Pegylated-interferon consolidation treatment versus nucleos(t)ide analogue consolidation treatment in non-cirrhotic hepatitis B patients with hepatitis B e antigen seroconversion: an open-label pilot trial
Authors
Authors and affiliations
Ying ZhouRong YanGuo Qing RuLi Li YuJiong YaoHong WangEmail author
Ying Zhou
1
Rong Yan
1
Guo Qing Ru
2
Li Li Yu
2
Jiong Yao
3
Hong Wang
1Email author
1.Department of Infectious Diseases, Zhejiang Provincial People’s HospitalPeople’s Hospital Hang Zhou Medical CollegeZhejiangChina
2.Department of Pathology, Zhejiang Provincial People’s HospitalPeople’s Hospital Hang Zhou Medical CollegeZhejiangChina
3.Department of Medical Record Statistic Information, Zhejiang Provincial People’s HospitalPeople’s Hospital Hang Zhou Medical CollegeZhejiangChina
Original Article
First Online: 06 June 2019
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Abstract
Background
The safety of nucleos(t)ide analogue (NA) treatment cessation remains one of the most controversial topics in the management of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients. This study investigated the efficiency of 48-week pegylated-interferon (peg-IFN) alfa-2a consolidation therapy on viral relapse after discontinued NA treatment in CHB patients who achieved hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion for > 1 year.
Methods
NA-treated HBeAg-positive patients who achieved the standard of discontinued NA treatment (i.e. time of HBeAg seroconversion > 1 year) were randomly assigned to receive peg-IFN consolidation (n = 24) treatment or continue original NA therapy (n = 24) for 48 weeks. The treatments were then discontinued, and the patients were observed up to 144 weeks. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with viral relapse at week 144 among those who received at least one dose of study drug or had at least one study visit [modified intention-to-treat population (mITT)].
Results
Of the 24 patients who received peg-IFN treatment, 6 (25%) experienced viral relapse and 8 (36.3%) showed HBsAg loss during 96 weeks of treatment-free follow-up. Of the patients who underwent NA consolidation treatment, only 1 (4.3%) of 23 patients showed HBsAg loss and 14 (58.3%) of 24 patients experienced viral relapse during follow-up. HBsAg level decline < 0.25 log10 IU/mL at week 96 was significantly associated with viral relapse.
Conclusion
A 48-week peg-IFN alfa-2a consolidation therapy increased the rate of HBsAg loss and sustained viral replication suppression in HBeAg-positive patients who achieved HBeAg seroconversion for > 1 year after NA treatment discontinuation.
Keywords
Hepatitis B virus Pegylated-interferon alfa-2a Hepatitis B surface antigen Antivirus 作者: StephenW 时间: 2019-8-3 21:03