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Consensus Guidelines: Best Practices for the Prevention, Detection and Management of Hepatitis B Virus Reactivation in Clinical Trials with Immunosuppressive/Immunomodulatory Therapy

Hepatitis B virus reactivation (HBVr) during and after immunosuppressive/immunomodulatory (IS/IM) therapy is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, including hepatic decompensation and acute liver failure. The risk of HBVr with IS/IM has been heterogeneous and often unpredictable. As a...

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Published in:Drug safety 2024-04, Vol.47 (4), p.321-332
Main Authors: Cohen, Eric B., Regev, Arie, Garg, Anju, Di Bisceglie, Adrian M., Lewis, James H., Vierling, John M., Hey-Hadavi, Judith, Steplewski, Klaudia, Fettiplace, Anna, Chen, Chunlin L., Pehlivanov, Nonko, Kendrick, Stuart, I. Avigan, Mark
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container_end_page 332
container_issue 4
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container_title Drug safety
container_volume 47
creator Cohen, Eric B.
Regev, Arie
Garg, Anju
Di Bisceglie, Adrian M.
Lewis, James H.
Vierling, John M.
Hey-Hadavi, Judith
Steplewski, Klaudia
Fettiplace, Anna
Chen, Chunlin L.
Pehlivanov, Nonko
Kendrick, Stuart
I. Avigan, Mark
description Hepatitis B virus reactivation (HBVr) during and after immunosuppressive/immunomodulatory (IS/IM) therapy is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, including hepatic decompensation and acute liver failure. The risk of HBVr with IS/IM has been heterogeneous and often unpredictable. As a result, patients with active or previous HBV infection are often excluded from clinical drug trials of such agents. Thorough screening for HBV infection, antiviral prophylaxis, and careful monitoring for HBVr have proven to be effective in reducing the rate of HBVr and improving its outcome in the context of IS/IM. Therefore, safe enrollment and management of certain HBV-marker–positive patients in clinical trials is possible. There is a great, unmet need for consistent, evidence-based recommendations for best practices pertaining to enrollment, monitoring, and management of HBVr in clinical trial participants receiving IS/IM. The aim of these consensus guidelines is to provide a step-by-step blueprint to safely enroll, monitor and manage the patient with inactive chronic or resolved HBV in IS/IM clinical trials from the time of screening through to the end of post-treatment follow up.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s40264-024-01399-4
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Therefore, safe enrollment and management of certain HBV-marker–positive patients in clinical trials is possible. There is a great, unmet need for consistent, evidence-based recommendations for best practices pertaining to enrollment, monitoring, and management of HBVr in clinical trial participants receiving IS/IM. 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Avigan, Mark</creatorcontrib><title>Consensus Guidelines: Best Practices for the Prevention, Detection and Management of Hepatitis B Virus Reactivation in Clinical Trials with Immunosuppressive/Immunomodulatory Therapy</title><title>Drug safety</title><addtitle>Drug Saf</addtitle><description>Hepatitis B virus reactivation (HBVr) during and after immunosuppressive/immunomodulatory (IS/IM) therapy is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, including hepatic decompensation and acute liver failure. The risk of HBVr with IS/IM has been heterogeneous and often unpredictable. As a result, patients with active or previous HBV infection are often excluded from clinical drug trials of such agents. Thorough screening for HBV infection, antiviral prophylaxis, and careful monitoring for HBVr have proven to be effective in reducing the rate of HBVr and improving its outcome in the context of IS/IM. 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source Nexis UK; Springer Nature
subjects Antigens
Best practice
Clinical trials
Consensus Statement
Consortia
Disease prevention
Drug Safety and Pharmacovigilance
Drugs
Enrollments
Genetic testing
Guidelines
Hepatitis
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis delta virus
Immunomodulation
Immunomodulators
Immunosuppressive agents
Infections
Liver
Medical research
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Monitoring
Morbidity
Patients
Pharmaceuticals
Pharmacology/Toxicology
Prophylaxis
Regulatory agencies
Steroids
Telemedicine
title Consensus Guidelines: Best Practices for the Prevention, Detection and Management of Hepatitis B Virus Reactivation in Clinical Trials with Immunosuppressive/Immunomodulatory Therapy
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