Preventing Hepatitis B Reactivation During Anti-CD20 Antibody Treatment in the Veterans Health Administration.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation may occur with high risk immunosuppression, such
as anti-cluster of differentiation (CD)20 antibodies (Abs). Appropriate HBV prophylaxis
during anti-CD20 Ab therapy averts hepatitis, chemotherapy disruption, and death.
Serologic evidence of prior HBV exposure is present in one in nine veterans in the
Veterans Health Administration (VHA). In 2014, most (61%-73%) patients in the VHA
who were receiving anti-CD20 Ab treatment underwent HBV testing, yet <20% of eligible
patients received HBV antiviral prophylaxis. We aimed to prevent HBV reactivation
by increasing HBV testing and antiviral treatment rates among anti-CD20 Ab recipients
through prospective interventions. A multidisciplinary team of clinicians, pharmacists,
and public health professionals developed comprehensive prevention systems, including
national seminars/newsletters/websites; pharmacy criteria for HBV screening/treatment
prior to anti-CD20 Ab use; changes to national formulary restrictions to expand HBV
prophylaxis prescribing authority; Medication Use Evaluation Tracker to identify omissions;
national e-mail alert to all VHA oncology providers detailing specific testing and
HBV antiviral treatment needs; and a voluntary electronic medical record "order check"
used at interested facilities (n = 11) to automatically assess pretreatment HBV testing
and antiviral treatment and only generate a reminder to address deficiencies. Analysis
of monthly data from June 2016 through September 2017 among anti-CD20 Ab recipients
revealed pre-anti-CD20 Ab treatment HBV testing increased to 91%-96% and appropriate
HBV antiviral prophylaxis to 76%-85% nationally following implementation of the intervention.
Medical centers using the voluntary electronic medical record order check increased
HBV testing rates to 93%-98% and HBV antiviral prophylaxis rates to 99%. Conclusion:
Multimodal intervention systems to prevent HBV reactivation among VHA patients receiving
anti-CD20 Ab therapies increased national rates of HBV testing to >90% and antiviral
prophylaxis to >80%.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17622Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1002/hep4.1238Publication Info
Jasmine Bullard, A; Cunningham, Francesca E; Volpp, Bryan D; Lowy, Elliott; Beste,
Lauren A; Heron, Bernadette B; ... Hunt, Christine M (2018). Preventing Hepatitis B Reactivation During Anti-CD20 Antibody Treatment in the Veterans
Health Administration. Hepatology communications, 2(9). pp. 1136-1146. 10.1002/hep4.1238. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17622.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Christine Marie Hunt
Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine
Michael John Kelley
Professor of Medicine
1. A major theme throughout my career has been the biology of and improving outcomes
for patients with lung cancer. Early publications examined the relationship between
specific genetic alterations in lung cancer and clinically relevant applications including
differential drug sensitivity, differentiation of metastases from second primary cancers,
and application of patient-specific mutations as epitopes for immunotherapy. Correlation
of alteration of p16 w
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