Abstract
Reactivation
of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in HBV surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive
patients treated with cytotoxic chemotherapy is well known. HBV
reactivation in patients with HBV and hepatitis C virus (HCV)
coinfection caused by direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy has also
recently been reported. We report a case of acute hepatitis B in a
patient with HCV infection after DAA therapy. An 83-year-old woman was
referred for chronic hepatitis C. She was infected with HCV genotype 1b
and negative for HBsAg at baseline. She received daclatasvir and
asunaprevir therapy, and HCV became negative at 4 weeks and remained
negative until 6 months after the end of DAA therapy. Acute hepatitis B
developed 5 months after ending DAA therapy. Genome sequencing revealed
the subgenotype as B1, and the serological subtype as adr. T118 K
mutation at the S region as an immune escape mutant was identified.
These virologic features led to HBV reactivation. The presence of
hepatitis B core antibody or HBs antibody was not determined before DAA
therapy, so prior HBV infection status was unclear. This case is
speculated to represent HBV reactivation in a patient with previously
resolved HBV induced by DAA therapy, based on virologic analysis and
clinical status. The risk might be very low, but DAA therapy can cause
HBV reactivation in chronic hepatitis C patients with prior HBV
infection. When acute hepatitis emerges in patients who have received
DAA therapy for HCV, HBV reactivation should be considered to allow
early initiation of anti-HBV therapy.
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