Back to Search Start Over

The Clinical Impact of Early Detection of the Ymdd Mutant on the Outcomes of Long-Term Lamivudine Therapy in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis B

Authors :
Kwang Hyub Han
Hyun Woong Lee
Sun Pyo Hong
Young Myoung Moon
Soo Ok Kim
Ji Eun Shin
Yong Han Paik
Kwan Sik Lee
Sang Hoon Ahn
Chae Yoon Chon
Source :
Antiviral Therapy. 11:447-455
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2005.

Abstract

The early emergence of lamivudine (3TC)-resistant tyro-sine–methionine–aspartate–aspartate (YMDD) mutants has been reported during 3TC therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) in hepatitis B virus (HBV)-endemic areas; however, its clinical impact during long-term 3TC therapy is unknown. This study was performed to investigate the impact of the early emergence of YMDD mutants 3 months after the initiation of treatment on the outcomes of long-term 3TC therapy in HBV e antigen (HBeAg)-positive CHB. We analysed YMDD genotypes in consecutive samples from 30 patients with HBeAg positive CHB throughout 3TC treatment using both restriction fragment length polymorphism and mass spectrometric assays. Long-term outcome was compared between patients who had YMDD mutations detected at 3 months and those who had no mutations. YMDD mutation was detected in 16 (53.3%) out of 30 patients at 3 months and only the rtM204I mutation was found. Cumulative HBeAg loss rates at 3 years was 12.5% and 57.4% in patients who had the rtM204I mutant and wild-type virus at 3 months, respectively ( P=0.010). Cumulative viral breakthrough rates at 3 years was 75.0% and 14.3% in patients who had the rtM204I mutant and wild-type virus at 3 months, respectively ( P=0.002). Logistic regression revealed that YMDD mutation at 3 months was significantly related to viral breakthrough within 24 months ( P=0.003). In conclusion, early detection for HBV YMDD mutation at 3 months may be useful to predict the long-term outcomes of 3TC therapy in patients with HBeAg-positive CHB in HBV-endemic areas.

Details

ISSN :
20402058 and 13596535
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antiviral Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....170add8b0c2da62af59b31c61435c6d9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/135965350601100402