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Peginterferon Alfa-2a (40KD) Plus Lamivudine or Entecavir in Children with Immune-tolerant Chronic Hepatitis B
Giorgina Mieli-Vergani 1 , Sanjay Bansal, James F Daniel, Aydan Kansu, Deirdre Kelly, Carmen Martin, Sarah Tizzard, Stefan Wirth, Julian Zhou, Diego Vergani
Affiliations
Affiliation
1
King's College London Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine, London, United Kingdom Paediatric Liver, Gastrointestinal and Nutrition Centre, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom Children's Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Kansas, United States Department of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Ankara University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey Liver Unit, Birmingham Women's & Children's Hospital and University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom Roche Products Limited, Welwyn Garden City, United Kingdom Department of Pediatrics, Helios Medical Center Wuppertal, Witten-Herdecke University, Germany RochePharma Product Development Shanghai, Shanghai, China Institute of Liver Studies, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
PMID: 33720089 DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000003118
Abstract
Objective: Treatment guidelines for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) do not recommended antiviral therapy for patients in the immune-tolerant phase of the disease, which generally occurs in children who acquire hepatitis B virus (HBV) vertically and may last for decades. On the basis of promising results of a pilot study, we conducted a randomized, controlled, multicenter study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of antiviral therapy in children and adolescents with immune-tolerant CHB.
Methods: Fifty-nine children aged 3 to <18 years HBe antigen-positive with an HBV DNA titer >20000 IU/mL and persistently normal alanine aminotransferase levels were randomized to 56 weeks of antiviral therapy with an oral nucleoside analogue [entecavir or lamivudine], combined with subcutaneous peginterferon alfa-2a from week 8, or 80 weeks of untreated observation. The primary efficacy outcome was HBsAg loss 24 weeks post-treatment in the antiviral therapy group or at the end of observation in the control group.
Results: Enrollment was terminated after the results of two similar studies showed that similar antiviral regimens were ineffective in children and adults with immune-tolerant CHB. At 24 weeks post-treatment, one of 26 patients in the antiviral treatment group experienced HBsAg loss (vs none of 33 patients in the control group). No serious treatment-related adverse events were reported, and no patients discontinued treatment because of adverse events.
Conclusions: The antiviral regimen evaluated in this trial had an acceptable tolerability profile, but was ineffective in children and adolescents with immune-tolerant CHB.
Copyright © 2021 by European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition and North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology. |
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