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Published in: Hepatology International 2/2009

01-06-2009 | Case Report

Two cases of development of entecavir resistance during entecavir treatment for nucleoside-naive chronic hepatitis B

Authors: Haruhiko Kobashi, Shin-ichi Fujioka, Mitsuhiko Kawaguchi, Hiromitsu Kumada, Osamu Yokosuka, Norio Hayashi, Kazuyuki Suzuki, Takeshi Okanoue, Michio Sata, Hirohito Tsubouchi, Chifumi Sato, Kendo Kiyosawa, Kyuichi Tanikawa, Taku Seriu, Hiroki Ishikawa, Akinobu Takaki, Yoshiaki Iwasaki, Toshiya Osawa, Toshiyuki Takaki, Kosaku Sakaguchi, Yasushi Shiratori, Kazuhide Yamamoto, Daniel J. Tenney, Masao Omata

Published in: Hepatology International | Issue 2/2009

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Abstract

Background

Entecavir (ETV) is a potent nucleoside analogue against hepatitis B virus (HBV), and emergence of drug resistance is rare in nucleoside-naive patients because development of ETV resistance (ETVr) requires at least three amino acid substitutions in HBV reverse transcriptase. We observed two cases of genotypic ETVr with viral rebound and biochemical breakthrough during ETV treatment of nucleoside-naive patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB).

Results

Case 1: A 44-year-old HBeAg-positive man received ETV 0.1 mg/day for 52 weeks and 0.5 mg/day for 96 weeks consecutively. HBV DNA was 10.0 log10 copies/ml at baseline, declined to a nadir of 3.1 at week 100, and rebounded to 4.5 at week 124 and 6.7 at week 148. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level increased to 112 IU/l at week 148. Switching to a lamivudine (LVD)/adefovir-dipivoxil combination was effective in decreasing HBV DNA. Case 2: A 47-year-old HBeAg-positive man received ETV 0.5 mg/day for 188 weeks. HBV DNA was 8.2 log10 copies/ml at baseline, declined to a nadir of 2.9 at week 124, and then rebounded to 4.7 at week 148 and 6.4 at week 160. ALT level increased to 72 IU/l at week 172. The ETVr-related substitution (S202G), along with LVD-resistance-related substitutions (L180M and M204V), was detected by sequence analysis at week 124 in both case 1 and case 2.

Conclusions

ETVr emerged in two Japanese nucleoside-naive CHB patients after prolonged therapy and incomplete suppression and in one patient after <0.5 mg of dosing. ETV patients with detectable HBV DNA or breakthrough after extended therapy should be evaluated for compliance to therapy and potential emergence of resistance.
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Metadata
Title
Two cases of development of entecavir resistance during entecavir treatment for nucleoside-naive chronic hepatitis B
Authors
Haruhiko Kobashi
Shin-ichi Fujioka
Mitsuhiko Kawaguchi
Hiromitsu Kumada
Osamu Yokosuka
Norio Hayashi
Kazuyuki Suzuki
Takeshi Okanoue
Michio Sata
Hirohito Tsubouchi
Chifumi Sato
Kendo Kiyosawa
Kyuichi Tanikawa
Taku Seriu
Hiroki Ishikawa
Akinobu Takaki
Yoshiaki Iwasaki
Toshiya Osawa
Toshiyuki Takaki
Kosaku Sakaguchi
Yasushi Shiratori
Kazuhide Yamamoto
Daniel J. Tenney
Masao Omata
Publication date
01-06-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Hepatology International / Issue 2/2009
Print ISSN: 1936-0533
Electronic ISSN: 1936-0541
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12072-008-9108-8

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