4.1 Article

Factors associated with serum hepatitis B surface antigen levels and its on-treatment changes in patients under lamivudine therapy

Journal

ANTIVIRAL THERAPY
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 71-79

Publisher

INT MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.3851/IMP1925

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30730082, 30901271]
  2. National Grand Program on Key Infectious Disease [2008ZX10002-004]
  3. Yuanzhang Grant [20070009, 2009B004]
  4. Guangdong Natural Science Foundation [10451051501005787]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: We aimed to investigate factors associated with serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) levels and its kinetics under lamivudine treatment in chronic hepatitis B patients. Methods: HBsAg levels were measured with the Architect HBsAg assay (Abbott laboratories, Abbott Park, IL, USA) in genotype B (HBV/B) or C (HBV/C) patients (n=218). Early HBsAg kinetics in 86 hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive patients and long-term HBsAg changes in 45 patients with rapid and sustained viral suppression were further analysed. Results: Mean HBsAg levels were higher in male (n=181) than in female (n=37) patients (3.59 versus 3.23 log(10) IU/ml; P=0.036), and higher in 121 HBV/B than in 97 HBV/C patients (3.68 versus 3.34 log(10) IU/ml; P=0.006). In addition to HBV DNA loads (P<0.001), male gender (P=0.012) and HBV/B infection (P=0.035) were independently associated with higher HBsAg levels in antiviral-naive patients. HBsAg increases (0.00-0.87 log(10)) were found in 28/86 patients who obtained viral suppression under 12 weeks of lamivudine therapy. Higher baseline HBsAg levels (P=0.046), HBV/B infection (P=0.007) and faster HBV DNA declines (P=0.006) independently contributed to greater HBsAg decreases under 12 weeks treatment. An apparent dissociation between HBsAg and HBV DNA changes were found in 14/45 patients with rapid and sustained viral suppression, who had low baseline HBsAg levels and predominant HBV/C infection. Conclusions: HBV/B and male gender were associated with higher HBsAg levels in antiviral-naive patients. Higher baseline HBsAg levels and HBV/B infection contributed to greater early HBsAg declines in HBeAg-positive patients, and might correlate with discordance between HBsAg and HBeAg or HBV DNA under long-term lamivudine treatment.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available