8 research outputs found

    Prophylaxis and treatment of hepatitis B infection in the setting of liver transplantation

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    Without any treatment, the prognosis of hepatitis B in liver transplant recipients is very poor. So, antiviral prophylaxis is very important in patients with hepatitis B who undergo liver transplantation. Before liver transplantation, a suppression of viral replication has to be achieved by nucleos(t)ide analogs. Drugs used in the prophylaxis of post-transplant hepatitis B include immunoglobulin against HBV and nucleos(t)ide analogs. Prophylaxis against graft infection must be based on the individual risk of recurrence. When prophylactic measures have failed and graft infection has occurred, treatment of recurrent hepatitis B may be based on the resistance profile of the virus and previous antiviral exposure. Finally, lamivudine seems to be very effective in the prevention of de novo hepatitis B in patients transplanted with a graft from an anti-HBc positive donor

    Risk factors of lung, head and neck, esophageal, and kidney and urinary tract carcinomas after liver transplantation: the effect of smoking withdrawal

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    Liver transplant recipients have an increased risk of malignancy. Smoking is related to some of the most frequent causes of posttransplant malignancy. The incidence and risk factors for the development of neoplasia related to smoking (head and neck, lung, esophageal, and kidney and urinary tract carcinomas) were studied in 339 liver transplant recipients. Risk factors for the development of smoking-related neoplasia were also studied in 135 patients who had a history of smoking so that it could be determined whether smoking withdrawal was associated with a lower risk of malignancy. After a mean follow-up of 7.5 years, 26 patients were diagnosed with 29 smoking-related malignancies. The 5- and 10-year actuarial rates were 5% and 13%, respectively. In multivariate analysis, smoking and older age were independently associated with a higher risk of malignancy. In the smoker subgroup, the variables related to a higher risk of malignancy were active smoking and older age. In conclusion, smoking withdrawal after liver transplantation may have a protective effect against the development of neoplasia

    Prophylaxis and treatment of hepatitis B infection in the setting of liver transplantation

    No full text
    Without any treatment, the prognosis of hepatitis B in liver transplant recipients is very poor. So, antiviral prophylaxis is very important in patients with hepatitis B who undergo liver transplantation. Before liver transplantation, a suppression of viral replication has to be achieved by nucleos(t)ide analogs. Drugs used in the prophylaxis of post-transplant hepatitis B include immunoglobulin against HBV and nucleos(t)ide analogs. Prophylaxis against graft infection must be based on the individual risk of recurrence. When prophylactic measures have failed and graft infection has occurred, treatment of recurrent hepatitis B may be based on the resistance profile of the virus and previous antiviral exposure. Finally, lamivudine seems to be very effective in the prevention of de novo hepatitis B in patients transplanted with a graft from an anti-HBc positive donor

    Metabolic dysfunction–associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD): an update of the recent advances in pharmacological treatment

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    Metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) is nowadays considered the liver manifestation of metabolic syndrome. Its prevalence is increasing worldwide in parallel to the epidemic of diabetes and obesity. MAFLD includes a wide spectrum of liver injury including simple steatosis and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) that may lead to serious complications such as liver cirrhosis and liver cancer. The complexity of its pathophysiology and the intricate mechanisms underlying disease progression explains the huge variety of molecules targeting diverse biological mechanisms that have been tested in preclinical and clinical settings in the last two decades. Thanks to the large number of clinical trials of the last few years, most of them still ongoing, the pharmacotherapy scenario of MAFLD is rapidly evolving. The three major components of MAFLD, steatosis, inflammation, and fibrosis seem to be safely targeted with different agents at least in a large proportion of patients. Likely, in the next few years more than one drug will be approved for the treatment of MAFLD at different disease stages. The aim of this review is to synthesize the characteristics and the results of the most advanced clinical trials for the treatment of NASH to evaluate the recent advances of pharmacotherapy in this disease

    Treatment of murine fulminant hepatitis with genetically engineered endothelial progenitor cells

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    BACKGROUND & AIMS: Cell therapy has been used to attenuate liver injury. Here we evaluated whether genetic engineering of either bone marrow-derived mononuclear cells (MNC) or endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) many enhance their hepatoprotective properties. METHODS: Mice with ConA-induced hepatitis or with lethal fulminant hepatitis resulting from administration of an adenovirus encoding CD40L (AdCD40L) received an intra-splenic injection of saline or 2 × 10(6) unmodified MNC or EPC or the same cells transduced ex vivo with an adenovirus expressing luciferase (MNCLUC and EPCLUC) or encoding the hepatoprotective cytokine cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) (MNCCT-1 and EPCCT-1). We analyzed the extent of liver damage, the intensity of inflammatory reaction, and animal survival. RESULTS: Luciferase immunohistochemistry showed that after injection into the spleen, the engineered cells migrated efficiently to the damaged liver. In mice with ConA hepatitis EPCCT-1, but not other forms of cell therapy, significantly decreased serum transaminases and induced more intense histological improvement than other treatments. This superior therapeutic effect was associated with upregulation of cytoprotective molecules including IGF-I and EGF, lower expression of proinflammatory cytokines, IL-1b and TNFα, and decreased granzyme B levels. In AdCD40L-induced lethal fulminant hepatitis, EPCCT-1 also exceeded other cell therapies in attenuating the expression of proinflammatory mediators and hepatic injury enabling 35.7% survival while mortality was 100% in the other treatment groups. CONCLUSIONS: Genetic engineering of EPC to overexpress CT-1 enhances the hepatoprotective properties of EPC and constitutes a therapy that deserves consideration for acute liver failure. Copyright © 2011 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Brain ventricular enlargement in human and murine acute intermittent porphyria

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    The morphological changes that occur in the central nervous system of patients with severe acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) have not yet been clearly established. The aim of this work was to analyze brain involvement in patients with severe AIP without epileptic seizures or clinical posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, as well as in a mouse model receiving or not liver-directed gene therapy aimed at correcting the metabolic disorder. We conducted neuroradiologic studies in 8 severely affected patients (6 women) and 16 gender- and age-matched controls. Seven patients showed significant enlargement of the cerebral ventricles and decreased brain perfusion was observed during the acute attack in two patients in whom perfusion imaging data were acquired. AIP mice exhibited reduced cerebral blood flow and developed chronic dilatation of the cerebral ventricles even in the presence of slightly increased porphyrin precursors. While repeated phenobarbital-induced attacks exacerbated ventricular dilation in AIP mice, correction of the metabolic defect using liver-directed gene therapy restored brain perfusion and afforded protection against ventricular enlargement. Histological studies revealed no signs of neuronal loss but a denser neurofilament pattern in the periventricular areas, suggesting compression probably caused by imbalance in cerebrospinal fluid dynamics. In conclusion, severely affected AIP patients exhibit cerebral ventricular enlargement. Liver-directed gene therapy protected against the morphological consequences of the disease seen in the brain of AIP mice
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