Conference Coverage

Switching to tenofovir alafenamide may benefit HBV patients


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM DIGESTIVE DISEASES: NEW ADVANCES


Compared with tenofovir disoproxil, tenofovir alafenamide is a slightly different prodrug of tenofovir, according to Dr. Kwo.

The approved dose of tenofovir alafenamide is 25 mg, compared with 300 mg for tenofovir disoproxil. “It’s more stable in the serum, so you don’t need higher levels, and you have fewer off-target effects,” Dr. Kwo said.

The two agents are “Coke and Pepsi” in terms of efficacy, he added, noting that comparative studies showed similar efficacy on endpoints of percentage HBV DNA less than 29 IU/mL and log10 HBV DNA change.

Very low rates of resistance are seen with first-line therapies for chronic hepatitis B, including entecavir and tenofovir disoproxil. “We wouldn’t expect (tenofovir alafenamide) to be any different, but nonetheless the surveillance has to happen,” Dr. Kwo said.

Recommended Reading

Psychiatric issues common among hepatitis C inpatients
MDedge Internal Medicine
HCV screening, care inadequate for young adults who use opioids nonmedically
MDedge Internal Medicine
Inflammatory markers predict vaccine response in HCV, HIV
MDedge Internal Medicine
Viremic suppression linked to decreased MACE rate in patients with HCV-cirrhosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
ACIP unanimously recommends HEPLISAV-B
MDedge Internal Medicine
HCV infection tied to premature ovarian senescence and a high miscarriage rate
MDedge Internal Medicine
NASH rapidly overtaking hepatitis C as cause of liver cancer
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bioengineered liver models screen drugs and study liver injury
MDedge Internal Medicine
Alcohol dependence may accelerate aging, frontal cortical deficits
MDedge Internal Medicine
HIV+ dialysis patients: Differential survival by race compared with HIV/HCV coinfection
MDedge Internal Medicine