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Antiviral treatment and monitoring: what to prepare before each hepatitis B visit

A visit-preparation checklist for chronic hepatitis B care, including HBV DNA, ALT, liver cancer surveillance, medicine adherence, and questions to ask.

Audience
Patients and families
Published
2026-06-26
Last reviewed
2026-06-26

Treatment decisions are not based on one number

Whether chronic hepatitis B needs antiviral treatment is usually judged from several pieces of information together: HBV DNA, ALT/AST, HBeAg status, fibrosis or cirrhosis risk, age, family history, pregnancy plans, and other medical conditions. Do not start, stop, or switch medicines because of one HBV DNA result or because ALT is normal once.

Organize four groups of records before the visit

First, viral results: HBV DNA, HBsAg, HBeAg, and anti-HBe. Second, liver inflammation and function: ALT, AST, bilirubin, albumin, and INR. Third, fibrosis and liver cancer surveillance: platelets, liver ultrasound, AFP, elastography, or other fibrosis assessment. Fourth, medicine and lifestyle notes: missed doses, side effects, alcohol, supplements, pregnancy plans, and any chemotherapy or immune-suppressing treatment plans.

If you are already taking antivirals

Take medicine at a consistent time and contact the clinic if doses are missed or treatment is interrupted. At follow-up, ask: Is my viral load falling as expected? Do I need kidney, bone, or urine monitoring? If stopping treatment is ever considered, what conditions would need to be met and how often would I be checked after stopping?

If you are not currently on treatment

No treatment now does not mean no follow-up. Your clinician may schedule ALT, HBV DNA, HBeAg/HBsAg, fibrosis assessment, and liver cancer surveillance depending on your risk. Hepatitis B Online monitoring resources emphasize that chronic hepatitis B phases can change over time, so stable results still need periodic review.

Questions to ask at the visit

Ask which phase of chronic hepatitis B you are in, how your fibrosis risk is being judged, whether liver cancer surveillance is needed and how often, and what should be done before pregnancy, chemotherapy, immune-suppressing treatment, or long-term steroid use. End the visit with one clear plan: what to check next, when to check it, and what result or symptom should trigger earlier contact.

Action checklist

Bring your latest HBV DNA, ALT/AST, bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, ultrasound or elastography, AFP, medicine list, missed-dose notes, alcohol record, and pregnancy or immune-suppression plans. Ask the clinician to write the next test date and urgent-contact conditions. Do not change antiviral treatment on your own.

治疗 随访监测 指南

References

WHO 2024 Chronic Hepatitis B Guidelines

World Health Organization · accessed 2026-06-26

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Hepatitis B Online Monitoring Persons On and Off HBV Therapy

University of Washington Hepatitis B Online · accessed 2026-06-26

Open original source

AASLD Hepatitis B Guidance

American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases · accessed 2026-06-26

Open original source

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