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Finite Antiviral Therapy in Chronic Hepatitis B Patients with Cirrhosis

Wen‐Juei Jeng, Yun‐Fan Liaw

2021Seminars in Liver Disease23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Antiviral therapy has greatly improved the survival and reduced the incidence of adverse liver events such as hepatic decompensation and hepatocellular carcinoma in chronic hepatitis B patients with cirrhosis (hepatitis B virus [HBV]-cirrhosis). However, hepatitis B surface antigen loss, regarded as the ultimate goal of therapy or functional cure, was rarely achieved during long-term indefinite nucleos(t)ide analogues (Nuc) treatment. Emerging issues such as medication adherence and loss-to-follow-up may lead to increased risk of hepatic decompensation, even catastrophic life-threatening events. Studies have shown that finite therapy is feasible and reasonably safe, even in patients with HBV-cirrhosis. This review critically assesses the scientific evidence of the pros and cons for finite Nuc therapy in HBV-cirrhosis and proposes how to stop Nuc therapy and monitor the off-therapy patients. It also proposes the perspective and unsolved issues to be investigated in the future.

Topics & Concepts

CirrhosisMedicineDecompensationHepatocellular carcinomaHepatitis BHepatitis B virusAdverse effectGastroenterologyInternal medicineAntiviral therapyIncidence (geometry)Chronic hepatitisVirusImmunologyPhysicsOpticsHepatitis B Virus StudiesHepatitis C virus researchLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
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