4.8 Article

Hepatitis B Virus Surface Antigen Levels: A Guide to Sustained Response to peginterferon alfa-2a in HBeAg-Negative Chronic Hepatitis B

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 1141-1150

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hep.22760

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We investigated the relationship between hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) serum level decline and posttreatment response in patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative chronic hepatitis B from a large multinational study of pegylated interferon alfa-2a (peginterferon alfa-2a), with or without lamivudine, versus lamivudine alone. Serum HBsAg was quantified using the Architect assay (Abbott Diagnostics) at pretreatment, end of treatment (week 48), and 6 months after the end of treatment (week 72) in sera from 386 of the 537 patients who participated in the multinational study (peginterferon alfa-2a, 127; peginterferon alfa-2a plus lamiviadine, 137; lamivudine monotherapy, 122). Pretreatment HBsAg levels varied according to genotype, with the highest levels present in patients infected with genotypes A (median, 4.11 log(10) IU/mL) and D (median, 3.85 log(10) IU/mL). Significant on-treatment decline in HBsAg was observed during treatment: with peginterferon alfa-2a (alone or combined with lamivudine; mean decline at week 48, -0.71 and -0.67 log(10) IU/mL, respectively, P < 0.001), but not during treatment with lamivudine alone (-0.02 log(10) IU/mL. Significantly more patients treated with peginterferon alfa-2a (21%) or peginterferon a1fa-2a plus lamivudine (17%) achieved HBsAg levels <100 IU/mL at the end of treatment compared with lamivudine (1%) (both P < 0.001 versus lamivudine). End-of-treatment HBsAg level correlated strongly with HBV DNA suppression to <= 400 copies/mL 6 months posttreatment. An HBsAg level < 10 IU/mL at week 48 and on-treatment decline > 1 log10 IU/mL were significantly associated with sustained HBsAg clearance 3 years after treatment (both P < 0.0001). Conclusion: On-treatment quantification of HBsAg in patients with HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B treated with peginterferon alfa-2a may help identify those likely to be cured by this therapy and optimize treatment strategies. (HEPATOLOGY 2009;49:1141-1150.)

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