1 / 28

CHRONIC HEPATITIS B SEROLOGY

CHRONIC HEPATITIS B SEROLOGY. Antigens. HBsAg Found on the surface of the intact virus and in serum as unattached particles Earliest detectable marker in serum indicates current Hepatitis B infection. HBcAg Found within the core of the intact virus Not detectable in serum.

uriel
Download Presentation

CHRONIC HEPATITIS B SEROLOGY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B SEROLOGY

  2. Antigens HBsAg • Found on the surface of the intact virus and in serum as unattached particles • Earliest detectable marker in serum • indicates current Hepatitis B infection HBcAg • Found within the core of the intact virus • Not detectable in serum Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1933-1934

  3. Antigens HBeAg • Readily detectable serologic marker of HBV infection • Appears shortly after HBsAg • Coincides w/high levels of virus replication • Indicates highly infective stage of HBV Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1935

  4. Antibodies Anti-HBs • Antibody to HBsAg • Becomes detectable in serum after HBsAg disappears • indicates immunity to Hepatitis B infection • “protective antibody” Anti-HBc • Total antibody to HBcAg • Only serologic evidence of recent HBV infection during the “window period” • May indicate acute or chronic infection Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1933-1934

  5. Antibodies Anti-HBc IgM • IGM antibody to HBcAg • Seen in the 1st 6 months after acute infection • indicates recent acute Hepatitis B infection Anti-Hbc IgG -IgG antibody to HBcAg -predominates beyond 6 months - Seen in chronic HBV infection Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1934-1935

  6. Antibodies Anti-HBe - Antibody to HBeAg - Signifies low infectivity Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1935

  7. Chronic Hepatitis B Serologic Patterns Reference: 17th Ed. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine p.1943

  8. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B CLINICAL and laboratory FEATURES

  9. Progression of acute hepatitis to chronic hepatitis: Clinical and Laboratory features: • lack of complete resolution of clinical symptoms of anorexia, weight loss, and fatigue and the persistence of hepatomegaly; 2. the presence of bridging or multilobular hepatic necrosis on liver biopsy during protracted, severe acute viral hepatitis; • failure of the serum aminotransferase, bilirubin, and globulin levels to return to normal within 6 to 12 months after the acute illness; and 4. the persistence of HBeAg beyond 3 months or HBsAg beyond 6 months after acute hepatitis. Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th Ed., pp.1945

  10. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B CLINICAL FEATURES • Onset: insiduous • Incubation period: 30-180 days (mean, 8-12 weeks) • Fatigue is a common symptom • Low grade fever between 38° and 39°C (100° - 102°F) when heralded with serum-sickness syndrome Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th Ed., pp.1941-1942

  11. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B • Persistent or Intermittent jaundiceis a common feature in severe or advanced cases. • It may lead to progressive liver injury and in cases with superimposed cirrhosis --- hepatic decompensation. Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th Ed., p. 1957

  12. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B LABORATORY FEATURES • Aminotransferase elevations tend to be modest but may fluctuate in the range of 100-1000 units. • Alanineaminotransferase (ALT) tends to be more elevated than aspartateaminotransferase (AST) • When cirrhosis is established, AST tends to exceed ALT. • Levels of alkaline phosphatase activity tend to be normal or only marginally elevated. Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th Ed., p. 1957

  13. CHRONIC HEPATITIS B • In severe cases, moderate elevations in serum bilirubin [51.3 to 171 µmol/L (3 to 10 mg/dL)] occur. • Hypoalbuminemia and prolongation of the prothrombin time occur in severe or end-stage cases. • Hyperglobulinemia and detectable circulating autoantibodies are distinctly absent in chronic hepatitis B (in contrast to autoimmune hepatitis). Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th Ed., p. 1957

  14. Reference: Braunwald, et al, Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 16th Ed., p. 1844

  15. TREATMENT

  16. Candidates for therapy • Chronically infected individuals with: • persistently elevated alanineaminotransferase • a marker of liver damage • HBV DNA levels Lai, CL; Yuen (2007). "The natural history and treatment of chronic hepatitis B: a critical evaluation of standard treatment criteria and end points". Annals of internal medicine147 (1): 58–61

  17. Candidates for therapy HBeAg-positive patients (w/ evidence of chronic HBV): • HBV DNA level is ≥20,000 IU/mL (105 copies/mL) • Serum ALT is elevated for 3-6 months. HBeAg-negative patients(w/ evidence of chronic HBV): • HBV DNA is ≥ 2000 IU/mL (104 copies/mL) • Serum ALT is elevated (ALT levels >20 U/L for females and 30 U/L for males) for 3-6 months. Pyrsopoulos, Nikolaos. Chronic Hepatitis B: treatment and medication. Emedicine.com. June 19,2009

  18. Goals of Treatment • to suppress HBV replication • to induce remission of liver disease before development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma

  19. Approved Drugs for Chronic Hepatitis B treatment • Interferon (INF) α • Pegylated interferon • Lamivudine • Adefovirdipivoxil • Entecavir

  20. Interferon (INF) α • Protein product manufactured by recombinant DNA technology • Modulates host immune responses • Direct antiviral activity • HBeAg negative patients: 1 and ½ yr txresults in sustained remissions, with suppressed HBV DNA and aminotransferase activity, in 20%

  21. Complications of Interferon (INF) α • systemic "flu-like" symptoms • marrow suppression • Irritability,depression/anxiety • autoimmune reactions • miscellaneous side effects • alopecia, rashes, diarrhea, and numbness and tingling of the extremities. *With the possible exception of autoimmune thyroiditis, all these side effects are reversible upon dose lowering or cessation of therapy.

  22. Lamivudine • inhibits reverse transcriptase activity of both HIV and HBV • HBeAg-reactive patients: daily doses of 100 mg for 48–52 weeks • HBeAg- negative patients: 1 year of lamivudine therapy

  23. Adefovirdipivoxil • prodrug that is converted to the diphosphate salt • active drug : antiviral nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor • oral daily dose of 10 mg reduces HBV DNA

  24. Pegylated interferon • once-a-week PEG IFN was more effective than the more frequently administered, standard IFN • After 6 months of therapy: • HBeAg loss (30%) • HBeAgseroconversion (22%–27%) • undetectable HBV DNA (<400 copies/mL by PCR) in 10–25% • normal ALT in 34–39% • a mean reduction in HBV DNA of 2 log10 copies/mL (PEG IFN-2b) to 4.5 log10 copies/mL (PEG IFN-2a)

  25. Entecavir • Guanosine nucleoside analogue with activity against HBV polymerase • Competes with natural substrate deoxyguanosinetriphosphate (dGTP) to inhibit HBV polymerase activity • Less effective for lamivudine-refractory HBV infection • available as a tablet and as oral solution (0.05 mg/mL; 0.5 mg = 10 mL).

  26. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 17 edition

  27. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 17 edition

More Related