Publication Date: 31 Mar 2009
Journal: Clinical Medicine Insights: Therapeutics
Citation: Clinical Medicine: Therapeutics 2009:1 11-15
Emilio Palumbo
Clinic of Paediatric, Hospital of Sondrio, Italy.
Abstract
Actually three nucleotide/nucleoside analogues are used for chronic hepatitis B: lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, entecavir and telbivudine. Lamivudine and adefovir are advantageous for oral administration and safety, but they induce a sustained response after withdrawal of therapy in only a minority of patients. Telbivudine is a new drug and further studies are need to evaluate its real efficacy. Entecavir, a cyclopentyl guanosine analog, is a potent inhibitor of HBV-DNA polymerase and it inhibits both priming and elongation steps of viral DNA replication. In phase II and III clinical trials, entecavir was found to be superior to lamivudine for all primary endpoints evaluated in both nucleoside-naive and lamivudine-resistant patients and it was effective in both HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative nucleoside-naive patients. Only one trial has evidenced cases of viral resistance to entecavir. The approved dosage in treatment-naive patients is 0.5 mg/day orally, while in patients who have failed lamivudine therapy or are known to harbour lamivudine-resistant mutants, the approved dosage is 1.0 mg/day.
PDF (206.64 KB PDF FORMAT)
RIS citation (ENDNOTE, REFERENCE MANAGER, PROCITE, REFWORKS)
BibTex citation (BIBDESK, LATEX)
The submission process was made very simple and easy, and I found the journal's staff to be very receptive and helpful. The online process was very user-friendly. I hope to work with this journal again in the future.
All authors are surveyed after their articles are published. Authors are asked to rate their experience in a variety of areas, and their responses help us to monitor our performance. Presented here are their responses in some key areas. No 'poor' or 'very poor' responses were received; these are represented in the 'other' category.See Our Results
Copyright © 2014 Libertas Academica Ltd (except open access articles and accompanying metadata and supplementary files.)
Facebook Google+ Twitter
Pinterest Tumblr YouTube