Title: Hepatitis B
1Hepatitis B
- Jay H. Hoofnagle, M.D.
- Division of Digestive Diseases
- and Nutrition
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and
Kidney Diseases - National Institutes of Health
FDA Advisory Panel Meeting August 7, 2002
2Hepatitis B
- HBV, small double stranded DNA virus
- Hepadnaviridae
- Infection restricted to humans and higher apes
- High levels in blood (102 to 1010 copies/ml)
- Causes both acute and chronic hepatitis
- Parenteral, sexual and maternal-infant spread
- Marked geographic variation in incidence
- Common in Asia Africa, uncommon in the United
States and Western Europe
3Hepatitis B Virus
HBeAg
HBsAg
HBsAg
HBcAg
Sphere
HBsAg
Dane Particle
Tubule
4(No Transcript)
5Hepatitis B Virus RNAs
2.1kb RNA
2.4kb RNA
Pre-S1
Pre-S2
-strand
ORF-S
strand
3.5kb RNA
5
DR1
ORF-C
ORF-P
5
DR2
Pre-C
ORF-X
0.7kb RNA
6Hepatitis B Viral Genome
- Circular, partially doubled-stranded DNA
- Four open reading frames
- HBsAg (pre-S1, pre-S2 and S)
- HBcAg (pre-core core)
- Polymerase (multifunctional)
- HBxAg (transactivating factor)
- Replicates largely in liver
- Through RNA intermediate and reverse transcription
7Infectious cycle of hepatitis B virus
Y
Y
Y
degradation - antigen-specific - non-specific
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Virus - half-life 1-2 days -production
1011-1013/day mutation rate 1-3
x 10-5/site/yr
cell death
Zeuzem et al 2000
8Hepatitis B Virus Mutants
- Variations in nucleotide sequence in one of the
HBV genes can result in change in the virological
and, in some cases, clinical features of the
infection. - S gene vaccine or HBIG escape mutants
- C gene can affect disease severity or
serological and clinical manifestations - P gene can effect replicative efficiency and
resistance to antiviral therapy
9Hepatitis B Core Antigen Mutants
- Nucleocapsid region Pre-core and Core
- Pre-core May result in inability to produce
HBeAg. HBeAg-negative mutants. Most frequently,
G?A at nt 1896. - Core Substitutions in core region are frequent
among pts with severe disease or resistance to
interferon, in areas of major B cell and T cell
epitopes, thus important in T cell cytotoxicity
and viral clearance
10HBeAg-negative Variants
- G?A at nt 1896 creates a stop codon in the
pre-core region that therefore blocks the
synthesis of HBeAg. - nt 1896 is in the highly structured stem-loop ?
encapsidation signal region of HBV RNA and
base-pairs with nt 1858 - If nt 1858 is a T (ayw, adr, some adw), stem loop
of ? is maintained by either G or A if it is a C
(adw), stem loop is disrupted by A and
replication is stopped. - Thus HBeAg-negative variants are more common with
genotypes B, C and D than genotype A
11Outcome of Hepatitis B Virus Infection
35
Acute Hepatitis B
65
Asymptomatic subclinical infection
Fulminant Hepatitis
5
Chronic Hepatitis B
30
50
Inactive Carrier State
Cirrhosis
?
Liver Cancer
12Typical Acute Hepatitis B
HBsAg
HBeAg
ALT
ALT and HBV DNA IU/L and million copies/ml
Symptoms
HBV DNA
Normal
Months After Exposure
13Typical Chronic Hepatitis B
HBsAg
HBeAg
ALT and HBV DNA IU/L or million copies/ml
HBV DNA
ALT
Normal
Months After Exposure
14Chronic Hepatitis B Transition to Inactive
Carrier State
HBsAg
HBeAg
ALT and HBV DNA IU/L and million copies/ml
HBV DNA
Anti-HBe
ALT
Normal
Months After Exposure
15Evolution of HBeAg Negative Mutant
HBsAg
Anti-HBe
HBeAg
ALT
ALT and HBV DNA IU/L and million copies/ml
HBV DNA
Normal ALT levels
Months
16Chronic Hepatitis B Three Clinical Forms
- HBeAg Positive Chronic Hepatitis B
- HBeAg, raised ALT, HBV DNA in serum and chronic
hepatitis on biopsy - HBeAg Negative Chronic Hepatitis B
- Anti-HBe, raised ALT and HBV DNA in serum,
chronic hepatitis on biopsy - Inactive HBsAg Carrier State
- Anti-HBe, normal ALT no HBV DNA, minimal
nonspecific changes on biopsy
17Chronic Hepatitis B Clinical Forms HBV DNA
levels
- HBeAg Positive Chronic Hepatitis B
- 107 to 1011 copies per ml
- HBeAg Negative Chronic Hepatitis B
- 104 to 108 copies per ml
- Inactive HBsAg Carrier State
-
18HBV DNA Detection
10
35,000
8
350
6
3.5
pg/mL
Log10 copies/mL
.035
4
2
.0035
Dynamic Range of Detection of HBV DNA 5 Assays
19Genotypes of Hepatitis B Virus
Type Subtype Geographical Distribution
- A adw, adw2, ayw1 US, Northern Europe, Africa
- B adw2, ayw1 China, Indonesia, Vietnam
- C adr, ayr China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam
- D ayw2, ayw3 Mediterranian, Middle East,
India - E ayw4 West Africa
- F adw4 Polynesia, US (rare)
- G Europe, US (rare)
20Acute Hepatitis BSentinel County Study 1982-98
- Currently, HBV causes 34 of viral hepatitis
- Decline in incidence by 76 between 1987-98
- 20 hospitalized, 1 fatal
- Gradual rise in median age (27 to 32 yrs)
- More common in men than women
- African-Americans Hispanic whites whites
- Current proportions with risk factors
- Injection drug use 14
- Men who has sex with men 15
- Heterosexual activity 40
- Occupational exposure 2
Goldstein et al 2002
21Acute Hepatitis B Incidence in the U.S. 1978-1998
HBsAg screening of pregnant women
Vaccine licensed
Routine infant immunization
OSHA Rule
Routine adolescent immunization
Infections per 100,000
Decline in high-risk heterosexuals
Decline in MSM HCW
Decline in injecting drug users
Year
Alter et al CDC
22Chronic Liver Disease United States 1999
Other
Hepatitis B
NASH 10
Hepatitis C 57
Alcohol 25
Hepatitis B accounted for only 4.4 of
newly-diagnosed chronic liver disease
Bell et al 2001
23Chronic Hepatitis BLong-Term Complications
- Cirrhosis
- Hepatocellular carcinoma
- Glomerulonephritis
- Polyarteritis Nodosa
24Chronic Hepatitis BHistology
- Necroinflammatory Changes (Grade)
- Periportal inflammation and necrosis (piecemeal
necrosis, interface hepatitis) - Lobular inflammation and single cell necrosis
- Portal inflammation
- Fibrosis (Stage)
- Portal
- Septa formation
- Bridging fibrosis
- Cirrhosis
25Chronic Hepatitis BHistology Scoring Systems
- Histology Activity Index (Knodell)
- Periportal necrosis inflammation (0-10)
- Lobular necrosis inflammation (0-4)
- Portal inflammation (0-4)
- Fibrosis
- None 0
- Portal fibrosis 1
- Bridging fibrosis 3
- Cirrhosis 4
26Chronic Hepatitis BHistology Scoring Systems
- Histology Activity Index (Ishak)
- Periportal necrosis inflammation (0-4)
- Bridging necrosis (0-6)
- Lobular necrosis inflammation (0-4)
- Portal inflammation (0-4)
- Fibrosis
- None 0
- Portal fibrosis 1 or 2
- Bridging fibrosis 3 or 4
- Cirrhosis 5 or 6
27Therapy of Hepatitis B
28Chronic Hepatitis BGoals of Therapy
- Improve symptoms and quality of life
- Decrease infectivity
- Prevent progression of disease
- Hepatic Decompensation
- Death from liver disease
- What surrogate end-points
- correlate with these outcomes ?
29Therapy of Chronic Hepatitis B Major Issues
- What are appropriate end-points?
- Are they the same for different forms of HBV?
- Loss of HBeAg
- Loss of HBsAg
- Loss of HBV DNA (fall below 105 copies/ml)
- Normalization of ALT
- Improvement in histology
- What amount of follow up is appropriate in
assessing benefit of therapy?
30Definition of Responses to Therapy in Chronic
Hepatitis B
- Type
- Virological Loss of HBeAg and/or HBV DNA
- Biochemical Normal ALT
- Histological Improvement in histology scores
- Complete All of above loss of HBsAg
- Timing
- Initial within first 6 mo of therapy
- End-of-therapy when therapy is stopped
- Sustained 6 or 12 mo after stopping
- Maintained present while continuing therapy
31Virological Response in Chronic Hepatitis B
- Loss of HBeAg and fall of HBV DNA levels to below
105 copies/mL - Occurs in 25-48 of patients given a 4-5 month
course of alpha interferon - Occurs in 20-32 of patients given a 12 month
course of lamivudine - Occurs in 8-12 of patients on no therapy
- Is this response durable and does it result in
long-term improvement in disease and lack of
progression to cirrhosis and HCC?
32Virological Response in Chronic Hepatitis B
- Loss of HBeAg cannot be used as an endpoint in
patients with HBeAg-negative disease - Generally rely upon decrease in HBV DNA to below
105 copies/ml - HBV DNA levels, however, can fluctuate widely,
and with nucleoside therapy will rapidly return
to baseline when treatment is stopped. - How durable is decrease in HBV DNA without other
changes in viral status?
33Virological Response in Chronic Hepatitis B
- Loss of HBsAg and development of anti-HBs
- Occurs in 8 of patients given a 4-5 month course
of alpha interferon - Occurs in 1-2 of patients given a 12 month
course of lamivudine - Occurs in
- Extremely rare in treatment trials of
HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B - This response is durable and associated with
resolution of liver disease
34Biochemical Response in Chronic Hepatitis B
- Fall of ALT levels into the Normal Range
- Often accompanies loss of HBeAg or decrease in
HBV DNA to below 105 copies/mL - Not durable unless the decrease in HBV DNA is
durable. - Surrogate, indirect marker for decrease in
necroinflammatory disease
35Histological Response in Chronic Hepatitis B
- Improvements in Histology
- Used in virtually all studies of antiviral
therapy - Typically, improvement is called a 2 point
improvement in HAI score (0-22) compared to
baseline - However, necroinflammatory scores can change
rapidly and improve and worsen - Fibrosis scores represent best evidence for
progression of disease and are unlikely to
improve with treatment
36Alpha Interferon
- Human cytokine made by lymphocytes in response to
viral infection - Acts through cell-surface receptors
- Activates Jak/Stat system
- Induces transcription of proteins with antiviral
activity (2-5 OAS, PKR, eIF2) - Recombinant human alpha interferon
- Pegylated forms now available
37Chronic Hepatitis BLong-term Response to
Interferon
Alpha Interferon
ALT
Anti-HBe
HBV DNA (dot blot)
HBeAg
Anti-HBs
HBsAg
Months After Start of Therapy
Patient A
38Chronic Hepatitis BResponse to Interferon
Relapse
Alpha Interferon
ALT
HBeAg
HBeAg
Anti-HBe
HBsAg
Months After Start of Therapy
Patient B
39HBeAg-Negative Chronic Hepatitis BResponse to
Interferon and Relapse
Alpha Interferon
-
-
-
HBV DNA
HBsAg
ALT
Anti-HBe
Months After Start of Therapy
Patient C
40Interferon for Chronic Hepatitis B Problems
- Effective in only 1/3rd of cases
- Expensive
- Side effects are common and can be severe
- Not appropriate for many categories of pts
- Immune suppressed
- Renal failure or dialysis
- Solid organ transplant
- Decompensated liver disease
41Lamivudine
- Negative enantiomer of 3-thiacytidine
- Both an unnatural nucleoside and chain terminator
- Highly active against HBV in vitro
- Dose 100 mg, once daily by mouth
- Approved for use in chronic hepatitis B as one
year course of therapy - Continuous, long-term use is common but must be
considered experimental
42Lamivudine TherapyMaintained Response
Therapy with Lamivudine (100 mg/d)
ALT
108
HAI Scores Pre 14 Yr 1 4 Yr 4 1
HBV DNA
106
HBV DNA Levels
HBeAg
104
HBsAg
102
Patient B
43HBeAg-Negative Chronic Hepatitis B
Lamivudine
HAI 4 200 copies/ml
HAI 13 53.1 million copies/ml
HAI 1 Liver Biopsy HBV DNA
ALT
HBsAg and Anti-HBe
Months After Start of Therapy
Patient C
44Lamivudine TherapyViral Resistance
Therapy with Lamivudine (100 mg)
wt
1010
108
HBV DNA
YVDD
HBV DNA Levels
106
ALT
104
102
Normal
HAI Scores Pre 14 Yr 1 10 Yr 4 17 (Cirrhosis)
Patient D
45Lamivudine for Chronic Hepatitis BHistology
Activity Index Scores
9.8
9.9
8.4
7.1
Total HAI Scores (0 to 18)
2.5
1.3
9
9
9
13
13
4
46Lamivudine for Chronic Hepatitis B Fibrosis
Scores
4.3
4.2
3.9
3.3
2.9
Fibrosis Score (0 to 6)
1.3
9
9
9
13
13
4
47Lamivudine TherapyLate Relapse
Therapy with Lamivudine (100 mg/d)
ALT
108
HAI Scores Pre 14 Yr 1 4 Yr 4 1
HBV DNA
106
HBV DNA Levels
HBeAg
104
HBsAg
102
Patient B
4885
50
49Lamivudine
- The major shortcoming of long-term lamivudine
therapy for hepatitis B is emergence of
lamivudine resistance - Occurs in 20-30 of patients per yr, approaching
90 by 5 yrs - Loss of HBsAg, but not loss of HBeAg, appears to
reliably predict long-term benefit ability to
stop lamivudine - Future studies should focus on combinations that
might prevent resistance
50Optimal Therapy of Hepatitis B?
- Monotherapy or combination therapy?
- For a defined period (48 wks) or continuous?
- For all pts or only those with mod-severe
disease? - If monotherapy, which agent?
- If combination, which combination?
- Standard interferon and lamivudine
- Pegylated interferon and lamivudine
- Lamivudine and adefovir
- Lamivudine and entecavir
51Management of Hepatitis B
- Initial evaluation Routine liver tests, HBsAg,
HBeAg anti-HBe, HBV DNA, anti-HDV, abdominal US - If ALT elevated HBV DNA present liver biopsy
and assess for therapy - Reserve therapy for patients with significant
underlying liver disease - Therapy?
Lok, Heathcote Hoofnagle 2001
52Therapy of Chronic Hepatitis B Future Directions
- Focus must be on combination therapy
- Long term outcomes with histological verification
of long-term benefit - Loss of HBsAg might be a gold standard
- Appropriate directions
- Combinations of alpha interferon lamivudine
- Nucleoside combinations without cross-reactive
resistance (lamivudine adefovir or entecavir) - Novel approaches immunological or molecular