Browsing by Author "Erhardt, Andreas"
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Publication 96 weeks of pegylated-interferon- alpha-2α plus tenofovir or placebo for the treatment of hepatitis delta: The hidit-2 study(Wiley-blackwell, 2013-10-01) Wedemeyer, Heiner; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Ernst, Stefanie; Caruntu, Florin A.; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalcin, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George; Keskin, Onur; Port, Kerstin; Celen, Mustafa K.; Stift, Judith; Heidrich, Benjamin; Mederacke, Ingmar; Hardtke, Svenja; Koch, Armin; Dienes, Hans P.; Manns, Michael P.; Gürel, Selim; GÜREL, SELİM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi; HLH-8209-2023Publication A novel non-invasive fibrosis score based on cytokines and clinical parameters for the use in chronic hepatitis delta(Wiley-blackwell, 2013-10-01) Heidrich, Benjamin; Wranke, Anika; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Stift, Judith; Caruntu, Florin A.; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalcin, Kendal; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Bremer, Birgit; Grabowski, Jan; Kirschner, Janina; Port, Kerstin; Cornberg, Markus; Christine, Falk; Dienes, Hans Peter; Hardtke, Svenja; Manns, Michael P.; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gurel, Selim; GÜREL, SELİM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi; HLH-8209-2023Publication A transient early hbv-dna increase during peg-ifnα therapy of hepatitis d indicates loss of infected cells and is associated with hdv-rna and hbsag reduction(Wiley, 2020-12-12) Anastasiou, Olympia E.; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Maasoumy, Benjamin; Hardtke, Svenja; Caruntu, Florin Alexandru; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalcin, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Luth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George, V; Radu, Monica; Liebig, Stephanie; Bantel, Heike; Bremer, Birgit; Manns, Michael P.; Cornberg, Markus; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; GÜREL, SELİM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi; HLH-8209-2023HBV-DNA levels are low or even undetectable in the majority HDV-infected patients. The impact of PEG-IFN alpha on HBV-DNA kinetics in HDV-infected patients has not been studied in detail. We analysed data of a prospective treatment trial where 120 HDV-RNA-positive patients were randomized to receive PEG-IFN alpha-2a plus tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate (PEG-IFN alpha/TDF, n = 59) or placebo (PEG-IFN alpha/PBO; n = 61) for 96 weeks. At week 96, HBV-DNA was still quantifiable in 71% of PEG-IFN alpha/PBO-treated patients but also in 76% of PEG-IFN alpha/TDF-treated patients, despite low HBV-DNA baseline values. Surprisingly, a transient HBV-DNA increase between weeks 12 and 36 was observed in 12 in PEG-IFN alpha/TDF-treated and 12 PEG-IFN alpha/PBO-treated patients. This increase was positively associated with HBsAg loss [(P = 0.049, odds ratio (OR) 5.1] and HDV-RNA suppression (P = 0.007, OR 4.1) at week 96. Biochemical markers of cell death (M30 and ALT) were higher during the HBV-DNA peak but no distinct systemic immune pattern could be observed by screening 91 soluble inflammatory markers. In conclusion, an early increase in HBV-DNA during PEG-IFN alpha-2a therapy occurred in more than 20% of patients, even in TDF-treated patients. This transient HBV-DNA rise may indicate PEG-IFN alpha-induced cell death and lead to long-term HDV-RNA suppression and HBsAg loss.Publication Anti-HDV IgM as a marker of disease activity in hepatitis delta(Public Library Science, 2014-07-29) Wranke, Anika; Heidrich, Benjamin; Ernst, Stefanie; Serrano, Beatriz Calle; Caruntu, Florin Alexandru; Curescu, Manuela Gabriela; Yalcin, Kendal; Gürel, Selim; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Bremer, Birgit; Stift, Judith; Grabowski, Jan; Kirschner, Janina; Port, Kerstin; Cornberg, Markus; Falk, Christine S.; Dienes, Hans-Peter; Hardtke, Svenja; Manns, Michael P.; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Wedemeyer, Heiner; HIDIT-2 Study Grp; GÜREL, SELİM; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi.; HLH-8209-2023Background: Hepatitis delta frequently leads to liver cirrhosis and hepatic decompensation. As treatment options are limited, there is a need for biomarkers to determine disease activity and to predict the risk of disease progression. We hypothesized that anti-HDV IgM could represent such a marker.Methods: Samples of 120 HDV-infected patients recruited in an international multicenter treatment trial (HIDIT-2) were studied. Anti-HDV IgM testing was performed using ETI-DELTA-IGMK-2-assay (DiaSorin). In addition, fifty cytokines, chemokines and angiogenetic factors were measured using multiplex technology (Bio-Plex System). A second independent cohort of 78 patients was studied for the development of liver-related clinical endpoints (decompensation, HCC, liver transplantation or death; median follow up of 3.0 years, range 0.6-12).Results: Anti-HDV IgM serum levels were negative in 18 (15%), low (OD<0.5) in 76 (63%), and high in 26 (22%) patients of the HIDIT-2 cohort. Anti-HDV IgM were significantly associated with histological inflammatory (p<0.01) and biochemical disease activity (ALT, AST p<0.01). HDV replication was independent from anti-HDV IgM, however, low HBV-DNA levels were observed in groups with higher anti-HDV IgM levels (p<0.01). While high IP-10 (CXCL10) levels were seen in greater groups of anti-HDV IgM levels, various other antiviral cytokines were negatively associated with anti-HDV IgM. Associations between anti-HDV IgM and ALT, AST, HBV-DNA were confirmed in the independent cohort. Clinical endpoints occurred in 26 anti-HDV IgM positive patients (39%) but in only one anti-HDV IgM negative individual (9%; p = 0.05).Conclusions: Serum anti-HDV IgM is a robust, easy-to-apply and relatively cheap marker to determine disease activity in hepatitis delta which has prognostic implications. High anti-HDV IgM levels may indicate an activated interferon system but exhausted antiviral immunity.Item Anti-HDV immunoglobulin M testing in hepatitis delta revisited: Correlations with disease activity and response to pegylated interferon-alpha 2a treatment(Int Medical, 2012) Mederacke, Ingmar; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Dalekos, George N.; Bremer, Birgit; Erhardt, Andreas; Çakaloğlu, Yılmaz; Yalçın, Kendal; Zeuzem, Stefan; Zachou, Kalliopi; Bozkaya, Hakan; Dienes, Hans Peter; Manns, Michael P.; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Gastroenteroloji Anabilim Dalı.; 7003706434Background: The role of anti-HDV immunoglobulin M (IgM) testing in patients receiving pegylated interferon-alpha therapy for hepatitis delta is unknown. We performed anti-HDV IgM testing in a well defined cohort of HDVinfected patients who were treated with pegylated interferon-alpha 2a plus adefovir, or either drug alone. Methods: Sera from 33 HDV-RNA-positive patients from the international HIDIT-1 trial were available for anti-HDV IgM testing (ETI-DELTA-IGMK-2 assay, DiaSorin, Saluggia, Italy) before therapy, at treatment weeks 24 and 48, and at 24 weeks after the end of treatment. Results: Anti-HDV IgM tested positive in 31 out of the 33 patients (94%) prior to treatment. HDV IgM levels correlated with histological inflammatory activity (r= 0.51, P<0.01) and were higher in patients with alanine aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels above the median (P<0.05). Quantitative anti-HDV IgM values declined in patients responding to antiviral therapy, however anti-HDV IgM remained positive after treatment in the majority of virological responders. Conclusions: We suggest that anti-HDV IgM testing might give additional useful information to determine disease activity in hepatitis delta and to predict treatment response to antiviral therapy with type I interferons. However, determination of anti-HDV IgM can not substitute HDV RNA testing, which remains the primary virological marker for response to therapy.Publication Anti-hdv-igm levels as a marker of disease activity and response to pegylated interferon-α based therapy in hepatitis delta(Wiley-blackwell, 2013-10-01) Wranke, Anika; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Heidrich, Benjamin; Ernst, Stefanie; Koch, Armin; Serrano, Beatriz Calle; Caruntu, Florin A.; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalçın, Kendal; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Bremer, Birgit; Stift, Judith; Kirschner, Janina; Port, Kerstin; Cornberg, Markus; Dienes, Hans P.; Hardtke, Svenja; Manns, Michael P.; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gurel, Selim; GÜREL, SELİM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi; HLH-8209-2023Item Efficacy of pegylated interferon-based treatment in patients with cirrhosis due to chronic delta hepatitis: Comparison with non-cirrhotic patients(Wiley, 2009-10) Yurdaydın, Cihan; Kobacam, Gökhan; Cakaloğlu, Yılmaz; Erhardt, Andreas; Değertekin, Halil; Zeuzem, Stefan; Dalekos, George N.; Bozkaya, Hakan; Dienes, Hans P.; Manns, Michael P.; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İç Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı/Gastroenteroloji Bilimdalı.Publication Late HDV RNA relapse after peginterferon alpha-based therapy of chronic hepatitis delta(Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2014-07-01) Heidrich, Benjamin; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Kabacam, Gokhan; Ratsch, Boris A.; Zachou, Kalliopi; Bremer, Birgit; Dalekos, George N.; Erhardt, Andreas; Tabak, Fehmi; Yalçın, Kendal; Gürel, Selim; Zeuzem, Stefan; Cornberg, Markus; Bock, C. -Thomas; Manns, Michael P.; Wedemeyer, Heiner; GÜREL, SELİM; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Gastroenteroloji Anabilim Dalı.; HLH-8209-2023Interferon alpha is the only treatment option for hepatitis delta virus (HDV). Trials investigating the efficacy of pegylated interferon alpha (PEG-IFNa) showed HDV RNA negativity rates of 25-30% 24 weeks after therapy. However, the clinical and virological long-term outcome of HDV-infected patients treated with PEG-IFNa is unknown. We performed a retrospective-prospective follow-up of 77 patients treated for 48 weeks with either PEG-alfa-2a and adefovir (ADV) or either drug alone in the Hep-Net-International-Delta-Hepatitis-Intervention-Study 1 (HIDIT-1) trial. Long-term follow-up data were available for 58 out of 77 patients (75%) with a median time of follow-up of 4.5 (0.5-5.5) years and a median 3 visits per patient. Patients treated with ADV alone received retreatment with PEG-IFNa (48% versus 19%; P = 0.02) more often. Hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) became negative in six PEG-IFNa-treated patients until the end of long-term follow-up (10%). Sixteen patients tested HDV RNA-negative 6 months after PEG-IFNa treatment who were entered in the long-term follow-up study. Out of these, nine individuals tested HDV RNA-positive at least once during further long-term follow-up, with seven patients being HDV RNA-positive at the most recent visit. Clinical endpoints (liver-related death, liver transplantation, hepatic decompensation, hepatocellular carcinoma) were observed in three PEG-IFNa-treated (8%) and three ADV-treated (14%) patients during posttreatment long-term follow-up with an overall annual event rate of 2.5% (4.9% in cirrhosis). Sequencing confirmed the reappearance of pretreatment virus strains in all cases. Conclusion: Late HDV RNA relapses may occur after PEG-IFNa therapy of hepatitis delta and thus the term sustained virological response should be avoided in HDV infection. The annual posttreatment rate of clinical events in hepatitis delta patients eligible for PEG-IFNa therapy is about 2.5% and 4.9% in patients with cirrhosis.Item Peginterferon alfa-2a plus tenofovir disoproxil fumarate for hepatitis D (HIDIT-II): A randomised, placebo controlled, phase 2 trial(Elsevier, 2019-03) Wedemeyer, Heiner; Yurdaydin, Cihan; Hardtke, Svenja; Caruntu, Florin Alexandru; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalcin, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Keskin, Onur; Port, Kerstin; Radu, Monica; Celen, Mustafa K.; Idilman, Ramazan; Weber, Kristina; Stift, Judith; Wittkop, Ulrike; Heidrich, Benjamin; Zeuzem, Stefan; Gürel, Selim; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İç Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı.; 7003706434Abstract Background Hepatitis D is the most severe form of chronic viral hepatitis. Treatment guidelines recommend 1 year of peginterferon alfa, which is effective in 25-30% of patients only. Whether prolonged therapy with peginterferon alfa-2a for 96 weeks and combination therapy with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) would increase hepatitis D virus (HDV) RNA suppression is unknown. We aimed to explore whether prolonged treatment of HDV with 96 weeks of peginterferon would increase HDV RNA response rates and reduces post-treatment relapses. Methods We did two parallel, investigator-initiated, multicentre, double-blind randomised, controlled trials at 14 study sites in Germany, Greece, Romania, and Turkey. Patients with chronic HDV infection and compensated liver disease who were aged 18 years or older were eligible for inclusion. All patients were HBsAg positive for at least 7 months, anti-HDV positive for at least 3 months, and HDV-RNA positive at the local laboratory at the screening visit. Patients were ineligible if alanine aminotransferase levels were higher than ten times above the upper limit of normal and if platelet counts were lower than 90 000 per mu L, or if they had received interferon therapy or treatment with a nucleoside and nucleotide analogue within the preceding 6 months. Patients were randomly assigned by blinded stratified block randomisation (1:1) to receive 180 mu g of peginterferon alfa-2a weekly plus either TDF (300 mg once daily) or placebo for 96 weeks. The primary endpoint was the percentage of patients with undetectable HDV RNA at the end of treatment assessed by intention to treat. The trials are registered as NCT00932971 and NCT01088659. Findings Between June 24, 2009, and Feb 28, 2011, we randomly assigned 59 HDV RNA-positive patients to receive peginterferon alfa-2a plus TDF and 61 to receive peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo, including 48 (40%) patients with cirrhosis to the two treatment groups (23 in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus TDF group and 25 in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo group). The primary endpoint was achieved in 28 (48%) of 59 patients in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus TDF group and in 20 (33%) of 61 patients in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo group (odds ratio 1.84, 95% CI 0.86-3.91, p=0.12). We recorded 944 adverse events (459 in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus TDF group and 485 in the peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo group). The most common adverse events were haematological, behavioural (eg, fatigue), musculoskeletal, influenza-like syndromes, and psychiatric complaints. Interpretation Addition of TDF resulted in no significant improvement in HDV RNA response rates at the end of treatment. These findings highlight that alternative treatment options are needed for hepatitis D.Item Peginterferon plus adefovir versus either drug alone for hepatitis delta(Massachusetts Medical Soc, 2011-01-27) Wedemeyer, Heiner; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Dalekos, George N.; Erhardt, Andreas; Çakaloğlu, Yılmaz; Değertekin, Halil; Zeuzern, Stefan; Zachou, Kalliopi; Bozkaya, Hakan; Koch, Armin; Bock, Thomas; Dienes, Hans Peter; Manns, Michael P.; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi.; 7003706434BACKGROUND Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) results in the most severe form of viral hepatitis. There is no currently approved treatment. We investigated the safety and efficacy of 48 weeks of treatment with peginterferon alfa-2a plus adefovir dipivoxil, peginterferon alfa-2a alone, and adefovir dipivoxil alone. METHODS We conducted a randomized trial in which 31 patients with HDV infection received treatment with 180 mu g of peginterferon alfa-2a weekly plus 10 mg of adefovir daily, 29 received 180 mu g of peginterferon alfa-2a weekly plus placebo, and 30 received 10 mg of adefovir alone weekly for 48 weeks. Follow-up was conducted for an additional 24 weeks. Efficacy end points included clearance of HDV RNA, normalization of alanine aminotransferase levels, and a decline in levels of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg). RESULTS The primary end point - normalization of alanine aminotransferase levels and clearance of HDV RNA at week 48 - was achieved in two patients in the group receiving peginterferon alfa-2a plus adefovir and two patients in the group receiving peginterferon alfa-2a plus placebo but in none of the patients in the group receiving adefovir alone. At week 48, the test for HDV RNA was negative in 23% of patients in the first group, 24% of patients in the second, and none of those in the third (P=0.006 for the comparison of the first and third groups; P=0.004 for the comparison of the second and third). The efficacy of peginterferon alfa-2a was sustained for 24 weeks after treatment, with 28% of the patients receiving peginterferon alfa-2a plus adefovir or peginterferon alfa-2a alone having negative results on HDV-RNA tests; none of the patients receiving adefovir alone had negative results. A decline in HBsAg levels of more than 1 log(10) IU per milliliter from baseline to week 48 was observed in 10 patients in the first group, 2 in the second, and none in the third (P<0.001 for the comparison of the first and third groups and P=0.01 for the comparison of the first and second). CONCLUSIONS Treatment with peginterferon alfa-2a for 48 weeks, with or without adefovir, resulted in sustained HDV RNA clearance in about one quarter of patients with HDV infection.Item Pegylated-Interferon-a-2a plus Tenofovir or Placebo for the treatment of hepatitis delta: First results of the HIDIT-2 study(Wiley, 2012-10) Yurdaydın, Cihan; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Caruntu, Florin A.; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalçın, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Port, Kerstin; Keskin, Onur; Radu, Monica N.; Çelen, Mustafa K.; İdilman, Ramazan; Stift, Judith; Mederacke, Ingmar; Heidrich, Benjamin; Manns, Michael P.; Dienes, Hans Peter; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İç Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı.; 0000-0002-7279-2161; EYK-5719-2022Item Quantitative HBsAg and HDV-RNA levels in chronic delta hepatitis(Wiley, 2010-03) Zachou, Kalliopi; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Drebber, Uta; Dalekos, George Nikolaos; Erhardt, Andreas; Çakaloğlu, Yılmaz; Değertekin, Halil; Zeuzem, Stefan S.; Bozkaya, Hakan; Schlaphoff, Verena; Dienes, Hans Peter; Bock, C. Thomas; Manns, Michael Peter; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İç Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı.; 7003706434Background: Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) causes severe liver disease. Aims: To investigate the quantitative HDV-RNA, HBsAg and hepatitis B virus (HBV)DNA levels in correlation to histological, biochemical and demographical parameters in patients with chronic HDV infection as similar data in a large series of HDV patients are missing. Methods: Eighty HDV patients were recruited in Germany, Turkey and Greece; quantitative determination of HDV-RNA, HBsAg and HBV-DNA was performed by real-time polymerase chain reaction, the Architect HBsAg assay and Cobas TaqMan HBV test respectively. Results: All patients were infected with HDV-genotype 1. Thirty-five patients (48%) had significant fibrosis (Ishak 3-4) and 15 (20.5%) had cirrhosis. HDV viraemia ranged from 1.1 x 10(3) to 8.4 x 10(7) copies/ml with 60% of patients showing HDV-RNA levels above 105 copies/ml accompanied by low HBV viraemia (<10(5) copies/ml). However, HDV-RNA and HBV-DNA levels showed no direct inverse correlation. HDV-RNA correlated positively with HBsAg and negatively with age. HBsAg correlated negatively with age and positively with histological grading. Only gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase was independently associated with cirrhosis (P=0.032), while no biochemical parameter was associated with grading. Conclusions: (i) HBsAg levels correlated with HDV viraemia in chronic HDV. (ii) Biochemical parameters did not accurately indicate the stage and grade of liver disease in chronic HDV and thus liver biopsy seems to remain the major tool for the evaluation of delta hepatitis patients.Item Renal function during treatment with adefovir plus peginterferon alfa-2a vs either drug alone in hepatitis B/D co-infection(Wiley, 2012-06) Mederacke, Ingmar; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Grosshennig, Anika; Erhardt, Andreas; Çakaloğlu, Yılmaz; Yalçın, Kendal; Zeuzem, Stefan; Zachou, Kalliopi; Chatzikyrkou, Christos; Bozkaya, Hakan; Dalekos, George Nikolaos; Manns, Michael Peter; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi.; 7003706434Long-term safety of treatment with hepatitis B virus (HBV) polymerase inhibitors is a concern. Adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) therapy has previously been associated with impairment of renal function. Limited data are available on the safety of combination therapy with nucleos(t)ide analogues and interferon alfa (IFNa). The aim of this analysis was to assess the renal function during combination therapy with peginterferon alfa-2a (PegIFNa-2a) plus ADV vs either drug alone in patients with hepatitis B/D co-infection. We performed a retrospective analysis of renal function data of patients treated in the Hep-Net/International Delta Hepatitis Intervention Trial 1(HIDIT-1-trial), a European multicenter study to investigate the efficacy of 48 weeks of therapy with PegIFNa-2a+ADV vs either drug alone in 90 patients with chronic hepatitis B/D co-infection. Glomerular filtration rates (GFR) were calculated by CockcroftGault (CG), abbreviated Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) study and Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation. After 48 weeks of therapy GFR values were significantly lower in patients receiving adefovir-containing treatment vs PegIFNa-2a alone [mean difference 16.1 mL/min (CG) and 10.2 mL/min (MDRD), respectively, P < 0.05] while no differences were observed between patients receiving adefovir alone vs combination treatment. Twenty-four weeks after treatment GFR values did not differ between treatment arms. A decrease in GFR =20% was observed more often in patients during adefovir-containing treatment vs PegIFNa-2a alone (P < 0.05) which was confirmed by KaplanMeier analysis. Adefovir-containing but not PegIFNa-2a treatment was associated with a decrease in GFR values in about one-fifth of patients. Combination treatment of PegIFNa-2a+ADV in chronic hepatitis B/D co-infection did not lead to any further impairment of kidney function.Item Residual low HDV viraemia is associated HDV RNA relapse after PEG-IFNa-based antiviral treatment of hepatitis delta: Results from the HIDIT-II study(Wiley, 2020-11-20) Bremer, Birgit; Anastasiou, Olympia E.; Hardtke, Svenja; Caruntu, Florin A.; Curescu, Manuela G.; Yalçın, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Luth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George V.; Radu, Monica; İdilman, Ramazan; Manns, Michael P.; Cornberg, Markus; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/İç Hastalıkları.; HLH-8209-2023; 7003706434The role of low levels of HDV-RNA during and after interferon therapy of hepatitis D is unknown. We re-analysed HDV RNA in 372 samples collected in the HIDIT-2 trial (Wedemeyer et al, Lancet Infectious Diseases 2019) with the Robogene assay (RA; Jena Analytics). Data were compared with the previously reported in-house assay (IA). We detected HDV-RNA in one-third of samples previously classified as undetectable using the highly sensitive RA. Low HDV viraemia detectable at week 48 or week 96 was associated with a high risk for post-treatment relapse, defined as HDV RNA positivity in both assays at week 120. HDV RNA relapses occurred in 10/15 (67%) patients with detectable low HDV RNA at week 48 and in 10/13 (77%) patients with low viraemia samples at week 96. In contrast, the post-treatment relapse rate was lower in patients with undetectable HDV RNA in both assays during treatment.Publication Residual low hdv viremia is associated with hdv rna relapse after peg-ifna-based antiviral treatment of hepatitis d (delta): Results from the hidit-ii study(Elsevier, 2020-08-01) Bremer, Birgit; Anastasiou, Olympia; Hardtke, Svenja; Caruntu, Florin Alexandru; Curescu, Manuela Gabriela; Yalcin, Kendal; Akarca, Ulus S.; Idilman, Ramazan; Zeuzem, Stefan; Erhardt, Andreas; Lueth, Stefan; Papatheodoridis, George; Radu, Monica; Manns, Michael P.; Cornberg, Markus; Yurdaydın, Cihan; Wedemeyer, Heiner; Gürel, Selim; GÜREL, SELİM; Bursa Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi.; HLH-8209-2023