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No resistance to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate detected after up to 144 weeks of therapy in patients monoinfected with chronic hepatitis B virus

โœ Scribed by Andrea Snow-Lampart; Brandi Chappell; Maria Curtis; Yuao Zhu; Florence Myrick; James Schawalder; Kathryn Kitrinos; Evguenia S. Svarovskaia; Michael D. Miller; Jeff Sorbel; Jenny Heathcote; Patrick Marcellin; Katyna Borroto-Esoda


Book ID
102850121
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
582 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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โœฆ Synopsis


Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) is a nucleotide analogue with potent activity against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and hepatitis B virus (HBV). To date, no reports of HBV clinical resistance to TDF have been confirmed. In two phase 3 studies (GS-US-174-0102 and GS-US-174-0103), 375 hepatitis B e antigen-negative (HBeAg(-) ) patients and 266 HBeAg(+) patients with chronic hepatitis B (some nucleoside-naive and some lamivudine-experienced) were randomized 2:1 to receive TDF (n = 426) or adefovir dipivoxil (ADV; n = 215) for 48 weeks. After week 48, eligible patients received open-label TDF with no interruption. The studies are being continued through week 384/year 8; week 144 data are presented here. Per protocol, viremic patients (HBV DNA level โ‰ฅ 400 copies/mL or 69 IU/mL) had the option of adding emtricitabine (FTC) at or after week 72. Resistance analyses of HBV polymerase/reverse transcriptase (pol/RT) were based on population dideoxy sequencing. Phenotypic analyses were conducted in HepG2 cells with recombinant HBV derived from patient serum. Most patients maintained TDF monotherapy treatment across both studies (607/641, 95%). A resistance analysis of HBV pol/RT was performed at the baseline for all patients, for viremic patients at week 144 or at the last time when they were on TDF monotherapy (34 on TDF and 19 on ADV-TDF), and for patients who remained viremic after the addition of FTC (7/20 on TDF and 5/14 on ADV-TDF). No patient developed amino acid substitutions associated with resistance to TDF. Virological breakthrough on TDF monotherapy was infrequent over 144 weeks (13/426, 3%) and was attributed to documented nonadherence in most cases (11/13, 85%). Persistent viremia (โ‰ฅ400 copies/mL) through week 144 was rare (5/641, 0.8%) and was not associated with virological resistance to TDF by population or clonal analyses.

Conclusion:

No nucleoside-naive or nucleoside-experienced patient developed hbv pol/rt mutations associated with tdf resistance after up to 144 weeks of exposure to tdf monotherapy.


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