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Chronic Hepatitis Is Common and Often Untreated Among Children with Hepatitis B Infection in the United States and Canada

Chronic Hepatitis Is Common and Often Untreated Among Children with Hepatitis B Infection in the United States and Canada

Authors :
Stephanie Kelley
Manuel Lombardero
Shannon M. Riggs
Laurie A. Rodgers-Augustyniak
Sherry R. Hall
Jeffrey Teckman
Naureen Islam
Peter A. Lee
Karen F. Murray
Shirley Montanye
Jay H. Hoofnagle
Kathleen B. Schwarz
Kara Cooper
Rosemary A. Nagy
Daniel Cui
Norberto Rodriguez-Baez
Camille Langlois
Donna Stoliker
Natasha Feier
Tamara Haller
Douglas Mogul
Hejab Imteyaz
Frani Averbach
Robert A. Anders
Christina M. Lalama
Athena Hau
Andrew Pelesko
Hongxia Li
Qian Zhao
Kiyoko Oshima
Joel Feier
Sharon Lawlor
Jacki Cerkoski
Kim Kafka
Edward Doo
Melissa Weiner
Philip J. Rosenthal
Rebecca Torrance
Regina M. Hardison
Averell H. Sherker
Sarah Jane Schwarzenberg
Hsing-Hua S Lin
Ella Zadorozny
Simon C. Ling
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 237
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective To determine the outcomes of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a large, prospectively studied cohort of children in the US and Canada. Study design This was a prospective, observational study of children with chronic HBV enrolled in 7 clinical centers and evaluated at baseline, weeks 24 and 48, and annually thereafter, with analysis of demographic, clinical, physical examination, and blood test data. Results Among 362 children followed for a median of 4.2 years, elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels (>1 upper limit of normal) were present in 72% at last evaluation, including in 60% of children with loss of hepatitis B e antigen during follow-up and 70% of those who were hepatitis B e antigen negative at baseline. Significant ALT flares (male patients ≥400 U/L, female patients ≥350 U/L) occurred in 13 children. Of 129 children who fulfilled the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases treatment criteria during follow-up, anti-HBV treatment was initiated in only 25. One child died (unrelated to liver disease), 1 developed cirrhosis, but no episodes of cirrhotic decompensation or hepatocellular carcinoma were observed. Decline in platelet count was inversely associated with ALT elevations. Conclusions In a cohort of children with chronic HBV infection in the US and Canada, many children remained at risk of progressive liver disease due to active hepatitis, but major clinical outcomes such as cirrhosis, cancer, and death were rare. Many children who met criteria for treatment remained untreated.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
237
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23f80ff9c70286f8dc355cea804e8848