4.8 Review

Hepatitis B

Journal

LANCET
Volume 401, Issue 10381, Pages 1039-1052

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)01468-4

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Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a significant global public health problem, with a large number of chronic infections and deaths reported every year. Diagnosis of HBV infection requires serological testing for specific antibodies. Treatment mainly focuses on preventing liver disease progression and development of complications. Efforts are being made to develop new therapies that aim for a functional cure, while prevention strategies include universal vaccination and improved screening and diagnosis. Achieving the goal of eliminating HBV infection by 2030 requires a comprehensive approach.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major public health problem, with an estimated 296 million people chronically infected and 820 000 deaths worldwide in 2019. Diagnosis of HBV infection requires serological testing for HBsAg and for acute infection additional testing for IgM hepatitis B core antibody (IgM anti-HBc, for the window period when neither HBsAg nor anti-HBs is detected). Assessment of HBV replication status to guide treatment decisions involves testing for HBV DNA, whereas assessment of liver disease activity and staging is mainly based on aminotransferases, platelet count, and elastography. Universal infant immunisation, including birth dose vaccination is the most effective means to prevent chronic HBV infection. Two vaccines with improved immunogenicity have recently been approved for adults in the USA and EU, with availability expected to expand. Current therapies, pegylated interferon, and nucleos(t)ide analogues can prevent development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, but do not eradicate the virus and rarely clear HBsAg. Treatment is recommended for patients with cirrhosis or with high HBV DNA levels and active or advanced liver disease. New antiviral and immunomodulatory therapies aiming to achieve functional cure (ie, clearance of HBsAg) are in clinical development. Improved vaccination coverage, increased screening, diagnosis and linkage to care, development of curative therapies, and removal of stigma are important in achieving WHO's goal of eliminating HBV infection by 2030.

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