Higher end‐of‐treatment HBsAg levels is associated with later onset but not severe relapse in HBeAg‐negative chronic hepatitis B patients stopping antivirals
0301 basic medicine
Hepatitis B virus
Hepatitis B Surface Antigens
Middle Aged
Symptom Flare Up
Antiviral Agents
Cohort Studies
03 medical and health sciences
Hepatitis B, Chronic
Treatment Outcome
Recurrence
DNA, Viral
Humans
Hepatitis B e Antigens
DOI:
10.1111/apt.17880
Publication Date:
2024-01-18T09:00:05Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
SummaryBackgroundQuantitative hepatitis B surface antigen (qHBsAg) level at end‐of‐treatment (EOT) predict clinical relapse (CR) after nucleos(t)ide analogues (Nuc) in chronic hepatitis B(CHB) patients. It is unclear if higher EOT qHBsAg leads to earlier onset or more severe off‐Nuc CR.AimThis large cohort study investigates the association between EOT qHBsAg and CR onset/severity.MethodsThis study enrolled HBeAg‐negative CHB patients who had achieved undetectable HBV DNA for over 1 year after receiving Nuc therapy before discontinuation. The EOT qHBsAg level was categorised into three groups: <100, 100–999, ≥1000 IU/mL. The study assessed the predictability of qHBsAg levels for CR, and analysed and compared the incidence, time to onset and severity of CR among these three groups.ResultsPatients with higher EOT qHBsAg showed a higher incidence of CR (≥1000, 100–999, <100 IU/mL: 73%, 65%, and 38%, p < 0.01) but a later onset of CR (median time to CR: 35, 33 and 27 weeks, p < 0.01). The predictabilities of EOT qHBsAg for CR were greater in patients aged <50‐year‐old or with genotype C than in those aged ≥50‐year‐old or with genotype B. There's no correlation between EOT qHBsAg level and ALT folds at CR (Pearson correlation coefficient: r = −0.03, p = 0.35). EOT qHBsAg was neither a predictor for severe hepatitis flare nor a predictor for hepatic decompensation.ConclusionsPredictability using EOT qHBsAg levels for CR differed in subgroups of age and genotypes. Higher EOT qHBsAg levels correlate with higher incidence but later onset of CR. No correlation between EOT qHBsAg and relapse severity was observed.
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