# HBV DNA, ALT/AST, and liver tests: how to read trends over time

URL: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/articles/hbv-dna-alt-ast-and-liver-tests-how-to-read-trends-over-time?locale=en
Canonical Markdown: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/articles/hbv-dna-alt-ast-and-liver-tests-how-to-read-trends-over-time.md?locale=en
Language: en
Translation key: article-6380c1409f3c
Topic: 检查结果
Audience: Patients and families
Region: Global
Published: 2026-06-26
Last reviewed: 2026-06-26
Review status: source_backed
Tags: 血清学, 随访监测, 治疗

## Summary

How HBV DNA, ALT/AST, bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, imaging, and medication history can be organized for chronic hepatitis B follow-up.

## Article

## Look at trends, not one number

Hepatitis B follow-up is rarely decided from one result alone. Clinicians often interpret HBV DNA, ALT/AST, bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, HBeAg/anti-HBe, quantitative HBsAg, liver ultrasound, and fibrosis assessment together.

The change over time in the same person is often more useful than one isolated value. Different laboratories may use different units, lower limits of detection, and reference ranges, so keep the original reports and record the date, unit, and reference range whenever possible.

## What HBV DNA can and cannot tell you

HBV DNA reflects the amount of hepatitis B virus detected in blood and is commonly used for baseline assessment and treatment response. A very high, very low, or undetectable HBV DNA result cannot by itself decide whether you need treatment, can stop treatment, or have no future risk.

Doctors usually combine HBV DNA with ALT/AST, fibrosis or cirrhosis status, age, family history, pregnancy plans, immune-suppressing treatment plans, and local guidelines. If you are already taking antivirals, the HBV DNA trend can help assess adherence and treatment response. If it rises after previously falling, tell the clinician about missed doses, stopping medicine, switching medicine, supplements, or other drugs.

## How to understand ALT/AST and normal liver function

ALT and AST are often used as signals of liver cell injury or inflammation. They are not the whole meaning of liver function. Normal ALT/AST does not prove that chronic hepatitis B no longer needs follow-up, and it does not rule out fibrosis, cirrhosis, or liver cancer screening needs.

To assess liver status, clinicians may also review bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, imaging, and fibrosis tests. If you develop jaundice, very dark urine, marked abdominal swelling, vomiting blood or black stools, confusion, easy bleeding, or severe fatigue, do not wait for the next routine appointment.

## Put follow-up results into one table

A practical table can include one row per visit: date, HBsAg, HBeAg/anti-HBe, HBV DNA value and unit, detection limit, ALT/AST, bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, ultrasound or elastography results, current medicines, missed doses, alcohol, supplements, pregnancy plans, and immune-suppressing treatment plans.

If tests are done at different hospitals, save PDFs, photos, and original imaging files. Showing a trend table to a clinician is often more helpful than saying a number was higher or used to be normal.

## When to contact a clinician sooner

Contact a clinician promptly if ALT/AST rises suddenly, jaundice appears, urine becomes dark, abdominal swelling develops, bleeding or confusion occurs, or HBV DNA rises again during treatment. Tell clinicians about hepatitis B before pregnancy planning, chemotherapy, immune-suppressing treatment, long-term high-dose steroids, or biologic medicines.

Do not start, stop, or switch antiviral treatment based only on one HBV DNA or ALT/AST result. Herbal products, supplements, and products marketed for detox or lowering enzymes should not replace clinical assessment.

## Questions to ask at follow-up

1. Which hepatitis B phase or clinical category best describes me now?
2. What do my HBV DNA and ALT/AST trends suggest?
3. Do I need fibrosis assessment or liver cancer screening?
4. Which tests should I repeat next, and when?
5. Which result changes should make me contact you before the next appointment?
6. If I am taking antivirals, is my response as expected?
7. What should I do before pregnancy, chemotherapy, or immune-suppressing treatment?

## Action checklist

Keep every original report. Build a trend table for HBV DNA, ALT/AST, and key liver tests. Check units, reference ranges, and detection limits. Do not make treatment decisions from one number. Bring medication, missed-dose, alcohol, supplement, pregnancy, and immune-suppression details to follow-up. Ask for the next test date and the thresholds for contacting your clinician early.

## References

1. CDC Hepatitis B Testing and Diagnosis
   Organization: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/cdc-hepatitis-b-testing-and-diagnosis?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis-b/hcp/diagnosis-testing/index.html
   Source type: guideline
   Accessed: 2026-06-26
2. WHO 2024 Chronic Hepatitis B Guidelines
   Organization: World Health Organization
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/who-2024-chronic-hepatitis-b-guidelines?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240090903
   Source type: guideline
   Accessed: 2026-06-26
3. Hepatitis B Online Monitoring Persons On and Off HBV Therapy
   Organization: University of Washington Hepatitis B Online
   Source page: https://openhbv.bangbo.dev/sources/hepatitis-b-online-monitoring-persons-on-and-off-hbv-therapy?locale=en
   Original URL: https://www.hepatitisb.uw.edu/go/hbv/monitoring-persons-on-hbv-therapy
   Source type: patient_resource
   Accessed: 2026-06-26

## Use And Safety Notes

This Markdown version is provided for search, retrieval, and LLM citation workflows. OpenHBV is a health education site, not a personal diagnosis or treatment service. Use the references above to verify medical claims, and consult qualified clinicians for individual decisions.
