Long-term follow-up of hepatitis B virus-infected recipients after orthotopic liver transplantation.

The outcome after OLT was studied in 53 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV)* infection, 15 of whom had, in addition, evidence of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) superinfection. Nine of 53 patients received short-term immunoprophylaxis with anti-hepatitis B surface (HBs) hyperimmunoglobulin up to 1 week after OLT and 44 of 53 patients received long-term unlimited immunoprophylaxis. Eight of 9 (89%) patients with short-term immunoprophylaxis showed reactivation of replication with HBV DNA in serum > 10 pg/ml independently of the preoperative HBV DNA level and HBsAg reappeared in all cases. Four (44%) patients in this group lost their graft because of fulminant hepatitis or cirrhosis and required retransplantation, and 2 patients (22%) died after reinfection in the second graft. Nineteen of 44 (43%) patients with long-term immunoprophylaxis developed HBV values > 10 pg/ml after transplant and 12 of 44 (27%) became HBsAg+ again. Most of them had quantifiable HBV DNA levels before OLT. Retransplantation was required in 5 of 44 (11%) patients and 4 of them died after HBV recurrence. The frequency of HBV reactivation and the development of viral hepatitis after OLT were associated with the preoperative presence of HBV, as determined by the molecular hybridization assay. With nested polymerase chain reaction, all 53 patients were HBV-DNA+ in the serum before and after OLT. with just one exception, none of the patients with HDV superinfection died, in spite of increased HDV replication after OLT. The data indicate that long-term immunoprophylaxis with anti-HBs hyperimmunoglobulin after OLT improves the prognosis in HBV-infected patients. The preoperative detection of HBV DNA in serum by molecular hybridization assay is correlated with graft infection and represents a prognostic parameter. The presence of HDV may have a protective effect after OLT.