Title: Chronic Hepatitis B Diagnosis When to refer
1Chronic Hepatitis BDiagnosis When to refer
2Screening 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
3Prevention 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
4Natural 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
5Evaluation
- Hx and P/E
- FHx of liver ds, Hepatitis B, HCC
- Lab tests
- CBP, PI
- HBeAg/Ab HBVDNA
- USG
- Fibroscan
- Liver Bx
6Fibroscan 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
7Fibroscan 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)
8LSM 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
9Factors 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
10LSM 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
11LSM 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
12Treatment
- 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
13Candidates 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
14Monitoring 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
15Monitoring 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
16Case sharing (1)
- HKU student, 20 years old
- Normal LFT
- Normal USG
- No need to check HBVDNA
- HBeAg status
17Case sharing (2)
- Young man, 22 years old
- Normal LFT
- Normal USG
- HBVDNA 9 logs
- HBeAg
- Started on oral drugs and referred to HA
18Case 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
19Case 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
20Case 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
21Case 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
22Case 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
23Case 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
24HCC 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
25Cumulative Risk Scores and Projected HCC Risk
Risk predictor Risk score
Gender Â
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 Â
lt15 0
15-44 1
45 2
HBeAg Â
Negative 0
Positive 2
HBV DNA level, copies/mL Â
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
26ROC Curves for Model Validation
Cut-off risk score 12 Sensitivity
0.84 Specificity 0.73
27Thank You