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Emerging Challenges in Managing Hepatitis B in HIV Patients

Authors :
Pablo Barreiro
Laura Benitez
Pablo Labarga
José Peña
Isabella Esposito
Vincent Soriano
José Vicente Fernández-Montero
Carmen de Mendoza
Source :
Current HIV/AIDS Reports. 12:344-352
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Roughly 10 % of HIV-positive individuals worldwide have concomitant chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, with large differences between geographical regions and/or risk groups. Hepatitis B is a preventable infection with vaccines. However, it cannot be eradicated once acquired, resembling HIV and in contrast with HCV. In developed countries, hepatitis B exhibits particular features in the HIV population. First, HBV infection is less frequently misdiagnosed than in the general population. Second, nucleos(t)ide analogs active against HBV are widely used as part of antiretroviral combinations and are taken by most HIV patients. Lastly, as the HIV population ages given the success of antiretroviral therapy, non-AIDS co-morbidities are becoming a major cause of disease, for which specific drugs are required, increasing the risk of interactions and hepatotoxicity. Furthermore, concern on HBV reactivation is rising as immunosuppressive drug therapies are increasingly been used for cancers and other non-malignant conditions. In this scenario, new challenges are emerging in the management of hepatitis B in HIV-positive individuals. Among them, major interest is focused on failures to suppress HBV replication, HBV breakthroughs and reactivations, the meaning of isolated anti-HBc, screening for liver cancer, and the complexity arising when hepatitis viruses C and/or D are additionally present. This review will focus on these challenges and the major advances in HBV coinfection in HIV.

Details

ISSN :
15483576 and 15483568
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current HIV/AIDS Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e0e9f1955a4011bfa602167f7c6e5f6