Chronic hepatitis D (CHD) is the most severe form of viral hepatitis, carrying a greater risk of developing cirrhosis and its complications. For decades, pegylated interferon alpha (PegIFN-α) has represented the only therapeutic option, with limited virological response rates and poor tolerability. In 2020, the European Medicines Agency approved bulevirtide (BLV) at 2 mg/day, an entry inhibitor of hepatitis B virus (HBV)/hepatitis delta virus (HDV), which proved to be safe and effective as a monotherapy for up to 144 weeks in clinical trials and real-life studies, including patients with cirrhosis. Long-term BLV monotherapy may reduce decompensating events in patients with cirrhosis. The combination of BLV 2 mg with PegIFN-α increased the HDV RNA undetectability rates on-therapy but not off-therapy, compared with PegIFN monotherapy. However, combination therapy, but not BLV monotherapy, may induce hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss in some patients. The PegIFN lambda study has been discontinued due to liver toxicity issues, while lonafarnib boosted with ritonavir showed limited off-therapy efficacy in a phase 3 study. Nucleic acid polymer-based therapy is promising but large studies are still lacking. New controlled trial data come from molecules, such as monoclonal antibodies and/or small interfering RNA, that target HBsAg or HBV RNAs, which demonstrated not only profound HDV suppression, but also HBsAg decline. While waiting for new compounds to be approved as monotherapy or in combination, BLV monotherapy 2 mg/day remains the only approved therapy for CHD, at least in the European Union region.

Antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis delta: new insights from clinical trials and real-life studies / P. Lampertico, M.P. Anolli, D. Roulot, H. Wedemeyer. - In: EGUT. - ISSN 1468-3288. - (2024), pp. gutjnl-2024-332597.1-gutjnl-2024-332597.10. [10.1136/gutjnl-2024-332597]

Antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis delta: new insights from clinical trials and real-life studies

P. Lampertico
Primo
;
M.P. Anolli
Secondo
;
2024

Abstract

Chronic hepatitis D (CHD) is the most severe form of viral hepatitis, carrying a greater risk of developing cirrhosis and its complications. For decades, pegylated interferon alpha (PegIFN-α) has represented the only therapeutic option, with limited virological response rates and poor tolerability. In 2020, the European Medicines Agency approved bulevirtide (BLV) at 2 mg/day, an entry inhibitor of hepatitis B virus (HBV)/hepatitis delta virus (HDV), which proved to be safe and effective as a monotherapy for up to 144 weeks in clinical trials and real-life studies, including patients with cirrhosis. Long-term BLV monotherapy may reduce decompensating events in patients with cirrhosis. The combination of BLV 2 mg with PegIFN-α increased the HDV RNA undetectability rates on-therapy but not off-therapy, compared with PegIFN monotherapy. However, combination therapy, but not BLV monotherapy, may induce hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss in some patients. The PegIFN lambda study has been discontinued due to liver toxicity issues, while lonafarnib boosted with ritonavir showed limited off-therapy efficacy in a phase 3 study. Nucleic acid polymer-based therapy is promising but large studies are still lacking. New controlled trial data come from molecules, such as monoclonal antibodies and/or small interfering RNA, that target HBsAg or HBV RNAs, which demonstrated not only profound HDV suppression, but also HBsAg decline. While waiting for new compounds to be approved as monotherapy or in combination, BLV monotherapy 2 mg/day remains the only approved therapy for CHD, at least in the European Union region.
English
ANTIVIRAL THERAPY; CHRONIC VIRAL HEPATITIS; CIRRHOSIS; HEPATITIS D
Settore MEDS-10/A - Gastroenterologia
Articolo
Esperti non anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 3: Good health and well-being
2024
24-dic-2024
BMJ Publishing Group
gutjnl-2024-332597
1
10
10
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis delta: new insights from clinical trials and real-life studies / P. Lampertico, M.P. Anolli, D. Roulot, H. Wedemeyer. - In: EGUT. - ISSN 1468-3288. - (2024), pp. gutjnl-2024-332597.1-gutjnl-2024-332597.10. [10.1136/gutjnl-2024-332597]
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
P. Lampertico, M.P. Anolli, D. Roulot, H. Wedemeyer
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1157567
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