REVIEW OF THE TREATMENT PROBLEM AND DRUG GROUPS FOR THE TREATMENT OF VIRAL HEPATITIS B

Authors

  • Bakhronov Jakhongir Jasurovich Assistant Professor, Department of Infectious Diseases of Samarkand State Medical University, Samarkand, Uzbekistan

Keywords:

Direct-acting antivirals, Hepatitis B surface antigen loss, Immune modulatory therapies, Nucleos(t)ide analogues, Pegylated interferon-α.

Abstract

Current treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, pegylated interferon-α (pegIFN-α) and nucleos(t)ide analogue (NA), can suppress HBV replication, reverse liver inflammation and fibrosis, and decrease risks of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, but hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss is rare. Functional HBV cure is defined as undetectable HBsAg and unquantifiable serum HBV DNA for at least 24 weeks after a finite course of therapy. This requires suppression of HBV replication and viral protein production as well as restoration of immune response to HBV. Direct-acting antivirals targeting virus entry, capsid assembly, viral protein production and secretion are in clinical trials. In parallel, immune modulatory therapies to stimulate HBV-specific immune response and to remove immune blockade are being tested. Clinical trials of direct-acting antivirals alone or immune modulatory therapies alone have not been successful in achieving HBV cure. Recent combinations of direct-acting antivirals and immune modulatory therapies have shown promising results particularly with combinations that included pegIFN-α. These results need to be confirmed in larger studies with longer follow-up, and further work is needed to develop simpler regimens with fewer drugs that can be administered orally and safely. While there is a strong desire to develop finite therapies that can achieve HBV cure, safety is paramount and new therapies must provide incremental value compared to standard of care, which is predominantly long-term NA therapy.

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Published

2025-12-17

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

REVIEW OF THE TREATMENT PROBLEM AND DRUG GROUPS FOR THE TREATMENT OF VIRAL HEPATITIS B. (2025). Web of Medicine: Journal of Medicine, Practice and Nursing , 3(12), 189-194. https://webofjournals.com/index.php/5/article/view/5648