Background: Fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis (FCH) is a severe form of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection occurring as either primary allograft reinfection after liver transplantation for HBV or as severe HBV reactivation induced by immunosuppression in patients with previously latent infection. Without treatment, FCH is universally fatal within a few months of diagnosis. Some improvement has been reported with long-term ganciclovir, with and without foscarnet, but an effective and easily available treatment has not yet been reported.
Methods: We report the prolonged survival of a renal transplant recipient who developed histologically confirmed FCH 6 months after transplantation and was treated with lamivudine.
Results: At the time of diagnosis, the patient had jaundice, ascites, and a serum HBV-DNA level of 3868 pg/ml. Lamivudine was instituted 2 months later, and after 6 months of treatment, the HBV-DNA level was undetectable with the serum bilirubin within the normal range. Twelve months after the diagnosis of FCH, the patient remains stable without progression of liver dysfunction.
Conclusion: Our experience demonstrates that lamivudine therapy can improve the dismal natural history of FCH.