Current Treatment Recommendations
There are little data to support treatment in the immune tolerant pediatric patient, as progressive disease is unlikely in the short term. Although close monitoring for immune activity is warranted, a panel that recently convened on HBV infection in the pediatric population recommended deferring therapy in immune tolerant children due to concerns about long-term therapy—including the risks of resistance and low yield for clinical serologic endpoints— as well as a lack of data that therapy would alter the natural history of the disease in children.21
Carey and colleagues reported results of a study involving 23 children with HBV infection acquired in infancy and biopsy-proven immune tolerance who received lamivudine treatment for 8 weeks followed by combination therapy with interferon for an additional 44 weeks.8 Those patients who showed a serologic response had a more vigorous T-cell proliferation and CD8 response and fewer mutations. Interestingly, DNA levels decreased in both responders and nonresponders during the 8 weeks of therapy with lamivudine alone, but increased mutations were already being seen in nonresponders during this period; after interferon was initiated, responders showed a gradual broadening and strengthening of core-specific T-cell proliferation.8 Although treatment is not currently recommended, therapy involving better antiviral agents in combination with the immunomodulatory stimulation of interferon continues to hold appeal and is being further studied in both children and adults. For adults, all current national and international guidelines do not recommend therapy for immune tolerant patients with normal ALT levels (Table 2)
Table 2
Summary of Current International Guidelines and Clinical Recommendations Regarding Immune Tolerant Patients
Organization/Guidelines Recommendations regarding immune tolerant patients
European Association for the Study of the Liver Most patients under 30 years of age with persistently normal ALT levels, a high HBV DNA level (usually >107 IU/mL), no suspicion of liver disease, and no family history of HCC or cirrhosis do not require immediate liver biopsy or therapy. Follow-up is mandatory.
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases HBeAg-positive patients with persistently normal ALT levels should have their ALT levels tested at 3–6 month intervals. ALT and HBV DNA levels should be tested more often when ALT levels become elevated. HBeAg status should be checked every 6–12 months.
Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver Patients with viral replication but persistently normal or minimally elevated ALT levels should not be treated, except patients with advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis. Immune tolerant patients need adequate follow-up and HCC surveillance every 3–6 months.
National Institutes of Health Consensus Therapy is not recommended for patients who are in the immune tolerant phase, which includes the presence of HBsAg, high HBV DNA levels, normal ALT levels, and liver histology showing mild or minimal inflammation and fibrosis.
US Algorithm Younger patients are often immune tolerant. A biopsy should be considered, particularly if a patient is older than 35–40 years of age. Patients should be treated if there is evidence of histologic disease on liver biopsy. In the absence of biopsy, patients should be observed for elevation in ALT levels.
In interferon treatment studies, HBeAg seroconversion rates were less than 10% when ALT levels were normal. In lamivudine studies, pretreatment serum ALT level was the strongest predictor of response among HBeAg-positive patients. Pooled data from 4 studies of patients who received lamivudine for 1 year found that HBeAg seroconversion occurred in 2%, 9%, 21%, and 47% of patients with ALT levels within the normal range, 1–2 times normal, 2–5 times normal, and greater than 5 times normal, respectively. In another study, lower seroconversion endpoints were noted in patients treated with newer antivirals, with entecavir (Baraclude, Bristol-Myers Squibb) having an HBeAg seroconversion rate of only 12% in patients with a pretreatment ALT level less than 2 times ULN.22
Although guidelines do not recommend therapy in immune tolerant patients, clinicians should note the importance of taking into account the age of the patient, duration of infection, whether ALT levels are truly normal for that patient, whether ALT levels are fluctuating, whether there is a family history of cirrhosis or HCC, the severity of histology, and other comorbidities.
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