201. HBV-associated cryoglobulinemic vasculitis: remission after antiviral therapy with entecavir.
- Author
-
Viganò M, Martin P, Cappelletti M, and Fabrizi F
- Subjects
- Adult, Comorbidity, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Guanine therapeutic use, Hepatitis B Surface Antigens blood, Hepatitis B virus, Hepatitis B, Chronic drug therapy, Humans, Remission Induction, Transaminases blood, Treatment Outcome, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Cryoglobulinemia drug therapy, Cryoglobulinemia etiology, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Hepatitis B, Chronic complications, Vasculitis drug therapy, Vasculitis etiology
- Abstract
Background/aims: Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis remains an uncommon complication of hepatitis B virus infection., Methods: We report the case of a 40-years old female Chinese patient with chronic hepatitis B developing cryoglobulinemic vasculitis with multiple organ involvement (liver, kidney, and skin) coupled with weakness, arthralgias, haemolytic anaemia, and autoimmune thyroiditis. She received entecavir mono-therapy at dose adjusted for estimated glomerular filtration rate., Results: Within five months of entecavir treatment, hepatitis B viraemia decreased below the limit of detection with normal serum amino-transferase levels, HBeAg clearance occurred, vasculitis regressed with disappearance of purpura and ascites; in addition, renal function normalized and nephritic syndrome remitted. After a five-year follow-up, the patient is asymptomatic with intact kidney function, proteinuria in the normal range, and normal liver biochemistry, despite the antiviral treatment was withdrawn and the patient remained HBsAg positive., Conclusions: This is the second case of hepatitis B virus-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis successfully treated with entecavir suggesting that effective antiviral therapy may counteract both the hepatic and extra-hepatic manifestations of infection by hepatitis B virus., (© 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF