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©2012 Baishideng.
World J Virol. Dec 12, 2012; 1(6): 174-183
Published online Dec 12, 2012. doi: 10.5501/wjv.v1.i6.174
Published online Dec 12, 2012. doi: 10.5501/wjv.v1.i6.174
Nucleos(t)ide analogue | Regimen | Pros | Cons |
Lamivudine | 100 mg daily | First licensed agent | Highest incidence of resistant mutations of M204V/I substitution (20% at year 1, 70% at year 5) |
Well established safety and efficacy record | |||
Lowest cost | Adverse effects including hepatitis flare ups, hepatic decompensation and even death | ||
Adefovir dipivoxil | 10 mg daily | Low drug resistance rate, and no cross resistance with other nucleos(t)ide analogs | Incidence of resistant mutations of N236T and/or A181V substitution (29% at year 5) |
Adverse effects including renal tubular acidosis with hypophosphataemia when treatment is prolonged | |||
Telbivudine | 600 mg daily | Higher seroconversion rate | Incidence of resistant mutations of M204I mutation (5% at year 1) |
Adverse effects including myopathy and neuropathy | |||
Entecavir | 1.0 mg daily | Anti-HBV effect | Incidence of resistant mutations of T184G or M250V (1.2% at year 5) (I169T and M250V, or T184G and S202I if also lamivudine-resistant) |
Lowest rate of resistance | |||
Most expensive | |||
Tenofovir disoproxil | 300 mg daily | More potent in reducing HBV load in patients with prior failure or resistance to lamivudine and/or adefovir | No resistant mutations reported at year 3 |
- Citation: Chen LP, Zhao J, Du Y, Han YF, Su T, Zhang HW, Cao GW. Antiviral treatment to prevent chronic hepatitis B or C-related hepatocellular carcinoma. World J Virol 2012; 1(6): 174-183
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3249/full/v1/i6/174.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5501/wjv.v1.i6.174