학술논문

Hepatitis B Surface Antigen Loss with Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate Plus Peginterferon Alfa-2a: Week 120 Analysis.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Digestive Diseases & Sciences. Dec2018, Vol. 63 Issue 12, p3487-3497. 11p.
Subject
*HEPATITIS B
*CELL surface antigens
*MEDICAL virology
*ANTIVIRAL agents
*TENOFOVIR
*COMBINATION drug therapy
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DRUG monitoring
*DRUG synergism
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*POLYETHYLENE glycol
*PROTEINS
*RECOMBINANT proteins
*RESEARCH
*STATISTICAL sampling
*TIME
*VIRAL antigens
*EVALUATION research
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*CHRONIC hepatitis B
Language
ISSN
0163-2116
Abstract
Background and Aims: Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss is the ideal clinical endpoint but is achieved rarely during oral antiviral treatment. A current unmet need in CHB management is achievement of HBsAg loss with a finite course of oral antiviral therapy, thereby allowing discontinuation of treatment. Significantly higher rates of HBsAg loss at 72 weeks post-treatment have been demonstrated when tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) was combined with pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) for 48 weeks compared with either monotherapy. This analysis provides follow-up data at week 120.Methods: In an open-label, active-controlled study, 740 patients with chronic hepatitis B were randomly assigned to receive TDF plus PEG-IFN for 48 weeks (group A), TDF plus PEG-IFN for 16 weeks followed by TDF for 32 weeks (group B), TDF for 120 weeks (group C), or PEG-IFN for 48 weeks (group D). Efficacy and safety at week 120 were assessed.Results: Rates of HBsAg loss at week 120 were significantly higher in group A (10.4%) than in group B (3.5%), group C (0%), and group D (3.5%). Rates of HBsAg loss and HBsAg seroconversion in group A were significantly higher than rates in group C (P < 0.001 for both) or group D (HBsAg loss: P = 0.002; HBsAg seroconversion: P < 0.001).Conclusions: The results of this analysis confirm the results from earlier time points which demonstrate the increased rate of HBsAg loss in patients treated with a finite course of PEG-IFN plus TDF compared with the rates in patients receiving either monotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]