects
Hepatitis B virus ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,General Medicine ,Oligonucleotides, Antisense ,Antiviral Agents ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Treatment Outcome ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,DNA, Viral ,Humans ,RNA, Viral ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,RNA, Messenger - Abstract
Background Bepirovirsen is an antisense oligonucleotide that targets all hepatitis B virus (HBV) messenger RNAs and acts to decrease levels of viral proteins. Methods We conducted a phase 2b, randomized, investigator-unblinded trial involving participants with chronic HBV infection who were receiving or not receiving nucleoside or nucleotide analogue (NA) therapy. Participants were randomly assigned (in a 3:3:3:1 ratio) to receive weekly subcutaneous injections of bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 24 weeks (group 1), bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks then 150 mg for 12 weeks (group 2), bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks then placebo for 12 weeks (group 3), or placebo for 12 weeks then bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg for 12 weeks (group 4). Groups 1, 2, and 3 received loading doses of bepirovirsen. The composite primary outcome was a hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) level below the limit of detection and an HBV DNA level below the limit of quantification maintained for 24 weeks after the planned end of bepirovirsen treatment, without newly initiated antiviral medication. Results The intention-to-treat population comprised 457 participants (227 receiving NA therapy and 230 not receiving NA therapy). Among those receiving NA therapy, a primary-outcome event occurred in 6 participants (9%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 31) in group 1, in 6 (9%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 43) in group 2, in 2 (3%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 16) in group 3, and 0 (0%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 8) in group 4. Among participants not receiving NA therapy, a primary-outcome event occurred in 7 participants (10%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 38), 4 (6%; 95% credible interval, 0 to 25), 1 (1%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 6), and 0 (0%; post hoc credible interval, 0 to 8), respectively. During weeks 1 through 12, adverse events, including injection-site reactions, pyrexia, fatigue, and increased alanine aminotransferase levels, were more common with bepirovirsen (groups 1, 2, and 3) than with placebo (group 4). Conclusions In this phase 2b trial, bepirovirsen at a dose of 300 mg per week for 24 weeks resulted in sustained HBsAg and HBV DNA loss in 9 to 10% of participants with chronic HBV infection. Larger and longer trials are required to assess the efficacy and safety of bepirovirsen. (Funded by GSK; B-Clear ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04449029.)
- Published
- 2022
14. Reply
- Author
-
Catherine Williamson and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
15. In Memoriam-Hugo R. Rosen
- Author
-
Norah Terrault, Vijay H. Shah, and Theo Heller
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
16. Characteristics of Older Patients With Immunotolerant Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection
- Author
-
Jordan J. Feld, Wendy C. King, Marc G. Ghany, Kyong-Mi Chang, Norah Terrault, Robert P. Perrillo, Mandana Khalili, Amanda S. Hinerman, Harry LA. Janssen, and Anna S. Lok
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Abstract
Most patients in the immunotolerant (IT) phase of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) transition to the immune active (IA-hepatitis B surface antigen [HBeAg]+) phase by early adulthood. We examined characteristics of adults in the IT vs IA-HBeAg+ phase and rate of transition from IT to other phases of CHB, with a focus on those ≥40 years.Demographic, clinical, and virologic characteristics of participants in the Hepatitis B Research Network adult cohort study with IT CHB (alanine aminotransferase ≤1.5 × upper limit of normal, hepatitis B virus DNA10Of 107 adult IT participants, 52 (48%) were30, 33 (31%) were 30 to 39, and 22 (21%) were ≥40 years old (maximum, 71 years). Among IT groups, the proportion born in Asia and duration of CHB were greater in older IT groups, but virologic and liver disease characteristics were similar. Compared with IA-HBeAg+ participants (n = 192), IT participants were younger, fewer were men, more were Asian, and platelets, qHBsAg, and qHBeAg levels were higher. Similar differences were observed when comparisons were made with the ≥40 years IT group. Among IT participants, 60 (56%) transitioned during 206 person-years of follow-up. The phase transition rate per 100 person-years was highest in the30 years group (33.0 [95% confidence interval [CI], 23.4-46.7]) vs the 30 to 39 years group (24.8 [95% CI, 15.6-39.4]) and ≥40 group (27.4 [95% CI, 14.8-50.9]), but 95% CIs overlapped.In a large North American population, over 50% of adults in the IT phase of CHB were ≥30 years and 20% were ≥40 years old, but older IT patients had similar characteristics and rates of transition as younger IT patients.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Universal Adult Hepatitis B Screening and Vaccination as the Path to Elimination
- Author
-
Samuel So, Norah Terrault, and Erin E. Conners
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
This Viewpoint describes new recommendations from the CDC regarding universal screening of adults for hepatitis B virus infection.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Alcohol use trajectories among U.S. adults during the first 42 weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic
- Author
-
Adam M. Leventhal, Junhan Cho, Lara A. Ray, Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, Brian P. Lee, Norah Terrault, Eric Pedersen, Jungeun Olivia Lee, Jordan P. Davis, Haomiao Jin, Jimi Huh, John P. Wilson, and Reid C. Whaley
- Subjects
Male ,Alcohol Drinking ,Ethanol ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,COVID-19 ,Middle Aged ,Toxicology ,Binge Drinking ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Pandemics ,Aged - Abstract
This study characterized the prevalence, drinking patterns, and sociodemographic characteristics of U.S. adult subpopulations with distinct drinking trajectories during the COVID-19 pandemic's first 42 weeks.Adult respondents (n = 8130) in a nationally representative prospective longitudinal study completed 21 biweekly web surveys (March 2020 to January 2021). Past-week alcohol drinking frequency (drinking days [range: 0 to 7]) and intensity (binge drinking on usual past-week drinking day [yes/no]) were assessed at each timepoint. Growth mixture models identified multiple subpopulations with homogenous drinking trajectories based on mean drinking days or binge drinking proportional probabilities across time.Four drinking frequency trajectories were identified: Minimal/stable (72.8% [95% CI = 71.8 to 73.8]) with1 mean past-week drinking days throughout; Moderate/late decreasing (6.7% [95% CI = 6.2 to 7.3) with 3.13 mean March drinking days and reductions during summer, reaching 2.12 days by January 2021; Moderate/early increasing (12.9% [95% CI = 12.2 to 13.6) with 2.13 mean March drinking days that increased in April and then plateaued, ending with 3.20 mean days in January 2021; and Near daily/early increasing (7.6% [95% CI = 7.0 to 8.2]) with 5.58 mean March drinking days that continued increasing without returning to baseline. Four drinking intensity trajectories were identified: Minimal/stable (85.8% [95% CI = 85.0% to 86.5%]) with0.01 binge drinking probabilities throughout; Low-to-moderate/fluctuating (7.4% [95% CI = 6.8% to 8%]) with varying binge probabilities across timepoints (range:0.12 to 0.26); Moderate/mid increasing (4.2% [95% CI = 3.7% to 4.6%]) with 0.39 April binge drinking probability rising to 0.65 during August-September without returning to baseline; High/early increasing trajectory (2.7% [95% CI = 2.3% to 3%]) with 0.84 binge drinking probability rising to 0.96 by June without returning to baseline. Males, Whites, middle-aged/older adults, college degree recipients, those consistently working, and those above the poverty limit were overrepresented in various increasing (vs. minimal/stable) frequency trajectories. Males, Whites, nonmarried, those without college degree, 18 to 39-year-olds, and middle aged were overrepresented in increasing (vs. minimal/stable) intensity trajectories.Several distinct U.S. adult sociodemographic subpopulations appear to have acquired new drinking patterns during the pandemic's first 42 weeks. Frequent alcohol use assessment in the COVID-19 era could improve personalized medicine and population health efforts to reduce drinking.
- Published
- 2022
19. Early Liver Transplantation for Severe Alcohol-Associated Hepatitis and a History of Prior Liver Decompensation
- Author
-
Ethan M. Weinberg, Matthew Dukewich, Neha Jakhete, Elizabeth Stonesifer, Gene Y. Im, Michael R. Lucey, Kirti Shetty, John P. Rice, David W. Victor, Mark R. Ghobrial, Akshay Shetty, Stephanie M. Rutledge, Sander S. Florman, Christine Hsu, Mohamed Shoreibah, Mahmoud Aryan, Babak J. Orandi, Hyosun Han, Norah Terrault, and Brian P. Lee
- Subjects
Adult ,End Stage Liver Disease ,Hepatology ,Hepatitis, Alcoholic ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,Esophageal and Gastric Varices ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,Severity of Illness Index ,Liver Transplantation ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
In the published studies of early liver transplantation (LT) for alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH), patients with a prior liver decompensation are excluded. The appropriateness of this criteria is unknown.Among 6 American Consortium of Early Liver Transplantation for Alcohol-Associated Hepatitis sites, we included consecutive early LT for clinically diagnosed AH between 2007 and 2020. Patients were stratified as first vs prior history of liver decompensation, with the latter defined as a diagnosis of ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, variceal bleeding, or jaundice, and evidence of alcohol use after this event. Adjusted Cox regression assessed the association of first (vs prior) decompensation with post-LT mortality and harmful (i.e., any binge and/or frequent) alcohol use.A total of 241 LT recipients (210 first vs 31 prior decompensation) were included: median age 43 vs 38 years ( P = 0.23), Model for End-Stage Liver Disease Sodium score of 39 vs 39 ( P = 0.98), and follow-up after LT 2.3 vs 1.7 years ( P = 0.08). Unadjusted 1- and 3-year survival among first vs prior decompensation was 93% (95% confidence interval [CI] 89%-96%) vs 86% (95% CI 66%-94%) and 85% (95% CI 79%-90%) vs 78% (95% CI 57%-89%). Prior (vs first) decompensation was associated with higher adjusted post-LT mortality (adjusted hazard ratio 2.72, 95% CI 1.61-4.59) and harmful alcohol use (adjusted hazard ratio 1.77, 95% CI 1.07-2.94).Prior liver decompensation was associated with higher risk of post-LT mortality and harmful alcohol use. These results are a preliminary safety signal and validate first decompensation as a criterion for consideration in early LT for AH patients. However, the high 3-year survival suggests a survival benefit for early LT and the need for larger studies to refine this criterion. These results suggest that prior liver decompensation is a risk factor, but not an absolute contraindication to early LT.
- Published
- 2022
20. Promise and pitfalls of new viral biomarkers for hepatocellular carcinoma risk prediction in patients with chronic hepatitis B
- Author
-
Kali Zhou and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Oncology ,Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Integrating Management of Hepatitis C Infection into Primary Care: the Key to Hepatitis C Elimination Efforts
- Author
-
Allison E. Wang, Eric Hsieh, Barbara J. Turner, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Primary Health Care ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Antiviral Agents ,Hepatitis C - Abstract
Elimination of hepatitis C virus (HCV), a leading cause of liver disease in the USA and globally, has been made possible with the advent of highly efficacious direct acting antivirals (DAAs). DAA regimens offer cure of HCV with 8-12 weeks of a well-tolerated once daily therapy. With increasingly straightforward diagnostic and treatment algorithms, HCV infection can be managed not only by specialists, but also by primary care providers. Engaging primary care providers greatly increases capacity to diagnose and treat chronic HCV and ultimately make HCV elimination a reality. However, barriers remain at each step in the HCV cascade of care from screening to evaluation and treatment. Since primary care is at the forefront of patient contact, it represents the ideal place to concentrate efforts to identify barriers and implement solutions to achieve universal HCV screening and increase curative treatment.
- Published
- 2021
22. The liver outcomes and equity (LOEq) index: neighborhood social determinants independently predict outcomes in liver transplantation
- Author
-
Kali Zhou, Leane Kuo, Jennifer Dodge, Laura Thompson, Norah Terrault, and Myles Cockburn
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Lifestyle factors and population attributable risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in lean vs non-lean populations
- Author
-
Kali Zhou, Tiffany Lim, Jennifer Dodge, Norah Terrault, and Veronica Setiawan
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Associations of food insecurity and fast-food consumption with diet quality in adults with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in a large population-based U.S. cohort
- Author
-
Ani Kardashian, Jennifer Dodge, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Discordance in categorization of acute-on-chronic-liver-failure in the national transplant database
- Author
-
Brian Lee, Giuseppe Cullaro, Aidan Vosooghi, Frederick Yao, Sarjukumar Panchal, David Goldberg, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Pregnancy as a unique opportunity to identify NAFLD in women: a prospective assessment
- Author
-
Tatyana Kushner, Shaelyn O’Hara, Marcia Lange, Carin Carroll, Emma Rosenbluth, Pamela Argiriadi, Rachel Meislin, Joanne Stone, Keith Sigel, Rhoda Sperling, Scott Friedman, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Survival and liver recompensation after declined for early liver transplantation for severe alcohol-associated hepatitis
- Author
-
Christine Hsu, Ethan Weinberg, Gene Im, William Davis, Jimin Ko, Stephanie Rutledge, Matthew Dukewich, Mohamed Shoreibah, Mahmoud Aryan, Aidan Vosooghi, Michael R. Lucey, John Rice, Norah Terrault, and Brian Lee
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. 577: RURAL-URBAN DIFFERENCES IN ALCOHOL ASSOCIATED LIVER DISEASE MORTALITY IN THE UNITED STATES FROM 1999-2019: AN ANALYSIS FROM THE CDC WONDER DATABASE
- Author
-
Divya Ayyala, Kali Zhou, Jennifer L. Dodge, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. 157: RETROSPECTIVE COHORT ANALYSIS OF FACTORS LINKED TO DIAGNOSTICS AND TREATMENT OF HEPATITIS C IN LARGE SAFETY NET HOSPITAL IN LOS ANGELES
- Author
-
Rishi Das, Allison E. Wang, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Su1378: DONOR ETHNICITY AND INFLUENCE ON GRAFT SURVIVAL IN LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS - A NATIONWIDE ANALYSIS
- Author
-
Curtis Maehara, Rajiv Patel, Jennifer L. Dodge, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Mo1359: CELL MEDIATED RESPONSES TO HEPATITIS E VIRUS ANTIGENS IN LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS
- Author
-
Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Susan D. Rouster, Heidi L. Meeds, Jennifer Price, Norah Terrault, Mohamed Tarek M. Shata, and Kenneth E. Sherman
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Contributors
- Author
-
Divya Ahuja, Wajiha Z. Akhtar, Frederick L. Altice, Hayley Berg, Annick Bórquez, John Cafardi, Javier A. Cepeda, Daniel Ciccarone, Don C. Des Jarlais, Ellen Eaton, Jonathan Feelemyer, Judith Feinberg, Audrey Li, Alain H. Litwin, Gregory M. Lucas, Lynn M. Madden, Natasha K. Martin, Benjamin McCoy-Redd, Jaimie P. Meyer, Dharushana Muthulingam, Brianna L. Norton, Irene Pericot-Valverde, David C. Perlman, Jody Rich, Christopher F. Rowley, Radha Sadacharan, Nikhil Seval, Roman Shrestha, Sandra A. Springer, Norah Terrault, and Kali Zhou
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Low Incidence of Adverse Outcomes in Adults With Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection in the Era of Antiviral Therapy
- Author
-
Anna S, Lok, Robert, Perrillo, Christina M, Lalama, Michael W, Fried, Steven H, Belle, Marc G, Ghany, Mandana, Khalili, Robert J, Fontana, Richard K, Sterling, Norah, Terrault, Jordan J, Feld, Adrian M, Di Bisceglie, Daryl T Y, Lau, Mohamed, Hassan, Harry L A, Janssen, and David, Kleiner
- Subjects
Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,HBsAg ,Cirrhosis ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hepatitis C virus ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,Article ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Decompensation ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,Prospective Studies ,Ontario ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Liver Neoplasms ,virus diseases ,Alanine Transaminase ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,United States ,HBeAg ,Coinfection ,Female ,Hepatitis D virus ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Outcomes of persons with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in the era of antiviral therapy (AVT) are not well characterized. We determined the incidence and factors associated with clinical outcomes in a multiethnic, North American cohort of adults with chronic HBV infection, who were not on AVT at enrollment. APPROACH AND RESULTS: Adults with chronic HBV infection, not receiving AVT, and without a history of decompensation, HCC, or liver transplantation (LT), were prospectively followed. Participants with known human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis C virus, or hepatitis D virus (HDV) coinfection were excluded. During follow-up, treatment could be initiated per standard of care. Clinical outcomes included: incident cirrhosis, decompensation, HCC, OLT, and HBV-related death. Among 1,418 participants analyzed, 51.5% were women, median age was 41.1 years, 75% were Asian, 10% White, 13% Black, 24% HBeAg(+), and 1.5% cirrhosis at baseline. During the study, 274 started treatment, 83 had an alanine aminotransferase flare, 118 of 330 initially HBeAg(+) became HBeAg(−), and 90 of 1,329 became HBsAg(−). After 6,641 person-years follow-up, 8 participants (4 of 21 with baseline cirrhosis) had 12 clinical outcomes (2 decompensation, 5 HCC, 2 OLT, and 3 HBV-related deaths) and 19 of 1,397 had incident cirrhosis. Twenty-one of 26 participants had first outcome before treatment, none had become HBsAg(−), whereas 5/9 HBeAg(+) had become HBeAg(−) at time of first outcome. Cumulative percentage of clinical outcomes was 16% at year 4 in participants with baseline cirrhosis and 2% (including incident cirrhosis) at year 7 in those without. CONCLUSIONS: Incidence of adverse outcomes was low in this closely monitored, large cohort of North American adults with predominantly inactive, chronic HBV without cirrhosis. Our data highlight the benefits of HBsAg loss and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment to prevent cirrhosis and other complications of chronic HBV infection.
- Published
- 2020
34. Re-establishing abstinence after alcohol relapse after early transplant (LT) for alcoholic hepatitis (AH) provides survival advantage
- Author
-
George Therapondos, Brian Lee, Gene Im, John Rice, Ann Lazar, Michael R. Lucey, Ethan Weinberg, Hyosun Han, Haripriya Maddur, R. Mark Ghobrial, Christine Hsu, Oren Fix, Sheila Eswaran, Kirti Shetty, Neha Jakhete, David Victor, David Foley, Neil Mehta, Mary Rinella, Thomas Schiano, Constance Mobley, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Increased risk of perinatal complications in women with cirrhosis: a population-based matched cohort study
- Author
-
Jacquie Lu, Monika Mullin, Maya Djerboua, Monika Sarkar, Susan Brogly, Maria Velez, Norah Terrault, and Jennifer Flemming
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Multicenter Validation of Association Between Decline in MRI-PDFF and Histologic Response in NASH
- Author
-
Rohit, Loomba, Brent A, Neuschwander-Tetri, Arun, Sanyal, Naga, Chalasani, Anna Mae, Diehl, Norah, Terrault, Kris, Kowdley, Srinivasan, Dasarathy, David, Kleiner, Cynthia, Behling, Joel, Lavine, Mark, Van Natta, Michael, Middleton, James, Tonascia, Claude, Sirlin, and Tanya, Wolfson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Placebo ,Chenodeoxycholic Acid ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Fibrosis ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Internal medicine ,Multicenter trial ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,Weight Loss ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Obeticholic acid ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Confidence interval ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Adipose Tissue ,Liver ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Steatosis ,Protons ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Emerging data from a single-center study suggests that a 30% relative reduction in liver fat content as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) from baseline may be associated with histologic improvement in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). There are limited multicenter data comparing an active drug versus placebo on the association between the quantity of liver fat reduction assessed by MRI-PDFF and histologic response in NASH. This study aims to examine the association between 30% relative reduction in MRI-PDFF and histologic response in obeticholic acid (OCA) versus placebo-treated patients in the FLINT (farnesoid X receptor ligand obeticholic acid in NASH trial). APPROACH AND RESULTS This is a secondary analysis of the FLINT trial including 78 patients with MRI-PDFF measured before and after treatment along with paired liver histology assessment. Histologic response was defined as a 2-point improvement in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease activity score without worsening of fibrosis. OCA (25 mg orally once daily) was better than placebo in improving MRI-PDFF by an absolute difference of -3.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], -6.5 to -0.2%, P value = 0.04) and relative difference of -17% (95% CI, -34 to 0%, P value = 0.05). The optimal cutoff point for relative decline in MRI-PDFF for histologic response was 30% (using Youden's index). The rate of histologic response in those who achieved less than 30% decline in MRI-PDFF versus those who achieved a 30% or greater decline in MRI-PDFF (MRI-PDFF responders) relative to baseline was 19% versus 50%, respectively. Compared with MRI-PDFF nonresponders, MRI-PDFF responders demonstrated both a statistically and clinically significant higher odds 4.86 (95% CI, 1.4-12.8, P value
- Published
- 2019
37. Increased hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence in women compared to men with high alpha fetoprotein at liver transplant
- Author
-
Monika, Sarkar, Jennifer L, Dodge, John P, Roberts, Norah, Terrault, Francis, Yao, and Neil, Mehta
- Subjects
Male ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Specialties of internal medicine ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Sex Factors ,Recurrence ,Sex differences ,Humans ,Women ,neoplasms ,Liver transplant ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Liver Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Tissue Donors ,digestive system diseases ,Liver Transplantation ,Tumor Burden ,RC581-951 ,Female ,alpha-Fetoproteins ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Liver cancer - Abstract
Introduction. Men have higher risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than women. Pre liver transplant (LT) alpha fetoprotein (AFP) levels strongly predict post LT HCC recurrence. Though women with HCC have higher AFP, the contribution of AFP level by gender to post LT HCC recurrence is unknown.Material and methods. In this UNOS-based, retrospective cohort study we investigate sex differences in HCC recurrence among LT recipients with MELD exception between 2006-2010. Covariates include race, disease etiology, co-morbidities, AFP at listing and LT, tumor burden, loco-regional therapy, and donor risk index. HCC recurrence was assessed by competing risks regression.Results. Of the eligible cohort (n = 5,002) included 3,872 men and 1,130 women. HCC recurred in 258 men (7%) and 66 women (6%). Median listing AFP was higher in women than men (14 vs. 11 ng/dL, p < 0.001). While no sex difference in overall HCC recurrence was detected (HR 0.9, 95% CI 0.7-1.2, p = 0.38), there was a strong interaction between gender and AFP on recurrence risk (p = 0.02). HCC recurrence was nearly three times higher in women (HR 4.2, 95% CI 2.2-8.2, p < 0.001) than men (HR 1.5, 95% CI 1.1-2.1, p = 0.02) with AFP at LT between 101-500 ng/dL.Conclusion. This study reveals novel sex differences in post LT HCC recurrence, which was nearly three times higher in women than men with high AFP at LT. Pre-LT AFP levels appear to carry a different prognosis in women than men, and a subset of female LT recipients may benefit from more intensive HCC surveillance after LT.
- Published
- 2016
38. Validation of the accuracy of the fast score for detecting non-alcoholic steatohepatitis patients at high risk of becoming cirrhotic in a North American cohort
- Author
-
Mariana Lazo, Mark Van Natta, Arun Sanyal, James Tonascia, Naga Chalasani, Samer Gawrieh, Mohammad Siddiqui, Cynthia Behling, Srinivasan Dasarathy, Anna Mae Diehl, Kris V. Kowdley, Rohit Loomba, Arthur McCullough, Norah Terrault, Brent Tetri, and Raj Vuppalanchi
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Prospective multicenter study of sofosbuvir-velpatasvir (SOF/VEL) in hepatitis C virus (HCV) negative liver (LT) and kidney transplant (KT) recipients receiving HCV viremic donors
- Author
-
Raymond Rubin, David Victor, James Burton, Elizabeth Verna, James F. Trotter, Claus Niemann, Constance Mobley, and Norah Terrault
- Subjects
Hepatology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Age, race and viral genotype are associated with the prevalence of hepatitis B e antigen in children and adults with chronic hepatitis B
- Author
-
Adrian M, Di Bisceglie, Wendy C, King, Mauricio, Lisker-Melman, Mandana, Khalili, Steven H, Belle, Jordan J, Feld, Marc G, Ghany, Harry L A, Janssen, Daryl, Lau, William M, Lee, Simon C, Ling, Stewart, Cooper, Philip, Rosenthal, Kathleen B, Schwarz, Richard K, Sterling, Jeffrey H, Teckman, Norah, Terrault, and David, Kleiner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatitis B virus ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Population Groups ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Public Health Surveillance ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,virus diseases ,Infant ,Hepatitis B ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Natural history ,Infectious Diseases ,HBeAg ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Child, Preschool ,DNA, Viral ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) is an important serological marker of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and is associated with higher levels of viraemia, increased risk of infectivity to others and increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. We analysed HBeAg status in a large cohort of adults and children enrolled in Cohort Studies of the Hepatitis B Research Network, long-term natural history studies of chronic HBV infection. A cross-sectional analysis examined factors associated with HBeAg positivity, including demographic and virologic data, across the age spectrum. Among 2241 enrolled participants who met criteria for this analysis, 825 (37%) were seropositive for HBeAg. The prevalence of HBeAg was lower in those with older age, ranging from 85% among those up to 10 years of age to only 12% among those older than 50 years. In addition to age, both race and HBV genotype were independently associated with HBeAg positivity. There was a significant interaction between age and race; the prevalence of HBeAg was significantly higher among Asians > 10-30 years old vs Whites or Blacks who were >10 to 30 years old and those infected with HBV genotype C. Conversely, the presence of the basal core promoter and precore variants was associated with significantly lower prevalence of HBeAg, even when adjusted for age, race and genotype. These data will provide a better understanding of factors associated with seropositivity for HBeAg and may lead to better strategies for preventing HBV infection and broader indications for antiviral therapy.
- Published
- 2019
41. Abstract P255: Long-term Associations Between Non-High Density Lipoprotein and Apolipoprotein B in Young Adulthood and Coronary Artery Calcification in Adults With Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Middle Age: The CARDIA Study
- Author
-
Lisa B Vanwagner, John T Wilkins, Hongyan Ning, Norrina B Allen, Juned Siddique, Cora E Lewis, norah Terrault, J. J Carr, Mary E Rinella, and Donald M Lloyd-Jones
- Subjects
Physiology (medical) ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,digestive system ,digestive system diseases - Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Apolipoprotein B (apoB) and non-high density lipoprotein-C (NHDL-C) are positively associated with NAFLD in small studies. High apoB predicts atherosclerotic CVD even when NHDL-C is low, suggesting that apoB may be the strongest predictor of atherosclerotic risk in adults. Objective: To quantify associations between apoB, NHDL-C and the discordance between apoB and NHDL-C levels in young adulthood with prevalent NAFLD, and coronary artery calcium (CAC) in adults with NAFLD in midlife. Methods: CARDIA recruited young adults ages 18 to 30 years in 1985-86. Participants with complete baseline CVD risk factor data and year 25 (Y25) NAFLD assessment and CAC score were included. NAFLD was defined as noncontrast computed tomography (CT) liver attenuation ≤40 Hounsfield Units after exclusions for other causes of liver fat. Presence of CAC was defined as Agatston score >0 on CT. Baseline NHDL-C or apoB values were divided into tertiles and 4 mutually exclusive concordant/discordant groups, stratified based on being above or below median NHDL-C or apoB levels. Results: Analysis included 2,508 participants (baseline age: 27 ± 4 years; body mass index: 25 ± 4 kg/m 2 ; 58% women; 53% white). Y25 NAFLD prevalence was 10%. Compared with the lowest tertile, higher odds of NAFLD were seen in the middle and high tertiles of both apoB and NHDL-C in separate adjusted models. High NHDL-C and low apoB, but not high apoB and low NHDL-C, discordance was associated with Y25 NAFLD in adjusted models. Among NAFLD participants (n=261), NHDL-C/apoB discordance was not associated with Y25 CAC. Highest odds of CAC were observed in NAFLD participants with high NHDL-C ( TABLE ). Conclusion: High NHDL-C is a strong early risk marker for both NAFLD and atherosclerosis among adults with NAFLD in midlife. Based on our study findings, the additional benefit of measuring apoB levels for risk stratification in adults with NAFLD is not apparent.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Ledipasvir and Sofosbuvir Plus Ribavirin for Treatment of HCV Infection in Patients With Advanced Liver Disease
- Author
-
Michael Charlton, Gregory T. Everson, Steven L. Flamm, Princy Kumar, Charles Landis, Robert S. Brown, Michael W. Fried, Norah A. Terrault, Jacqueline G. O'Leary, Hugo E. Vargas, Alexander Kuo, Eugene Schiff, Mark S. Sulkowski, Richard Gilroy, Kymberly D. Watt, Kimberly Brown, Paul Kwo, Surakit Pungpapong, Kevin M. Korenblat, Andrew J. Muir, Lewis Teperman, Robert J. Fontana, Jill Denning, Sarah Arterburn, Hadas Dvory-Sobol, Theo Brandt-Sarif, Phillip S. Pang, John G. McHutchison, K. Rajender Reddy, Nezam Afdhal, Michael Fried, Kris Kowdley, Norah Terrault, Steve Flamm, John Lake, Greg Everson, Mark Sulkowski, Michael Curry, Rajender Reddy, Hugo Vargas, Andrew Muir, Atif Zaman, Robert Fontana, Jacqueline O'Leary, Obaid Shaikh, Kevin Korenblat, Richard Stravitz, Kymberly Watt, Narayanan Menon, James Bredfeldt, and Carlos Romero-Marrero
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Ledipasvir ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Cirrhosis ,Genotype ,Sofosbuvir ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hepatitis C Virus Infection ,Cholestasis, Intrahepatic ,Hepacivirus ,Liver transplantation ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,Gastroenterology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Liver disease ,Model for End-Stage Liver Disease ,Internal medicine ,Fibrosing Cholestatic Hepatitis ,Ribavirin ,medicine ,Humans ,Fluorenes ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Surgery ,Liver Transplantation ,Drug Combinations ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Disease Progression ,Benzimidazoles ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Uridine Monophosphate ,business ,medicine.drug ,Decompensated Cirrhosis - Abstract
Background & Aims There are no effective and safe treatments for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection of patients who have advanced liver disease. Methods In this phase 2, open-label study, we assessed treatment with the NS5A inhibitor ledipasvir, the nucleotide polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir, and ribavirin in patients infected with HCV genotypes 1 or 4. Cohort A enrolled patients with cirrhosis and moderate or severe hepatic impairment who had not undergone liver transplantation. Cohort B enrolled patients who had undergone liver transplantation: those without cirrhosis; those with cirrhosis and mild, moderate, or severe hepatic impairment; and those with fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis. Patients were assigned randomly (1:1) to receive 12 or 24 weeks of a fixed-dose combination tablet containing ledipasvir and sofosbuvir, once daily, plus ribavirin. The primary end point was sustained virologic response at 12 weeks after the end of treatment (SVR12). Results We enrolled 337 patients, 332 (99%) with HCV genotype 1 infection and 5 (1%) with HCV genotype 4 infection. In cohort A (nontransplant), SVR12 was achieved by 86%–89% of patients. In cohort B (transplant recipients), SVR12 was achieved by 96%–98% of patients without cirrhosis or with compensated cirrhosis, by 85%−88% of patients with moderate hepatic impairment, by 60%–75% of patients with severe hepatic impairment, and by all 6 patients with fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis. Response rates in the 12- and 24-week groups were similar. Thirteen patients (4%) discontinued the ledipasvir and sofosbuvir combination prematurely because of adverse events; 10 patients died, mainly from complications related to hepatic decompensation. Conclusion The combination of ledipasvir, sofosbuvir, and ribavirin for 12 weeks produced high rates of SVR12 in patients with advanced liver disease, including those with decompensated cirrhosis before and after liver transplantation. ClinTrials.gov: NCT01938430.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Management strategies for hepatitis B-infected patients undergoing immunomodulatory therapy: Is lamivudine enough?
- Author
-
Norah Terrault
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,MEDLINE ,Lamivudine ,Hepatitis B ,medicine.disease ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Persistence of Virologic Response after Liver Transplant in Hepatitis C Patients Treated with Ledipasvir / Sofosbuvir Plus Ribavirin Pretransplant
- Author
-
Eric M, Yoshida, Paul, Kwo, Kosh, Agarwal, Christophe, Duvoux, François, Durand, Markus, Peck-Radosavljevic, Leslie, Lilly, Bernard, Willems, Hugo, Vargas, Princy, Kumar, Robert S, Brown, Yves, Horsmans, Shampa, De-Oertel, Sarah, Arterburn, Hadas, Dvory-Sobol, Diana M, Brainard, John G, McHutchison, Norah, Terrault, Mario, Rizzetto, Beat, Müllhaupt, University of Zurich, and Yoshida, Eric M
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Time Factors ,Genotype ,Sustained Virologic Response ,Specialties of internal medicine ,Decompensated cirrhosis ,610 Medicine & health ,Hepacivirus ,Direct-acting antivirals ,Antiviral Agents ,NS5B inhibitor ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ribavirin ,Humans ,Liver transplant ,Aged ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Fluorenes ,NS5A inhibitor ,Hepatology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Hepatitis C ,digestive system diseases ,Liver Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,10219 Clinic for Gastroenterology and Hepatology ,RC581-951 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,RNA, Viral ,Benzimidazoles ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,2721 Hepatology ,Sofosbuvir - Abstract
Introduction: Recurrence of HCV infection in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) at the time of liver transplantation is nearly universal and reduces the likelihood of graft and patient survival. Materials and methods: We evaluated outcomes of 17 patients (16 with HCV genotype 1 and 1 with genotype 4) who received up to 12 or 24 weeks of ledipasvir/sofosbuvir plus ribavirin prior to or up to the time of liver transplant in the SOLAR-1 and SOLAR-2 trials. In all patients, HCV RNA was < 15 IU/mL prior to transplant. At screening, 6 patients were Child-Pugh-Turcotte (CPT) class B and 11 were CPT class C. Seven patients underwent transplant prior to completing assigned treatment, with 4 treated for < 12 weeks. The primary endpoint was posttransplant virologic response 12 weeks after transplant (pTVR12) in patients with HCV RNA < 15 IU/mL at their last measurement prior to transplant. Results: Overall, 94% (16/17) achieved pTVR12. All who achieved pTVR12 received at least 11 weeks of treatment. The single patient who did not achieve pTVR12 discontinued study drug on day 21 and underwent liver transplant the following day. The patient had HCV RNA < 15 IU/mL at post-transplant week 2 but died 15 days post-transplant because of multi-organ failure and septic shock. Conclusion: Among a small population of HCV patients with decompensated cirrhosis, virologic response to ledipasvir / so-fosbuvir plus ribavirin prior to liver transplantation was maintained after transplantation, even if treatment was stopped early. Administration of ledipasvir / sofosbuvir plus ribavirin before liver transplant can prevent post-transplant HCV recurrence.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Low and High Birth Weights are Risk Factors for Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Children
- Author
-
Kimberly P. Newton, Haruna S. Feldman, Christina D. Chambers, Laura Wilson, Cynthia Behling, Jeanne M. Clark, Jean P. Molleston, Naga Chalasani, Arun J. Sanyal, Mark H. Fishbein, Joel E. Lavine, Jeffrey B. Schwimmer, Stephanie H. Abrams, Sarah Barlow, Ryan Himes, Rajesh Krisnamurthy, Leanel Maldonado, Rory Mahabir, April Carr, Kimberlee Bernstein, Kristin Bramlage, Kim Cecil, Stephanie DeVore, Rohit Kohli, Kathleen Lake, Daniel Podberesky, Alex Towbin, Stavra Xanthakos, Daniela Allende, Srinivasan Dasarathy, Arthur J. McCullough, Mangesh Pagadala, Rish Pai, Cha'Ron Winston, Gerald Behr, Jay H. Lefkowitch, Ali Mencin, Elena Reynoso, Manal F. Abdelmalek, Mustafa Bashir, Stephanie Buie, Anna Mae Diehl, Cynthia Guy, Christopher Kigongo, David Malik, Yi-Ping Pan, Dawn Piercy, Mariko Kopping, Tyler Thrasher, Adina Alazraki, Rebecca Cleeton, Maria Cordero, Albert Hernandez, Saul Karpen, Jessica Cruz Munos, Nicholas Raviele, Miriam Vos, Molly Bozic, Oscar W. Cummings, Samer Gawrieh, Ann Klipsch, Emily Ragozzino, Linda Ragozzino, Kumar Sandrasegaran, Girish Subbarao, Raj Vuppalanchi, Laura Walker, Kimberly Kafka, Ann Scheimann, Joy Ito, Saeed Mohammad, Cynthia Rigsby, Lisa Sharda, Peter F. Whitington, Theresa Cattoor, Jose Derdoy, Janet Freebersyser, Ajay Jain, Debra King, Jinping Lai, Pat Osmack, Joan Siegner, Susan Stewart, Brent A. Neuschwander-Tetri, Susan Torretta, Kristina Wriston, Fereshteh Assadian, Vanessa Barone, Maria Cardona Gonzalez, Jodie Davila, Oren Fix, Kelly Anne Hennessey, Kris V. Kowdley, Kacie Lopez, Erik Ness, Michelle Poitevin, Nicholas Procaccini, Brook Quist, Alana Saddic, Cara Wiseman, Matthew Yeh, Susan S. Baker, Diana Lopez-Graham, Sonja Williams, Lixin Zhu, Jonathan Africa, Brandon Ang, Hannah Awai, Archana Bhatt, Craig Bross, Jennifer Collins, Janis Durelle, Kathryn Harlow, Rohit Loomba, Michael Middleton, Kimberly Newton, Melissa Paiz, Claude Sirlin, Patricia Ugalde-Nicalo, Mariana Dominguez Villarreal, Bradley Aouizerat, Nathan M. Bass, Danielle Brandman, Jesse Courtier, Linda D. Ferrell, Natasha Feier, Ryan Gill, Bilal Hameed, Camille Langlois, Jacqueline Maher, Emily Rothbaum Perito, Claudia Ramos, Philip Rosenthal, Norah Terrault, Patrika Tsai, Ashley Ungermann, Pradeep Atla, Brandon Croft, Rebekah Garcia, Sonia Garcia, Muhammad Sheikh, Mandeep Singh, Kara Cooper, Simon Horslen, Evelyn Hsu, Karen Murray, Randolph Otto, Melissa Young, Sherry Boyett, Laura Carucci, Melissa J. Contos, Sherri Kirwin, Kenneth Kraft, Velimir A.C. Luketic, Puneet Puri, Jolene Schlosser, Mohammad S. Siddiqui, Elizabeth M. Brunt, Kathryn Fowler, David E. Kleiner, Sherry Brown, Edward C. Doo, Jay H. Hoofnagle, Patricia R. Robuck, Averell Sherker, Rebecca Torrance, Patricia Belt, Michele Donithan, Erin Hallinan, Milana Isaacson, Kevin P. May, Laura Miriel, Alice Sternberg, James Tonascia, Mark Van Natta, and Katherine Yates
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Cross-sectional study ,Biopsy ,Birth weight ,Population ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Article ,Infant, Postmature ,Fetal Development ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Birth Weight ,Humans ,education ,Child ,education.field_of_study ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Infant, Low Birth Weight ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,United States ,Low birth weight ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
To examine the distribution of birth weight in children with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) compared with the general US population, and to investigate the relationship between birth weight and severity of NAFLD.A multicenter, cross-sectional study of children with biopsy-proven NAFLD enrolled in the Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis Clinical Research Network Database. Birth weight was categorized as low birth weight (LBW), normal birth weight (NBW), or high birth weight (HBW) and compared with the birth weight distribution in the general US population. The severity of liver histology was assessed by birth weight category.Children with NAFLD (n = 538) had overrepresentation of both LBW and HBW compared with the general US population (LBW, 9.3%; NBW, 75.8%; HBW, 14.9% vs LBW, 6.1%; NBW, 83.5%; HBW 10.5%; P .0001). Children with HBW had significantly greater odds of having more severe steatosis (OR, 1.82, 95% CI. 1.15-2.88) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (OR, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.21-3.40) compared with children with NBW. In addition, children with NAFLD and LBW had significantly greater odds of having advanced fibrosis (OR, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.08-4.62).Birth weight involves maternal and in utero factors that may have long-lasting consequences. Children with both LBW and HBW may be at increased risk for developing NAFLD. Among children with NAFLD, those with LBW or HBW appear to be at increased risk for more severe disease.
- Published
- 2017
46. Abstract 05: Association of 25-Year Body Mass Index Trajectories Throughout Early Adulthood With Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Middle Age: The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study
- Author
-
Lisa B VanWagner, Sadiya Khan, Hongyan NIng, Juned Siddique, Cora E Lewis, John Jeffery Carr, Miriam Vos, Elizabeth Speliotes, Norah Terrault, Mary Rinella, Donald M Lloyd-Jones, and Norrina B Allen
- Subjects
Physiology (medical) ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) has increased in parallel with obesity, is a risk factor for cirrhosis and liver cancer, and has few effective treatments. Identifying modifiable risk factors for NAFLD development is essential to effectively design prevention programs. We tested whether trajectories of body mass index (BMI) change throughout early adulthood were associated with risk of prevalent NAFLD in midlife independent of current BMI. Methods: Participants from the CARDIA study, a prospective multicenter population-based biracial cohort of adults (baseline age 18-30 years), underwent BMI measurement at exam years 0, 2, 5, 7, 10, 15, 20, and 25. At Year 25 (Y25, 2010-2011), liver fat was assessed by computed tomography. NAFLD was identified after exclusion of other causes of liver fat (alcohol/hepatitis). Latent mixture modeling was used to identify 25-year trajectories in BMI percent (%) change relative to baseline BMI over time. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to assess associations between BMI trajectory group and prevalent NAFLD with adjustment for baseline or current Y25 BMI. Results: Among 4,423 participants, we identified 4 distinct trajectories of BMI %change: stable BMI (26.2% of the cohort, 25-year mean BMI Δ=0.7 kg/m 2 ), mild increase (46.0%, BMI Δ=5.2 kg/m 2 ), moderate increase (20.9%, BMI Δ=10.0 kg/m 2 ), and extreme increase (6.9%, BMI Δ=15.1 kg/m 2 ) (Figure). NAFLD prevalence at Y25 was higher with increasing BMI trajectory: 4.1%, 9.3%, 13.0%, and 17.6% (p-trend Conclusion: Weight gain throughout adulthood is associated with greater prevalence of NAFLD in midlife independent of baseline or current BMI. These findings highlight weight maintenance throughout adulthood as a potential target for primary prevention of NAFLD.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Diagnostic Accuracy of Noninvasive Fibrosis Models to Detect Change in Fibrosis Stage
- Author
-
Mohammad Shadab Siddiqui, Goro Yamada, Raj Vuppalanchi, Mark Van Natta, Rohit Loomba, Cynthia Guy, Danielle Brandman, James Tonascia, Naga Chalasani, Brent Neuschwander-Tetri, Arun J. Sanyal, Daniela Allende, Srinivasan Dasarathy, Arthur J. McCullough, Revathi Penumatsa, Jaividhya Dasarathy, Joel E. Lavine, Manal F. Abdelmalek, Mustafa Bashir, Stephanie Buie, Anna Mae Diehl, Christopher Kigongo, Mariko Kopping, David Malik, Dawn Piercy, Oscar W. Cummings, Samer Gawrieh, Linda Ragozzino, Kumar Sandrasegaran, Elizabeth M. Brunt, Theresa Cattoor, Danielle Carpenter, Janet Freebersyser, Debra King, Jinping Lai, Brent A. Neuschwander-Tetri, Joan Siegner, Susan Stewart, Susan Torretta, Kristina Wriston, Maria Cardona Gonzalez, Jodie Davila, Manan Jhaveri, Kris V. Kowdley, Nizar Mukhtar, Erik Ness, Michelle Poitevin, Brook Quist, Sherilynn Soo, Brandon Ang, Cynthia Behling, Archana Bhatt, Michael S. Middleton, Claude Sirlin, Maheen F. Akhter, Nathan M. Bass, Ryan Gill, Bilal Hameed, Jacqueline Maher, Norah Terrault, Ashley Ungermann, Matthew Yeh, Sherry Boyett, Melissa J. Contos, Sherri Kirwin, Velimir A.C. Luketic, Puneet Puri, Jolene Schlosser, Mohammad S. Siddiqui, Leslie Yost-Schomer, Kathryn Fowler, David E. Kleiner, Edward C. Doo, Sherry Hall, Jay H. Hoofnagle, Jessica J. Lee, Patricia R. Robuck, Averell H. Sherker, Rebecca Torrance, Patricia Belt, Jeanne M. Clark, John Dodge, Michele Donithan, Erin Hallinan, Milana Isaacson, Mariana Lazo, Jill Meinert, Laura Miriel, Jacqueline Smith, Michael Smith, Alice Sternberg, Mark L. Van Natta, Annette Wagoner, Laura A. Wilson, and Katherine Yates
- Subjects
Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Longitudinal study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biopsy ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Median follow-up ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Stage (cooking) ,Retrospective Studies ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Platelet Count ,business.industry ,Alanine Transaminase ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Clinical research ,Liver ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Hepatic fibrosis ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Noninvasive methods are needed to determine disease stage in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). We evaluated the diagnostic performance of several widely available fibrosis models for the assessment of hepatic fibrosis in patients with NAFLD. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of data from individuals enrolled in the NIDDK NASH Clinical Research Network, from 2004 through 2018. Using biopsy as the reference standard, we determined the diagnostic performance of the aspartate aminotransferase (AST):platelet ratio (APRI), FIB-4, ratio of AST:alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and the NAFLD fibrosis score (NFS) in a cross-sectional study of 1904 subjects. The ability of these models to detect changes in fibrosis stage was assessed in a longitudinal data set of 292 subjects with 2 biopsies and accompanying laboratory data. Outcomes were detection of fibrosis of any stage (stages 0 to 4), detection of moderate fibrosis (stages 0–1 vs 2–4), and detection of advanced fibrosis (stages 0–2 vs 3–4). Diagnostic performance was evaluated using the C-statistic, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) analyses. RESULTS: In the cross-sectional study, FIB-4 and NFS outperformed other non-invasive models for detecting advanced fibrosis; the C-statistics were 0.80 for FIB-4 and 0.78 for NFS. In the longitudinal study, 216 patients had non-advanced fibrosis at baseline and 35 patients progressed to advanced fibrosis after median follow up of 2.6 years. After we adjusted for fibrosis stage and model score at initial biopsy, change in APRI, FIB-4, and NFS were significantly associated with change in fibrosis. A unit change in APRI, FIB-4, or NFS was associated with changes in fibrosis stage of 0.33 (95% CI, 0.20-0.45; P
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Report from the International Conference on Viral Hepatitis (ICVH), San Francisco, March 2016
- Author
-
Vicente, Soriano, Benjamin, Young, and Norah, Terrault
- Subjects
Internationality ,Coinfection ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,HIV Infections ,San Francisco ,Global Health ,Hepatitis B ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Antiviral Agents ,Hepatitis C - Abstract
The International Conference on Viral Hepatitis 2016 brought exciting news on the treatment of viral hepatitis. The conference was mainly focused on the most recent estimates of burden for HBV and HCV; the current gaps and prospects for regional and global HCV eradication; the use of HCV treatment as prevention; and the management of difficult-to-cure hepatitis C patients, including individuals who fail on direct-acting antivirals, people who inject drugs, and those with decompensated cirrhosis or renal insufficiency. Special patient populations, such as children, pregnant women, HIV-coinfected and persons with acute hepatitis C, were addressed separately. Data from both clinical trials and real-world experience were discussed. Further debates focused on hepatic conditions that may alter the management and outcome of viral hepatitis, such as fatty liver disease, liver transplantation, and hepatocellular carcinoma.
- Published
- 2016
49. Prospective analysis of effector and regulatory CD4+ T cells in chronic HCV patients undergoing combination antiviral therapy
- Author
-
James R, Burton, Jared, Klarquist, KyungAh, Im, Sue, Smyk-Pearson, Lucy, Golden-Mason, Nicole, Castelblanco, Norah, Terrault, Hugo R, Rosen, and David E, Kleiner
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,T cell ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,Interferon alpha-2 ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Virus ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Cohort Studies ,Viral Relapse ,Interferon-gamma ,Ribavirin ,Humans ,Medicine ,Interferon gamma ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,ELISPOT ,Interferon-alpha ,Forkhead Transcription Factors ,T lymphocyte ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Th1 Cells ,biology.organism_classification ,Recombinant Proteins ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background/Aims The role of HCV-specific CD4 + T cells and regulatory T cells in influencing the outcome of antiviral therapy is incompletely defined. Methods CD4 + IFN-γ ELISPOT assays ( n =58) and flow cytometric analysis of FoxP3-expressing T regulatory cells ( n =62) were performed on patients from the Virahep-C study at baseline, during and after cessation of antiviral therapy. Results Total HCV-specific IFN-γ CD4 + T cell ELISPOT responses did not increase with therapy, but rather decreased by 8 weeks and remained below baseline 24 weeks after cessation of therapy. There were no statistically significant differences with respect to viral kinetics, race and virologic outcome. In contrast, viral relapse after treatment was associated with a three-fold increase in HCV-specific responses. The frequency and phenotype of regulatory T cells during therapy were not significantly different in terms of race, viral kinetic groups or virologic outcome. Conclusions A contraction of HCV-specific CD4 + T cell responses was found during treatment with recovery of responses in patients experiencing virologic relapse after treatment. The levels of FoxP3-expressing regulatory T cells did not vary by race and were not predictive of virologic outcome. Work is ongoing to explore the contribution of mechanisms independent of CD4 + T cells in therapy-induced viral clearance.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Current Management of Hepatitis C Virus: Regimens for Peri-Liver Transplant Patients
- Author
-
Varun, Saxena and Norah, Terrault
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,Postoperative Care ,Graft Survival ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Antiviral Agents ,Article ,Liver Transplantation ,Recurrence ,Preoperative Care ,Humans ,RNA, Viral ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Protease Inhibitors ,Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors - Abstract
Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection currently remains the leading indication for liver transplant in the United States. However, recurrent HCV infection after transplant is universal in those who enter transplant with viremia resulting in reduced posttransplant graft and patient survival rates, caused in large part by progressive recurrent HCV disease. Therefore, successful treatment of HCV in the peri-transplant period, either before or after transplant, is paramount in ensuring improved posttransplant outcomes. This article reviews the experience to date treating HCV in wait-listed patients and liver transplant recipients and the unique challenges encountered when treating this population.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.