Skip to main content
. 2015 Mar 27;7(3):344–361. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i3.344

Table 3.

Hepatitis virus B reactivation in rheumatoid arthritis patients receiving tumor necrosis factor-α inhibitors: studies in patients with markers of chronic or remote hepatitis virus B infection

Ref. Study design Target population No. of patients Treatment Antiviral Prophylaxis HBsAg+ Anti-HBc+ and anti-HBs- Anti-HBc+ and anti-HBs+ HBV-DNA+ Anti-HBs+/anti-HBc- Reactivation
Carroll et al[69] Case series Rheumatic pts or pts with IBD with CHB 13 11 treated with IFX, 2 treated with ETN Lamivudine 13 pts (100%) - - - - 7 cases with IFX, 2 cases with ETN
Charpin et al[70] Prospective RA (12)/SpA (9) pts with resolved HBV infection 21 4 treated with IFX, 14 with ETN, 3 with ADA 0 pts 0 pts 0 pts 100% (with 3 pts < 100 UI/mL) 0 pts - Mean decrease in anti-HBs titre 8%; no cases of HBV reactivation
Chung et al[71] Retrospective RA (41), SpA (60), JIA (2) pts 103 TNFα inhibitors 0 pts 8 pts - - 0 pts - 1/8 HBsAg+ (12.5%) after 6 wk of IFX
Caporali et al[72] Prospective RA (59), SpA (8) pts with resolved HBV infection 67 25 treated with IFX, 23 with ETN, 19 with ADA 0 pts 0 pts 46 pts 28 pts 0 pts - No cases of HBV reactivation
Vassillopoulos et al[73] Prospective RA (66), SpA (64), other (1) patients with actual/remote HBV infection or vaccinated for HBV 131 43 treated with IFX, 64 with ETN, 62 with ADA 14 pts (100% of CHB group): 11 with lamivudine, 2 with entecavir, 1 with telbivudine 14 pts 19 pts 0 pts among CHB group 19 pts (vaccinated) No cases of HBV reactivation in pts with resolved HBV infection. In vaccinated pts, slight decrease in anti-HBs titres (median 163 > 105 IU/mL, P = 0.01). Among CHB pts, 1 (7%) treated with Lamivudine + ETN developed HBV reactivation due to a resistant mutant strain
Mori et al[74] Prospective RA pts with actual/remote HBV infection 239 9 treated with IFX, 18 with ETN, 2 with ADA, 5 with TCZ, 28 with csDMARDs 2 (100% of HBsAg+ pts) with entecavir 2 pts 60 pts 0 pts - 2 cases of HBV reactivation in anti-HBc+ pts (3.3%), 1 with csDMARDs and 1 with ADA
Tamori et al[75] Prospective RA pts with positive anti-HBc 50 22 treated with IFX, 20 with ETN, 2 with ADA Entecavir 5 pts 45 pts - - 2/5 (40%) cases of HBV reactivation among HBsAg+ pts; 1/45 (2%) cases of HBV reactivation among HBcAb+/HBsAg- pts, not under TNFI
Pérez-Alvarez et al[76] Systematic review TNFI-treated pts 257 Anti-TNF (not specified) Not specified 89 pts 168 pts - - HBV reactivation in 35 (39%) pts among HBsAg+ group, fatal in 4 cases. Lower risk if pre-emptive NAs (23% vs 62%, P = 0.003). Higher risk with IFX vs ETN. Nine cases (5%) of HBV reactivation in HBcAb+/HBsAg- pts, fatal in 1 pt
Lan et al[77] Prospective RA anti-HBc+ pts 88 40 pts treated with ETN, 48 with ADA 10 HBsAg+ pts treated with lamivudine 18 pts 12 pts 58 pts 0 pts 22 pts (vaccinated) Among HBsAg+ pts, no cases of HBV reactivation if pre-emptive NAs; mean decrease in HBV-DNA = 153 IU/mL (P < 0.001); 5/8 cases of reactivation without antivirals. 1 case of HBV reactivation in the HBsAg-/anti-HBs- group
Lee et al[78] Systematic review HBsAg+ rheumatic disease-positive pts 122 14 pts treated with IFX, 56 with ETN and 25 with ADA 48 pts (drug not specified) 122 pts - - Not specified - 15 cases (12.3%) of HBV reactivation, including 1 SpA patient treated with pre-emptive lamivudine
Lee et al[79] Systematic Review HBsAg-/anti-HBc+ rheumatic disease-positive (RA 327, SpA 121) pts 468 100 pts treated with IFX, 269 with ETN and 95 with ADA Not specified 0 pts Not specified Not specified Not specified - 8 cases (1.7%) of HBV reactivation, 7 with ETN and 1 with ADA; satisfactory clinical outcomes with antiviral therapy
Droz et al[38] Retrospective Pts with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (RA 14, CTD 7, vasculitis 5, other 9) developing HBV reactivation 35 7 pts treated with TNF-α inhibitors (not specified), 4 with RTX, 1 with ABA, 1 with TCZ, the others with steroids and/or other immunosuppressants 5 pts (drug not specified) 23 pts 12 pts Not specified - Reactivation occurred a median of 35 wk after therapy start. 88.6% were asymptomatic; 25.7% had severe hepatitis. Management were NAs in 91.4% cases and decrease/withdrawal of immunosuppressants in 45.7%. Pooling these data with literature, earlier reactivation for RTX and HBsAg/HBV-DNA+ pts
Ye et al[80] Prospective Inflammatory arthritis pts (50 RA, 37 SpA) 87 TNFα inhibitors: 56 treated with IFX, 31 with ETN) 4 pts among CHB group , 9 pts among inactive carriers (not specified) 37 (6 HBV-DNA+, 31 HBV-DNA-) pts 50 pts Not specified - 2 cases of HBV reactivation among CHB pts not receiving pre-emptive NAs, none in those receiving it. Among inactive HBsAg carriers, 6 cases of reactivation in pts who didn’t receive NAs, none in those who did. No cases in HBsAg- pts
Nakamura et al[81] Retrospective RA 57 48 treated with TNFα inhibitors (including 9 receiving also TCZ); 7 with TCZ alone and 2 with TCZ and ABA 0 pts 0 pts 11 pts 38 pts 0 pts 8 pts (not vaccinated) HBV-DNA detected in 3 pts (5.3%), 2 receiving TCZ and 1 receiving ETN, with serum HBV-DNA < 2,1 log copies/mL, and subsequent undetectable HBV-DNA within months

Pts: Patients; CHB: Chronic hepatitis B; IFX: Infliximab; ETN: Etanercept; IBD: Inflammatory bowel disease; SpA: Spondyloenthesoarthropaties (psoriatic arthritis included); csDMARDs: Conventiona Synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; JIA: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis; TCZ: Tocilizumab; NAs: Nuclet(s)ide analogues; CTD: Connettive tissue disease; RTX: Rituximab; ABA: Abatacept. Adapted from Lunel-Fabiani et al[82] Joint Bone Spine 2014.