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Guideline Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver consensus statements on the diagnosis, management and treatment of hepatitis C virus infection. 2007
Anonymous00371, McCaughan GW, Omata M, Amarapurkar D, Bowden S, Chow WC, Chutaputti A, Dore G, Gane E, Guan R, Hamid SS, Hardikar W, Hui CK, Jafri W, Jia JD, Lai MY, Wei L, Leung N, Piratvisuth T, Sarin S, Sollano J, Tateishi R. · Centenary Research Institute, AW Morrow Gastroenterology and Liver Centre, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. · J Gastroenterol Hepatol. · Pubmed #17444847 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Review Hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia pacific region. 2009
Yuen MF, Hou JL, Chutaputti A, Anonymous00023. · Department of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, China. · J Gastroenterol Hepatol. · Pubmed #19220670 No free full text.
Abstract: Primary liver cancer, particularly hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains a significant disease worldwide. It is among the top three causes of cancer death in the Asia Pacific region because of the high prevalence of its main etiological agents, chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. In this region, the incidence of HCC has been static over recent decades. Older age is a major risk factor; the incidence increasing sharply after age 40 years. There is a male predilection, with male to female ratio of 3:1, except in elderly Japanese with equal sex incidence or female predominance. In most Asia-Pacific countries, chronic HBV infection accounts for 75-80% of cases; Japan, Singapore and Australia/New Zealand are exceptions because of higher prevalence of HCV infection. In spite of advances in surgery, liver transplantation and newer pharmaco/biological therapies, the survival rate has improved only slightly over recent decades, and this could be attributable to earlier diagnosis ('lead-time bias'). The majority of patients present with advanced diseases, hence reducing the chance of curative treatment. The importance of HCC may decrease in two to three decades when the prevalence of chronic HBV infection decreases as a result of the universal HBV vaccination programs implemented in late 1980s in most Asia-Pacific countries, and because of reduced incidence of medical transmission of HCV. However, transmission of HCV by injection drug use, and rising prevalence of obesity and diabetes, both independent risk factors for HCC, may partly offset this decline.
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Review Chronic hepatitis B virus infection in Asian countries. 2000
Merican I, Guan R, Amarapuka D, Alexander MJ, Chutaputti A, Chien RN, Hasnian SS, Leung N, Lesmana L, Phiet PH, Sjalfoellah Noer HM, Sollano J, Sun HS, Xu DZ. · Institute of Medical Research, Jalan Pahang, 50588, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. · J Gastroenterol Hepatol. · Pubmed #11197043 No free full text.
Abstract: Of the estimated 50 million new cases of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection diagnosed annually, 5-10% of adults and up to 90% of infants will become chronically infected, 75% of these in Asia where hepatitis B is the leading cause of chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In Indonesia, 4.6% of the population was positive for HBsAg in 1994 and of these, 21% were positive for HBeAg and 73% for anti-HBe; 44% and 45% of Indonesian patients with cirrhosis and HCC, respectively, were HBsAg positive. In the Philippines, there appear to be two types of age-specific HBsAg prevalence, suggesting different modes of transmission. In Thailand, 8-10% of males and 6-8% of females are HBsAg positive, with HBsAg also found in 30% of patients with cirrhosis and 50-75% of those with HCC. In Taiwan, 75-80% of patients with chronic liver disease are HBsAg positive, and HBsAg is found in 34% and 72% of patients with cirrhosis and HCC, respectively. In China, 73% of patients with chronic hepatitis and 78% and 71% of those with cirrhosis and HCC, respectively, are HBsAg positive. In Singapore, the prevalence of HBsAg has dropped since the introduction of HBV vaccination and the HBsAg seroprevalence of unvaccinated individuals over 5 years of age is 4.5%. In Malaysia, 5.24% of healthy volunteers, with a mean age of 34 years, were positive for HBsAg in 1997. In the highly endemic countries in Asia, the majority of infections are contracted postnatally or perinatally. Three phases of chronic HBV infection are recognized: phase 1 patients are HBeAg positive with high levels of virus in the serum and minimal hepatic inflammation; phase 2 patients have intermittent or continuous hepatitis of varying degrees of severity; phase 3 is the inactive phase during which viral concentrations are low and there is minimal inflammatory activity in the liver. In general, patients who clear HBeAg have a better prognosis than patients who remain HBeAg-positive for prolonged periods of time. The outcome after anti-HBe seroconversion depends on the degree of pre-existing liver damage and any subsequent HBV reactivation. Without pre-existing cirrhosis, there may be only slight fibrosis or mild chronic hepatitis, but with pre-existing cirrhosis, further complications may ensue. HBsAg-negative chronic hepatitis B is a phase of chronic HBV infection during which a mutation arises resulting in the inability of the virus to produce HBeAg. Such patients tend to have more severe liver disease and run a more rapidly progressive course. The annual probability of developing cirrhosis varies from 0.1 to 1.0% depending on the duration of HBV replication, the severity of disease and the presence of concomitant infections or drugs. The annual incidence of hepatic decompensation in HBV-related cirrhosis varies from 2 to 10% and in these patients the 5-year survival rate drops dramatically to 14-35%. The annual risk of developing HCC in patients with cirrhosis varies between 1 and 6%; the overall reported annual detection rate of HCC in surveillance studies, which included individuals with chronic hepatitis B and cirrhosis, is 0.8-4.1%. Chronic hepatitis B is not a static disease and the natural history of the disease is affected by both viral and host factors. The prognosis is poor with decompensated cirrhosis and effective treatment options are limited. Prevention of HBV infection thorough vaccination is still, therefore, the best strategy for decreasing the incidence of hepatitis B-associated cirrhosis and HCC.
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Review Adverse effects and other safety aspects of the hepatitis C antivirals. 2000
Chutaputti A. · Pramongkutklao Hospital, Rajathevee, Bangkok, Thailand. · J Gastroenterol Hepatol. · Pubmed #10921400 No free full text.
Abstract: The preferred treatment for patients with chronic hepatitis C, either treatment-naive, relapsers or nonresponders to IFN monotherapy, is now IFN-ribavirin combination treatment. The adverse effects of IFN are well established and familiar to hepatologists all over the world. More than 25,000 patients worldwide have been treated with combination therapy. Patients re-treated with a combination regimen are more likely to tolerate IFN better than treatment-naive patients, probably due to better case selection. The safety profile of regimens containing IFN-alpha plus ribavirin is generally consistent with the safety profile of each agent when employed in monotherapy; there is little or no synergistic toxicity. Anorexia, dyspnoea, cough, pruritus and rash are the only adverse events reported at a consistently higher frequency with combination treatment, and are usually mild to moderate in severity and rarely result in dose reductions or discontinuation. The primary cause of dose reduction for combination therapy is haemolytic anaemia, which can be managed effectively. The most common reason for discontinuation of therapy for either type of therapy is psychiatric problems, especially depression, which seems to be closely related to the duration of treatment. In patients receiving combination therapy, anaemia and depression need close monitoring, and dose modification in some cases. Strict guidelines for dose reduction and discontinuation are essential to prevent serious adverse events. Because of the teratogenic risk from ribavirin, pregnancy is contraindicated in patients or their partners during and 6 months after treatment.
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Clinical Conference Peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa): an advance in the treatment of hepatitis B e antigen-positive chronic hepatitis B. 2003
Cooksley WG, Piratvisuth T, Lee SD, Mahachai V, Chao YC, Tanwandee T, Chutaputti A, Chang WY, Zahm FE, Pluck N. · Royal Brisbane Hospital, Herston, Queensland, Australia. · J Viral Hepat. · Pubmed #12823597 No free full text.
Abstract: Current therapies for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) have a number of limitations, and better treatment options are needed. Peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) is superior to conventional interferon alpha-2a in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. This is the first report on peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) in the treatment of CHB. In this phase II study, 194 patients with CHB not previously treated with conventional interferon-alpha were randomized to receive weekly subcutaneous doses of peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) 90, 180 or 270 microg, or conventional interferon alpha-2a 4.5 MIU three times weekly. Twenty-four weeks of therapy were followed by 24 weeks of treatment-free follow-up. All subjects were assessed for loss of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), presence of hepatitis B antibody (anti-HBe), suppression of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA, and normalization of serum alanine transaminase (ALT) after follow-up. At the end of follow-up, HBeAg was cleared in 37, 35 and 29% of patients receiving peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) 90, 180 and 270 microg, respectively, compared with 25% of patients on conventional interferon alpha-2a. The combined response (HBeAg loss, HBV DNA suppression, and ALT normalization) of all peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) doses combined was twice that achieved with conventional interferon alpha-2a (24%vs 12%; P = 0.036). All treatment groups were similar with respect to frequency and severity of adverse events. These results indicate that peginterferon alpha-2a (40 kDa) is superior in efficacy to conventional interferon alpha-2a in chronic hepatitis B based on clearance of HBeAg, suppression of HBV DNA, and normalization of ALT.
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Article Baseline characteristics and early on-treatment response predict the outcomes of 2 years of telbivudine treatment of chronic hepatitis B. 2009
Zeuzem S, Gane E, Liaw YF, Lim SG, DiBisceglie A, Buti M, Chutaputti A, Rasenack J, Hou J, O'Brien C, Nguyen TT, Jia J, Poynard T, Belanger B, Bao W, Naoumov NV. · Klinikum der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt a. Main, Germany. · J Hepatol. · Pubmed #19345439 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIMS: In the GLOBE trial, telbivudine treatment was identified as a significant, independent predictor of better outcomes at 2 years. We analyzed all telbivudine recipients in this trial to determine the predictors of optimal outcomes. METHODS: The intent-to-treat population comprised 458 HBeAg-positive and 222 HBeAg-negative telbivudine-treated patients. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were employed to evaluate baseline and/or early on-treatment variables. RESULTS: Baseline HBV DNA<9 log(10)copies/mL, or ALT levels > or = 2x above normal were strong pretreatment predictors for HBeAg-positive, but not for HBeAg-negative patients. However, non-detectable serum HBV DNA at treatment week 24 (TW24) was the strongest predictor for better outcomes for both groups. A combination of pretreatment characteristics plus TW24 response identified subgroups with the best outcomes: (1) HBeAg-positive patients with baseline HBV DNA<9 log(10)copies/mL, ALT > or = 2x above normal and non-detectable HBV DNA at TW24 achieved at 2 years: non-detectable HBV DNA in 89%, HBeAg seroconversion in 52%, telbivudine resistance in 1.8%; and (2) HBeAg-negative patients with baseline HBV DNA<7 log(10)copies/mL and non-detectable serum HBV DNA at TW24 achieved at 2 years: non-detectable HBV DNA in 91%, telbivudine resistance in 2.3%. CONCLUSION: During telbivudine treatment, non-detectable serum HBV DNA at treatment week 24 is the strongest predictor for optimal outcomes at 2 years.
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Article Interspousal transmission of hepatitis C in Thailand. 2003
Boonyarad V, Chutaputti A, Choeichareon S, Bedi K, Theamboonlers A, Chinchai T, Poovorawan Y. · Section of Digestive and Liver Diseases, Department of Medicine, Phramongkutklao College of Medicine, Bangkok, Thailand. · J Gastroenterol. · Pubmed #14673722 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous studies evaluating the possibility of interspousal sexual transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) have yielded many conflicting results. Our study was carried out to determine the exact potential and risk factors of interspousal HCV transmission. METHODS: The spouses (54 men and 106 women; mean age +/-SD, 48 +/- 8 years) of 160 patients with HCV infection (106 men and 54 women) were serologically tested for HCV using a third-generation enzyme-linked immuno- sorbent assay (ELISA). Positive results were confirmed by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). For positive couples, the cluster nucleotides of the HCV gene and genotypes were compared on the basis of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), Innogenetic Line Probe Assay (INNO-LiPA), and direct sequencing. Similarly, phylogenetic tree and sequence homology analysis was performed in order to precisely verify interspousal transmission. Risk factors promoting interspousal HCV transmission were also identified. RESULTS: Throughout a mean duration of exposure of 23 + 5 years, most of the 160 partners had their usual and unprotected sexual relationships with the index patients. HCV-associated antibodies and HCV-RNA were detected in only 3 (1.88%) of the 160 spouses. Furthermore, homology and phylogenetic tree analysis could not clearly demonstrate that any one of these 3 positive spouses was infected with the same strain of HCV as that identified in the index cases. Because a positive group remained elusive, risk factors of interspousal HCV transmission could not be determined in this study. CONCLUSIONS: According to this study, interspousal transmission of HCV seems to be very rare. HCV-positive spouses should be firmly reassured that they can maintain their normal marital life.
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Article Acute hepatitis associated with Barakol. 2003
Hongsirinirachorn M, Threeprasertsuk S, Chutaputti A. · Section of Digestive and Liver Diseases, Department of Medicine, Phramongkutklao College of Medicine, Bangkok 10400, Thailand. · J Med Assoc Thai. · Pubmed #12930029 No free full text.
Abstract: Barakol is a natural anxiolytic extracted from Cassia siamea, known as "Khi-lek" in Thailand. The authors studied the adverse effects of Barakol in 12 healthy Thai patients, aged 29-81 years (mean 52.5) who took Barakol 3-180 days (mean 76.9). Eight of them were admitted with the first episode of anorexia and jaundice for 4-60 days (mean 14.3) after taking 20-40 mg/day (2-4 tablets) of Barakol. There was no relationship between degree of symptom and dosage/duration of Barakol intake. Three asymptomatic cases were detected with increased aminotransferase from a routine check-up, including an 81 year old female who took half of the dosage for 120 days. The last one was a male patient who presented with low-grade fever and nausea and vomiting. All patients had neither a history of chronic liver disease nor known hepatotoxic substance ingestion. On admission, the mean total bilirubin was 5.7 mg/dl and liver function test (LFT) revealed moderate to severe hepatitis (Aspartate amino transferase (AST) range 111-1,473 U/L: mean = 692). None of them had detected viral markers. Liver biopsy was done in 3 cases and the histopathological findings were compatible with interface hepatitis. Two non-biopsy cases developed recurrent transaminitis after one-week re-challenging without informing the physician. Their symptoms and LFT completely improved within 2-20 weeks (mean 5.9) after Barakol abstinence.
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Article Epidemiologic and virologic characteristics of hepatitis B virus genotype B having the recombination with genotype C. 2003
Sugauchi F, Orito E, Ichida T, Kato H, Sakugawa H, Kakumu S, Ishida T, Chutaputti A, Lai CL, Gish RG, Ueda R, Miyakawa Y, Mizokami M. · Department of Internal Medicine and Molecular Science and Clinical Molecular Informative Medicine, Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya, Japan. · Gastroenterology. · Pubmed #12671889 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) isolates of genotype B (HBV/B) with or without the recombination with genotype C over the precore region plus core gene have been reported. METHODS: All the 41 HBV/B isolates having the recombination with genotype C (HBV/Ba) possessed the nucleotide 1838 of A in contrast to that of G in all 29 of those without the recombination (HBV/Bj). Taking advantage of this single nucleotide polymorphism, a restriction fragment length polymorphism method was developed that distinguished HBV/Ba from HBV/Bj. RESULTS: HBV/Bj was detected in 90 of the 97 (93%) carriers of HBV/B from Japan, whereas HBV/Ba occurred in all 177 carriers of HBV/B from other countries (China, 20; Hong Kong, 45; Taiwan, 32; Thailand, 30; Vietnam, 30; and the United States, 20 [all of an Asian ethnicity]). In a case-control study, hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and the double mutation in the core promoter (T1762/A1764) were significantly more frequent in 80 carriers each of HBV/Ba than HBV/Bj (35% vs. 18%, P < 0.05 and 33% vs. 15%, P < 0.05, respectively). Differences in the prevalence of HBeAg were more conspicuous between the carriers of HBV/Bj and HBV/Ba older than 30 years (5 of 66 or 8% vs. 16 of 62 or 26%, P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: HBV/B having the recombination with genotype C is frequent in Asia, except in Japan, and HBeAg is more prevalent in carriers of HBV/Ba than HBV/Bj.
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Article Hepatitis B virus genotypes and clinical manifestation among hepatitis B carriers in Thailand. 2002
Sugauchi F, Chutaputti A, Orito E, Kato H, Suzuki S, Ueda R, Mizokami M. · Second Department of Internal Medicine and Department of Laboratory Medicine, Nagoya City University Medical School, Kawasumi, Mizuho, Nagoya 467-8601, Japan. · J Gastroenterol Hepatol. · Pubmed #12100612 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) genotypes have distinct geographic distributions. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the distribution of HBV genotypes and their clinical relevance in Thailand. METHODS: Hepatitis B virus genotypes among 107 hepatitis B carriers residing in Thailand were evaluated using serologic and genetic methods. They were clinically classified into asymptomatic carriers with normal serum alanine transaminase (ALT) levels and patients with chronic liver disease, such as those with chronic hepatitis (CH), liver cirrhosis (LC) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). RESULTS: Hepatitis B virus genotype distribution among the 107 patients was 25.2% for genotype B, 72.0% for genotype C and 2.8% for genotype D. The serum ALT levels, HBV-DNA and hepatitis B e antigen positivity were significantly higher in carriers infected with genotype C HBV than in those infected with genotype B (P < 0.05). The proportion of genotype B HBV was higher in asymptomatic carriers than in patients with CH and those who developed liver disease, such as LC and HCC (45.5, 16.9 and 25.0%, respectively; P < 0.05). In contrast, the proportion of genotype C HBV was higher in patients who developed liver disease and CH than in asymptomatic carriers (68.7, 83.0 and 50.0%, respectively; P < 0.05). Phylogenetic analysis based on entire genome sequences revealed three HBV isolates, which were classified into a subgroup of genotype C in isolates from South-East Asian countries. CONCLUSIONS: Genotypes B and C are the predominant types among hepatitis B carriers residing in Thailand and those genotypes influence the clinical manifestation in carriers with chronic hepatitis B infection.
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Article Hepatitis B virus of genotype B with or without recombination with genotype C over the precore region plus the core gene. free! 2002
Sugauchi F, Orito E, Ichida T, Kato H, Sakugawa H, Kakumu S, Ishida T, Chutaputti A, Lai CL, Ueda R, Miyakawa Y, Mizokami M. · Department of Internal Medicine and Molecular Science, Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya, Japan. · J Virol. · Pubmed #12021331 links to free full text
Abstract: The entire nucleotide sequences of 70 hepatitis B virus (HBV) isolates of genotype B (HBV/B), including 38 newly determined and 32 retrieved from the international DNA database (DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank), were compared phylogenetically. Two subgroups of HBV/B were identified based on sequence divergence in the precore region plus the core gene, one with the recombination with genotype C and the other without it. The analysis over the entire genome of HBV/B by the SimPlot program located the recombination with genotype C in the precore region plus the core gene spanning nucleotide positions from 1740 to 1838 to 2443 to 2485. Within this genomic area, HBV/B strains with the recombination had higher nucleotide and amino acid homology to genotype C than those without the recombination (96.9 versus 91.1% in nucleotides and 97.0 versus 92.9% in amino acids). There were 29 HBV/B strains without the recombination, and they were all recovered from carriers in Japan. The remaining 41 HBV/B isolates having the recombination with genotype C were from carriers in China (12 strains), Hong Kong (3 strains), Indonesia (4 strains), Japan (3 strains), Taiwan (4 strains), Thailand (3 strains), and Vietnam (12 strains). Due to the frequency of the distribution of HBV/B without the recombination (29 of 32 isolates, or 91%) and the fact that it was exclusive to Japan, it was provisionally classified into the Bj (j standing for Japan) subgroup, and HBV/B with the recombination was classified into the Ba (a for Asia) subgroup. Virological differences between HBV/Bj and HBV/Ba may be reflected in the severity of clinical disease in the patients infected with HBV of genotype B, which seems to be under strong geographic influences in Asia.
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