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"Lamivudine-Resistant Mutation Among Treatment-Naïve Hepatitis B Patients May Be Associated With Treatment Failure: Presented at AASLD" By Arushi Sinha SAN FRANCISCO -- November 7, 2008 -- Patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) appear to have a high prevalence of lamivudine resistance genetic mutations that result in treatment failure, researchers reported here at the Liver Meeting 2008, the 59th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD). In these patients, treatment with adefovir or tenofovir proved more effective than treatment with lamivudine, said investigator Scott Fung, MD, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario. The aim of this study was to examine the role of a patient's genetic profile in influencing the efficacy of treatment for HBV, he said in a presentation on November 2. The goal was to document the incidence of antiviral resistance (AVR) mutations among a population of patients diagnosed with chronic HBV who had not received prior treatment. The researchers hypothesised that AVR mutations in a patient may prevent effective treatment with lamivudine and thus reduce clinical outcomes. "We thought that there might be a low level of natural resistance," explained Dr. Fung. The study enrolled 209 treatment-naïve patients aged a mean of 38 years with a mean HBV DNA of 5.7 +- 2.3 log[10 IU/mL (male, 69%). Incidence of cirrhosis in the cohort was 15%. The range of HBV genotypes was type A (8%), type B (32%), type C (47%), and type D (10%). Patients' AVR mutations were the following: rtL180M 10%; rtM204V/I, 12%; rtL80V/I, 9%; rtV173L, 3%; rtA181V/T, 0%; rtN236T, 0%. |
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