HIV and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the
14th Annual Conference on Retroviruses
and Opportunistic Infections (14th CROI)

February 25 - 28, 2007, Los Angeles, CA

Hepatitis B Virus Kinetics and Treatment Response in HIV-HBV Coinfected Patients

Coinfection with HIV and hepatitis B virus (HBV) is associated with increased liver-related mortality and poorer response to anti-HBV treatment, but the kinetics of HBV decline during therapy in such patients is not well understood.

Among HIV negative, HBV monoinfected patients, there is a biphasic clearance of HBV following initiation of nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) active against the virus, similar to that seen following treatment of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV).

As reported at the 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections last month in Los Angeles, researchers conducted a viral kinetics sub-study of 18 patients enrolled in the Tenofovir in HIV/HBV Coinfection study (TICO). The study was conducted in Thailand, were HBV infection is highly prevalent.

In the TICO study, antiretroviral-naive participants were randomly assigned to receive one of the following 3 NRTI backbones as part of an efavirenz (Sustiva)-based HAART regimen:

tenofovir (Viread) + AZT (Retrovir);
lamivudine (3TC; Epivir) + AZT;
tenofovir + lamivudine.

HBV viral load was measured throughout the 8-week study using a combination of the bDNA assay (limit of detection 2000 copies/mL) and the COBAS Taqman assay (limit of detection 200 copies/mL). HIV viral load, CD4 cell count, and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) were also quantified regularly.

Results

All but 1 patient (17 of 18) experienced a biphasic decline in HBV viral load after starting treatment.

Overall, the median HBV treatment efficacy was 98%, the median HBV virion half-life was 1.2 days, and the median infected cell half-life was 8.1 days.

These parameters did not differ significantly from those previously observed in HBV monoinfected individuals using NRTIs active against HBV.

There were no observed differences in HBV dynamic parameters among the 3 treatment arms.

There was also no significant association between HBV dynamic parameters and CD4 cell count, HIV viral load, or ALT level.

Conclusion

"HBV viral kinetics following initiation of HBV-active HAART is not changed by HIV coinfection," the researchers concluded. "The efficacy of anti-HBV treatment (as measured by the inhibition of HBV production) in HIV-HBV coinfection is similar to that seen following treatment of HBV monoinfection."

Alfred Hosp, Melbourne, Australia; Monash Univ, Melbourne, Australia; Los Alamos Natl Lab, NM; HIV Netherlands Australia Thailand (HIV-NAT) Res Collaboration, Thai Red Cross AIDS Res Ctr, Bangkok; Chulalongkorn Univ, Bangkok, Thailand; Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Lab, Melbourne, Australia; Natl Ctr for HIV Epidemiology and Clin Res, Sydney, Australia.

Link to study abstract

03/30/07

References
S Lewin, R Ribeiro, A Avihingsanon, and others. Hepatitis B Virus Kinetics Is Similar in HIV/HBV-co-infected and HBV-mono-infected Individuals. 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections; February 25-28, 2007; Los Angeles, California. Abstract 949 (poster).

 











































14th croi