Hepatology International volume 15, pages82–92(2021)Cite this article
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Abstract
Background and aims
Many models have been developed to predict liver-related events (LRE) in chronic hepatitis B, few focused on compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis. We aimed to describe the incidence of LRE and to determine independent risk predictors of LRE in compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis patients receiving antiviral therapy using routinely available parameters.
Methods
Prospective cohorts of treatment-naïve adults with compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis were enrolled. Patients were treated with entecavir (ETV) or ETV + thymosin-alpha1 (Thy-α1) or lamivudine (LAM) + adefovir (ADV). Data were collected at baseline and every 6 months. LRE was defined as development of decompensation, HCC or death.
Results
Totally 937 patients were included, 608 patients treated with ETV, 252 with ETV + Thy-α1, and 77 with LAM + ADV. After a median follow-up of 4.5 years, 88 patients developed LRE including 48 with HCC. The cumulative incidence of LRE at year 1, 3, and 5 was 2.1%, 7.0%, and 12.7%, respectively, and was similar for three treatment groups. All models using variables at month 6 or 12 had better fit than models using baseline values. The best model for prediction of LRE used PLT, GGT, and AFP at month 6 [AUC: 0.762 (0.678–0.814)], for hepatic decompensation—PLT, LSM and GGT at month 12 (AUC: 0.834 (0.675–0.919)), and for HCC—AFP and GGT at month 6 [AUC 0.763 (0.691–0.828)]. All models had negative predictive values of 94.0–98.8%.
Conclusion
Models using on-treatment variables are more accurate than models using baseline variables in predicting LRE in patient with compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis receiving antiviral therapy. ClincialTrials.gov number NCT01943617, NCT01720238, NCT03366571, NCT02849132.
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