8 research outputs found
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Histological outcome during long-term lamivudine therapy
Background & Aims: One year of lamivudine for chronic hepatitis B results in histologic improvement. We aimed to assess the histological impact of longer-term treatment. Methods: Sets of 3 liver biopsies, from 63 patients before and after 1 year of randomized lamivudine treatment and after 2 years of further open-label treatment, were assigned Histologic Activity Index scores under code. Results: At the end of year 1, 36/63 (57%) showed ≥2 point improvement and 24/63 (38%) no change in necroinflammatory activity; after 2 additional years of lamivudine, 38/63 (60%) remained stable and 12/63 (19%) continued to improve. Worsening occurred in similar proportions of patients with and without YMDD (tyrosine, methionine, aspartate, aspartate) variants. After all 3 years of lamivudine treatment, 35/63 (56%) of patients showed improvement, 21/63 (33%) no change, and 7/63 (11%) worsening. Those without, compared with those with, YMDD variants were more likely to improve (17/22 [77%] vs. 18/41 [44%]) and less likely to deteriorate (1/22 [5%] vs. 6/41 [15%]). Patients with YMDD variants for >2 years were least likely to improve (8/22 [36%]). Bridging fibrosis improved by ≥1 level in 12/19 (63%), and cirrhosis improved (score of 4 to ≤3) in 8/11 (73%). Only 1/52 [2%]) showed progression to cirrhosis, and 3/34 (9%) showed progression to bridging fibrosis (all with YMDD variants). Conclusions: Three years of lamivudine therapy reduces necroinflammatory activity and reverses fibrosis (including cirrhosis) in most patients. The emergence of YMDD variants blunts histologic responses; therefore, extended-duration YMDD variants may require additional therapies to maintain the histological benefit of treatment.
GASTROENTEROLOGY 2003;124:105-11
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438 Continued safety and efficacy of adding adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) to ongoing lamivudine (LAM) therapy in compensated chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients with YMDD variant HBV: 2 year results
E-rosette positive acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in adolescents and adults
E-rosetting of leukaemic blast cells is one of the markers of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). In children, E+ ALL has a bad prognosis. In adults, data are scarce. This report provides information on 25 E+ ALL adult patients who have a minimum follow-up time of 36 months. Twenty-two of 25 patients (88%) achieved complete remission (CR) (median duration 16 months), and six of them were alive, relapse-free, and off therapy after 36-81 months, with a 26% projected 6-year relapse-free survival. In 97 patients with E-SmIg- ALL, who were treated at the same Institutions, over the same period of time, and by the same modalities, the outcome of therapy was almost identical: CR 80%, median duration of first CR 15 months, projected 6-year relapse-free survival 15%. The white blood cell (WBC) count at presentation influenced significantly and to the same degree of first CR length in both E+ and E- cases. In this adult series, WBC count was not as high as in children. Moreover, a high Hb concentration, a very high WBC count, lymphadenomegaly, and mediastinal involvement, were found more frequently in adolescents and young adults than in adults. Based on these data, it is suggested that in adults E-rosetting as such is not a marker of a poorer prognosis, that some of the typical features of children E+ ALL weaken with age, and that in adults the disease can have a less aggressive character