1. Lower prevalence of hepatic fibrosis in low viremic hepatitis B patients with fluctuating HBV DNA levels
- Author
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FaisalM Sanai, AhmadH Alhouthali, HamdanS Alghamdi, Feras Badriq, EisaA Sanai, MohammedK Mujalled, Waleed Khayyat, MotazS Attar, BasilS Bagadeem, AlaaM Meer, Waleed Alshumrani, Khalid Albeladi, Ibrahim AlTraif, and Saleh Alqahtani
- Subjects
Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,Hepatitis B virus ,Gastroenterology ,Alanine Transaminase ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis B ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,DNA, Viral ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,Viremia - Abstract
In chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) patients, fluctuations in HBV DNA serve as a "gray area" and impede the accurate identification of inactive carriers. We aimed to assess if such fluctuations impact the presence of significant hepatic fibrosis (Metavir F2-4) in chronic HBV patients.Consecutive, untreated HBeAg-negative carriers (n = 234) with fluctuating HBV DNA (n = 73) above or below a level of 2000 IU/mL were included and compared to those without fluctuations (n = 161). Patients without fluctuating HBV DNA were further analyzed based on those with persistently low (2,000 IU/mL, n = 137) and higher HBV DNA (2,000-20,000 IU/mL, n = 24). Hepatic fibrosis (assessed by transient elastography) was correlated with virologic and biochemical profiles.The mean age of the overall cohort was 47.8 ± 11.1 years, of whom 107 (45.7%) were male. During a median of 60 months (interquartile range [IQR] 34-82) of follow-up, 73 (31.2%) patients had a mean of 1.6 ± 0.9 fluctuations in HBV DNA. The median time to the first fluctuation was at 14.5 (IQR 5.0-33.7) months. Patients with fluctuating viremia had higher logFluctuating HBV DNA levels occur frequently but are not associated with significant fibrosis. Minor fluctuations in HBV DNA levels are unlikely to be of clinical relevance.
- Published
- 2022
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