Background and Aim: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is relatively frequent in China. This study investigated the clinical, demographic, and viral and host genetic characteristics that may influence disease manifestations and clinical management. Methods: In this cross-sectional observational study, treatment-naïve Han ethnic adults with recently confirmed chronic HCV infection were enrolled at 28 hospitals across China. HCV genotype and host interleukin 28B (IL28B) genotypes were determined and compared with patient demographic parameters and medical status. Results: Among the 997 HCV-positive patients analyzed, 56.8% were infected with HCV genotype 1b, followed in prevalence by genotypes 2, 3, and 6, with substantial regional variation. Overall, 84.1% of patients were IL28B genotype CC (rs12979860), with little regional variation. Cirrhosis was reported in 10.1% of patients and was significantly associated with hepatitis B virus coinfection, low HCV viral load, low serum alanine aminotransferase, high serum aspartate aminotransferase, diabetes, and high pickled food consumption. Medical procedures were common transmission risk factors; however, lifestyle-associated risk factors, including intravenous drug abuse and tattoos or piercings, were more common in patients with HCV genotype 3 or 6. Conclusions: Most HCV-infected Han Chinese patients were IL28B genotype CC (rs12979860). HCV genotypes varied by geographic region, and disease characteristics differed according to HCV genotype. Relatively frequent detection of advanced liver disease may reflect limitations on access to antiviral therapy, and suggests that greater awareness of factors that influence HCV-associated disease may help avoid clinical complications and improve patient outcomes.
Background and Aims: Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) has similar efficacy to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) but with improved renal and bone safety in chronic hepatitis B patients studied outside of China. We report 3-year results from two phase 3 studies with TAF in China (Clinicaltrials. gov: NCT02836249 and NCT02836236). Methods: Chinese hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive and -negative chronic hepatitis B patients with viremia and elevated alanine aminotransferase were randomized 2:1 to TAF or TDF treatment groups and treated in a double-blind fashion for 144 weeks (3 years). Efficacy responses were assessed by individual study while safety was assessed by a pooled analysis. Results: Of the 334 patients (180 HBeAg-positive and 154 HBeAg-negative) randomized and treated, baseline characteristics were similar between groups. The overall mean age was 38 years and 73% were male. The mean HBV DNA was 6.4 log 10 IU/mL. The median alanine aminotransferase was 88 U/L, and 37% had a history of antiviral use. At week 144, the proportion with HBV DNA <29 IU/mL was similar among the two groups, with TAF at 83% vs. TDF at 79%, and TAF at 93% vs. TDF at 92% for the HBeAg-positive and -negative patients, respectively. In each study, higher proportions of TAF than TDF patients showed normalized alanine aminotransferase (via the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and the China criteria) and showed loss of HBsAg; meanwhile, the HBeAg seroconversion rates were similar. Treatment was well-tolerated among the TAF patients, who showed a smaller median decline in creatinine clearance (−0.4 vs. −3.2 mL/min; p=0.014) and less percentage change in bone mineral density vs. TDF at hip (−0.95% vs. −1.93%) and spine (+0.35% vs. −1.40%). Conclusions: In chronic hepatitis B patients from China, TAF treatment provided efficacy similar to TDF but with better renal and bone safety at 3 years.
Poisoning by cytotoxic mushrooms (Amanita phalloides and related species) is associated with severe morbidity and a high mortality rate (lethality > 20% in adults and > 50% in children). The main causes of this intoxication are the amatoxines, which inhibit DNA-dependent RNA Polymerase II or B. This interaction leads to a tight complex, and the inhibition is of a non-competitive type (1); in addition to those tight binding inhibitors of adenosine kinase, papain, cathepsin L, cathepsin B, cysteine proteinase and bromelain (2), inhibit the synthesis of messenger RNA in the hepatocytes, decrease the formation of coagulation factors and of immunoglobulins and effect a vasoconstriction. They also have an influence on the transcription and lesions that are seen in cells with rapid protein synthesis, particularly in liver and renal cells, with the cellular changes causing the fragmentation and segregation of all nuclear components, even at low toxin concentrations (3). Phallotoxin, which is the other toxin isolated from death cap, binds with a high affinity to microfilamentous structures - in particular, to F-actin, which stimulates the polymerization of G-actin, stabilizes the F-actin filaments, irreversibly polymerizes actin filaments and causes cholestasis (4). Liver is recognized as the target organ for Amanita phalloides toxins; it is presented by fatty degeneration, acute toxic dystrophy and centrilobular necroses (5). Therapeutic options employed to treat mushroom intoxication, such as hemodiaperfusion on activated charcoal, high dosages of penicillin G, oral charcoal, etc., very often failed to act properly and liver transplantation (when a graft is available) appeared to be the only solution. The most polarized debate concerns the value of extracorporeal elimination. Plasmapheresis and peritoneal dialysis proved much less useful for this purpose; neither haemodialysis (HD) nor haemoperfusion (HP) contributed to the clearance of amatoxin (6, 7). Recently, Stange et al. (8). introduced a new detoxication method (referred to as MARS) for protein-bound substances in patients with liver failure and grade III and IV hepatic encephalopathy. MARS was performed with an albumin-containing dialysate, which is recycled in a closed loop that contains a charcoal cartridge, an anion exchanger resin adsorber and a conventional haemodialyser. With dialysis using an albumin-containing dialysate, protein-bound substances, which are usually not sufficiently dialysable, can be eliminated. The treatments increase the rate of toxin elimination to the extent that the toxic exposure of highly susceptible cells, such as hepatocytes, is minimized. This leads to the surprise recovery of the poisoning patient, despite her severe condition, even as late as up to a week after mushroom ingestion.
Background and Aim: In China, chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection represents a considerable healthcare burden. Although interferon-based therapy has been the standard-of-care for many years, few long-term, real-life studies have assessed interferon-based treatment in China. The objective of CCgenos follow-up study was to analyze long-term treatment patterns and outcomes in a cohort of treatment-naïve, Han ethnic, patients with chronic HCV infection. Methods: Patients who had participated in the CCgenos cross-sectional study were invited to enter this 5-year follow up. Clinical information and centralized HCV-RNA measures were collected at scheduled study visits every 6 months for untreated patients and every 3 months for treated patients. Results: Among 512 patients enrolled, 334 (65.2%) received interferon-based treatment and 178 (34.8%) remained untreated over a median of 4.1 (1.2-4.3) years. A total of 82.8% (424/ 512) of patients had an IL28B CC genotype (GT); 60.7% (311/512) had HCV GT1b infection, including 121 (38.9%) untreated. Most patients with baseline cirrhosis were untreated (26/46, 56.5%). Among patients who completed treatment and 24 weeks of post-treatment follow up, the duration of interferon-based therapy was frequently longer than recommended (52.9% [92/174] of GT1b-infected were treated for > 1 year). Rates of sustained virologic response (SVR24) were 71.1% (226/318) overall; 62.4% (111/178) among patients with HCV GT1b infection; and 42.9% (15/35) among patients with cirrhosis. Conclusions: There remains a high unmet need for effective HCV treatment in China, evidenced by a high proportion of patients remaining untreated by the current standard-ofcare and relatively low SVR24 rates for patients with both GT1b infection and cirrhosis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.