Effect of Pegylated Interferon Plus Tenofovir Combination on Higher Hepatitis B Surface Antigen Loss in Treatment-naive Patients with Hepatitis B e Antigen -positive Chronic Hepatitis B: A Real-world Experience

2021 
Abstract Purpose The loss of serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is considered an ideal clinical outcome but rarely achieved with current standard of care. We evaluated the effectiveness in inducing HBsAg seroclearance in a real-world clinical cohort of Chinese patients with CHB treated with a combination of pegylated interferon (Peg-IFN) with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) or monotherapy with each agent. Methods A total of 330 patients with CHB were assigned to receive Peg-IFN plus TDF for 48 weeks (Peg-IFN plus TDF group), Peg-IFN alone for 48 weeks (Peg-IFN group), or TDF alone for 144 weeks (TDF group). The primary end point was the percentages of patients who achieved HBsAg seroclearance at week 72. Differences from the baseline characteristics and treatment data were compared using the χ2 test for categorical variables or 1-way ANOVA for continuous variables. A Kaplan–Meier test was performed to compare the HBsAg loss among the 3 groups. Discrimination of responders versus nonresponders was quantified using AUC curves. Optimal cut-offs were selected based on Youden's J statistic defined as J = sensitivity + specificity-1. Findings At week 72, the Kaplan–Meier cumulative HBsAg loss was 11.5% in the Peg-IFN plus TDF group, 5.7% in the Peg-IFN group, and 0% in the TDF group. The percentage of patients with HBsAg loss was comparable in the Peg-IFN plus TDF and Peg-IFN groups (P = 0.143), but both were significantly higher than that in the TDF group (P = 0.000 and P = 0.010). In addition, a significantly higher percentage of patients in the combination group and Peg-IFN group had serum HBsAg of  1.5 log10 IU/mL from baseline at treatment week 24, an optimal timepoint for prediction of HBsAg loss in this cohort. Implications A 48-week course of Peg-IFN and TDF combination therapy led to profound reduction in serum HBsAg level, resulting in a significantly higher rate of HBsAg loss compared with TDF monotherapy. Patients with steep HBsAg decline >1.5 log10 IU/mL at week 24 well signaled a higher probability of achieving HBsAg loss at week 72.
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