Chronic Hepatitis B Diagnosis When to refer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chronic Hepatitis B Diagnosis When to refer

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Title: Chronic Hepatitis B Diagnosis When to refer


1
Chronic Hepatitis BDiagnosis When to refer
  • Dr Yeung Yat Wah
  • ?????

2
Screening for HBV
  • Persons born in hyperendemic areas
  • Men who have sex with men
  • Injection drug users
  • Patients on dialysis
  • HIV patients
  • Pregnant women
  • Family, household, and sexual contacts

3
Prevention of infection
  • Have sexual contacts vaccinated
  • Use barrier method
  • Not share toothbrushes or razors
  • Cover open cuts and scratches
  • Clean blood spills with detergent or bleach
  • Not donate blood or sperms
  • Safe
  • Contact sports, sharing food, utensils
  • Kiss

4
Natural HistorySelecting patient to treat
  • Immune tolerance phase
  • First 3 decades
  • Very high viral load with normal ALT
  • Immune clearance phase
  • Liver damage with high ALT, can be asymp
  • HBeAg seroconversion
  • Quiescent phase

5
Evaluation
  • Hx and P/E
  • FHx of liver ds, Hepatitis B, HCC
  • Lab tests
  • CBP, PI
  • HBeAg/Ab HBVDNA
  • USG
  • Fibroscan
  • Liver Bx

6
Fibroscan How it works
  • Fibroscan is non-invasive, good reproductivity,
    and easy operations
  • Patients need to
  • lay down and
  • put his right
  • arm during the
  • examination

7
Fibroscan How it works
  • The probe is placed at the intercostal space of
    the rib bones
  • Shear (mechanical) wave is triggered by
    pressing the button at the probe
  • The ultrasound will track the
  • speed of the shear wave
  • The harder the liver and faster
  • the speed? higher stiffness(LSM)
  • softer the liver and slower the
  • speed ? lower stiffness(LSM)

8
LSM is highly reproducible
Overall interobserver agreement ICC 0.98
Intraobserver agreement ICC 0.98
Intraobserver agreement ICC 0.98
  • Study population 200 patients with chronic liver
    diseases
  • 800 LSMs were performed
  • Intraobserver and interobserver agreement were
    analyzed using the intraclass
  • correlation coefficient (ICC)

LSM is a highly reproducible and user-friendly
technique for assessing liver fibrosis in
patients with chronic liver diseases
Fraquelli et al. Gut. 2007
9
Factors Associated with LSM Failure
N4172 N3089 N1568
N967 N225 N48
Factors associated with LSM failure
  • BMI (gt30 kg/m2)
  • Operator experience (lt500 examinations)
  • Age (gt52y)
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Time of examination

Castera et al. Hepatology. 2010
10
LSM in CHC Treatment Effects
Group (n) Initial LS Range (kPa) 2nd LS Range (kPa) LS Change (median, kPa) P Value
Sustained virological response (SVR) Sustained virological response (SVR) Sustained virological response (SVR) Sustained virological response (SVR) Sustained virological response (SVR)
Total (95) 3.0-70.6 2.7-33.8 -36.8 16.7 (-0.6) lt0.001
F 0-1 (33) 3.0-9.0 2.7-8.3 -3.3 2.6 (-0.5) 0.042
F 2-4 (57) 3.6-70.6 3.0-33.8 -36.8 16.7 (-1.0) 0.003
Non-sustained virological response (NSVR) Non-sustained virological response (NSVR) Non-sustained virological response (NSVR) Non-sustained virological response (NSVR) Non-sustained virological response (NSVR)
Total (49) 4.1-49.7 4.1-61.5 -14.6 23.6 (0.8) 0.557
F 0-1 (10) 5.3-17.1 4.1-16.0 -4.3 6.4 (0.9) 0.959
F 2-4 (32) 4.6-49.7 5.9-61.5 -14.6 23.4 (0.3) 0.694
LSM decreases in sustained responders following
IFN-based therapy in patients with chronic HCV
Wang et al. J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2010
11
LSM in CHB Treatment Effects
  • Study population 53 patients with cirrhosis 13
    patients with advanced fibrosis
  • Median treatment duration
  • 50.5 months
  • Transient elastography examinations demonstrate
    that prolonged treatment with NUCs in patients
    with CHB results in low liver stiffness

Andersen et al., Scand J Gastroenterol. 2011
12
Treatment
  • Aims sustained suppression
  • Prevent cirrhosis, hepatic failure, and HCC
  • Assess treatment response
  • ALT
  • Decrease in serum HBVDNA
  • Loss of HBeAg with HBeAb
  • Improvement in histology

13
Candidates for Referral
  • Cirrhosis
  • Chronic Hepatitis B
  • ALT above 2x and HBVDNA 5 log copies
  • Any ALT elevations with HBVDNA 5 log
  • Above 40
  • Liver bx showing active disease or sig fibrosis

14
Monitoring for those who do not need treatment
  • HBeAg with normal ALT
  • LFT every 3-6 months
  • More frequent if ALT elevated
  • For persistent slightly high ALT, consider liver
    biopsy esp above 40 years of age
  • In young patients (below 30) liver biopsy is
    usually not necessary if ALT is persistently
    normal
  • HBeAg status every 6-12 months

15
Monitoring for those who do not need treatment
  • HBeAg negative
  • Monitor LFT every 3 months during the first year
    to verify that they are truly inactive
  • Then every 6-12 months

16
Case sharing (1)
  • HKU student, 20 years old
  • Normal LFT
  • Normal USG
  • No need to check HBVDNA
  • HBeAg status

17
Case sharing (2)
  • Young man, 22 years old
  • Normal LFT
  • Normal USG
  • HBVDNA 9 logs
  • HBeAg
  • Started on oral drugs and referred to HA

18
Case sharing (3)
  • Male 65 years old
  • Known HB years ago during regular blood check
  • No regular follow up and monitoring
  • Recently seen by his family physician and LFT
    showed ALT 200, so referred to Medical

19
Case sharing (3)
  • As his ALT was high an early appointment was
    given (2 weeks)
  • New case assessment P/E normal
  • Taking his age and deranged LFT into account, an
    early USG was arranged in a week which showed a 3
    cm mass
  • Confirmed HCC with surgery done and received
    treatment for his HB

20
Case sharing (4)
  • 44 gentleman seen by GP for years
  • Known Hepatitis B for years
  • In recent 3-4 years noted a slightly high ALT
    around 40 to 50
  • USG showed fatty liver
  • Continue to monitor

21
Case sharing (4)
  • Came to seek a second opinion
  • USG showed moderate coarsening suggesting
    cirrhosis. Spleen was also enlarged to 11.5 cm.
    Platelet count was low at 100
  • HBVDNA was 3 logs
  • Treated with oral drugs

22
Case sharing (5)
  • Male 55 years old
  • Known HB during pre-marital check up
  • No regular follow up
  • Taking herbs for eczema for a year
  • Noted ankle and scrotal oedema, seen by GP, noted
    deranged LFT with ALT 300, RFT also abn with
    creatinine 130, USG showed a few nodules below 1
    cm
  • Adm PWH due to dizziness

23
Case sharing (5)
  • While waiting for hepatologist assessment came to
    see me
  • USG showed a vague large mass 6 cm but PV was
    patent, Alb normal
  • ? HCC but some element due to herbs?
  • CT scan confirmed several masses and extensive
    IVC infiltration and LN involvement

24
HCC screening
  • LFT AFP and USG every 6 months
  • Male HB patients over 40
  • Female HB over 50
  • Any Cirrhosis
  • FHx of HCC in HB patients

25
Cumulative Risk Scores and Projected HCC Risk
Risk predictor Risk score
Gender  
Female 0
Male 2
Age
30-34 0
35-39 1
40-44 2
45-49 3
50-54 4
55-59 5
60-65 6
ALT, U/L  
lt15 0
15-44 1
45 2
HBeAg  
Negative 0
Positive 2
HBV DNA level, copies/mL  
lt300 (Undetectable) 0
300-9999 0
10000-99999 3
100000-999999 5
?106 4
Cumulative risk score HCC risk HCC risk HCC risk
Cumulative risk score At 3rd year At 5th year At 10th year
0 0.0 0.0 0.0
1 0.0 0.0 0.1
2 0.0 0.0 0.1
3 0.0 0.1 0.2
4 0.0 0.1 0.3
5 0.1 0.2 0.5
6 0.1 0.3 0.7
7 0.2 0.5 1.2
8 0.3 0.8 2.0
9 0.5 1.2 3.2
10 0.9 2.0 5.2
11 1.4 3.3 8.4
12 2.3 5.3 13.4
13 3.7 8.5 21.0
14 6.0 13.6 32.0
15 9.6 21.3 46.8
16 15.2 32.4 64.4
17 23.6 47.4 81.6
26
ROC Curves for Model Validation
Cut-off risk score 12 Sensitivity
0.84 Specificity 0.73
27
Thank You
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