AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B who achieve seroconversion after peginterferon therapy have a better chance of clearing the virus in the long term.
  • A study involving 399 patients revealed that lower baseline HBsAg levels corresponded with higher post-treatment response rates, indicating potential predictive value for treatment outcomes.
  • The analysis suggests that monitoring HBsAg levels during treatment could be useful in predicting patient responses to therapy, specifically highlighting the importance of low HBsAg levels in achieving successful outcomes post-treatment.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive chronic hepatitis B, who achieve HBeAg seroconversion 6 months after completing 48 weeks of peginterferon alfa-2a therapy, have an increased chance of clearing hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) during long-term treatment-free follow-up. This analysis aimed to determine whether HBsAg quantification during treatment could be used to identify posttreatment response.

Methods: Patients (n = 399) treated with peginterferon alfa-2a (180 μg/week) alone or in combination with lamivudine (100 mg/day) for 48 weeks during a large, randomized study were included in this retrospective analysis. Receiver-operating characteristic analyses were used to identify baseline and on-treatment HBsAg levels associated with response (HBeAg seroconversion 6 months posttreatment).

Results: Baseline HBsAg levels were lower in patients achieving posttreatment response than in nonresponders (3.97 and 4.21 IU/mL, respectively, p = 0.039). Two baseline HBsAg cutoff levels (5,000 and 50,000 IU/mL) provided a positive predictive value of 42% and a negative predictive value of 77%. HBsAg decline was significantly greater during and posttreatment in responders than in nonresponders (p < 0.0001). HBeAg seroconversion rates 6 months posttreatment were significantly higher in patients with HBsAg < 1,500 IU/mL at weeks 12 and 24 (56.7 and 54.4%, respectively) versus patients with HBsAg 1,500-20,000 IU/mL (32.3 and 26.1%, respectively) or HBsAg < 20,000 IU/mL (16.3 and 15.4%, respectively) (all p < 0.0001 and <0.0001).

Conclusions: HBsAg levels at baseline strongly associated with posttreatment response were not identified. Low HBsAg levels during peginterferon alfa-2a therapy were associated with high rates of posttreatment response. On-treatment HBsAg quantification may, therefore, help guide patient management in the future.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12072-011-9280-0DOI Listing

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