Lamivudine: A Review of its Therapeutic Potential in Chronic Hepatitis B
Authors: Jarvis B.; Faulds D.
Source: Drugs, Volume 58, Number 1, July 1999 , pp. 101-141(41)
Publisher: Adis International
Abstract:
Lamivudine is a deoxycytidine analogue that is active against hepatitis B virus (HBV). In patients with chronic hepatitis B, lamivudine profoundly suppresses HBV replication.
Clinically significant improvements in liver histology and biochemical parameters were obtained with lamivudine in double-blind, randomised, trials in hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive patients with chronic hepatitis B and compensated liver disease. After 52 weeks of treatment, relative to placebo (
25%), significantly more Chinese (56%) or Western patients (52%) treated with lamivudine 100 mg/day had reductions of
2 or more points in Knodell necroinflammatory scores. Moreover, significantly fewer lamivudine 100 mg/day than placebo recipients had progressive fibrosis in liver biopsies (
5 vs
15%) and fewer lamivudine- than placebo-treated patients progressed to cirrhosis (1.8 vs 7.1%). More lamivudine 100 mg/day than placebo recipients acquired antibodies to HBeAg after 52 weeks (16 vs 4% in Chinese patients and 17 vs 6% in Western patients). ALT levels normalised in significantly more lamivudine than placebo recipients enrolled in these trials.
In HBeAg-negative, HBV DNA positive patients with compensated liver disease enrolled in a double-blind, randomised study, HBV DNA levels were suppressed to below the limit of detection (< 2.5 pg/ml) and ALT levels normalised in 63% and 6% of patients treated with lamivudine 100 mg/day or placebo for 24 weeks. Clinically significant improvements in liver histology were obtained in 60% of patients treated with lamivudine for 52 weeks in this study.
Lamivudine 100 mg/day for 52 weeks produced similar or significantly greater improvements in liver histology and ALT levels than 24 weeks' treatment with lamivudine plus interferon-
.
In liver transplant candidates with chronic hepatitis B and end-stage liver disease, lamivudine 100 mg/day alone, or in combination with hepatitis B immune globulin, generally suppressed HBV replication and appeared to protect the grafted liver from reinfection. Lamivudine 100 mg/day suppressed viral replication and improved liver histology in liver transplant recipients with recurrent or de novo chronic hepatitis B. Lamivudine 300 or 600 mg/day reduced HBV replication in HIV-positive patients.
The incidence of adverse events in patients with chronic hepatitis B and compensated liver disease treated with lamivudine 100 mg/day or placebo for 52 to 68 weeks was similar. 3.1- to 10-fold increases in ALT over baseline occurred in 13% of patients during treatment with lamivudine 100 mg/day or placebo for 52 weeks. Post-treatment ALT elevations were more common in lamivudine than placebo recipients; however, these generally resolved spontaneously;
1.5% of lamivudine- or placebo-treated patients experienced hepatic decompensation.
Conclusion: Lamivudine inhibits HBV replication, reduces hepatic necroinflammatory activity and the progression of fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B, ongoing viral replication and compensated liver disease including HBeAg-negative patients. The drug also suppresses viral replication in liver transplant recipients and HIV-positive patients. Thus, lamivudine is potentially useful in a wide range of patients with chronic hepatitis B and ongoing viral replication.
Keywords: Reviews-on-treatment; Lamivudine, general; Hepatitis-B, treatment; Interferon-alpha, therapeutic-use; Famciclovir, therapeutic-use; Lamivudine, pharmacodynamics; Lamivudine, pharmacokinetics; Clinical-pharmacokinetics; Lamivudine, therapeutic-use; Lamivudine, adverse-reactions; Liver-transplant; HIV-infections; Antivirals, therapeutic-use; Drug-evaluations; Immune-function
Language: English
Document Type: Drug Evaluation
Affiliations: 1: Adis International Limited, Auckland, New Zealand *
Publication date: 1999-07-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Pharmacology , Therapeutics & Alternative Medicine
- By this author: Jarvis B. ; Faulds D.

Shopping cart
Receive new issue alert
Get Permissions