Factors associated with the decrease in hepatitis B surface antigen titers following interferon therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis B: Is interferon and adefovir combination therapy effective?
- Authors:
- Published online on: July 18, 2017 https://doi.org/10.3892/br.2017.944
- Pages: 257-262
Abstract
Introduction
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major health problem, with approximately 350 million individuals having chronic infection and approximately 600,000 hepatitis B-related deaths annually. The main purpose of treating chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is to achieve sustained suppression of HBV replication and to improve quality of life and survival by preventing progression to cirrhosis and liver cancer (1–3). HBs antigen (HBsAg) is a classical serological marker used to screen for HBV infection. In recent years, serum HBsAg titer has been established as a useful marker for monitoring the response to antiviral therapy and is associated with the severity of fibrosis among HBeAg-positive CHB patients (4,5). Moreover, achieving HBsAg seroclearance is an ultimate aim of antiviral therapy and is related to favorable clinical outcomes of CHB (6).
Currently, nucleotide(s) analogs (NA) and interferon (IFN) are commonly used to treat CHB (7). Although several kinds of NAs are available, including lamivudine, telbivudine, entecavir, emtricitabine, adefovir dipivoxil (ADV), and tenofovir (8), patients cannot stop treatment because covalently closed circular (ccc)DNA is stably incorporated into the nucleus of hepatocytes, even after treatment with an NA (6,8). Currently, however, the efficacy of IFN in combination with an NA is not well established and some controversial findings have been published (9,10). It was reported that the combination of pegylated (PEG)-IFNα with lamivudine was associated with a greater virological response during treatment but not after treatment (11,12). A recent study revealed that PEG-IFN in combination with telbivudine (LDF) increased the risk of peripheral neuropathy (13). By contrast, IFN in combination with ADV was effective in terms of reducing intrahepatic cccDNA and reducing the serum HBsAg titer (14–16). Based on this complicated situation, combination therapy is not recommended in the international guidelines proposed by the Asian-Pacific Association, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and the European Association for the Study of the Liver (1–3). However, recent meta-analyses revealed that NA and IFN combination therapy was associated with improved outcomes than NA or IFN monotherapy (10,17). In addition, it is unclear whether the HBsAg titer is decreased by combination therapy.
In the present study, we examined the efficacy of IFN monotherapy, and IFN and ADV combination therapy and the factors associated with a decrease in HBsAg of >1 log IU/ml from baseline.
Materials and methods
Thirty five patients with CHB who received IFN-based therapy were enrolled in the study (mean ± standard deviation age, 36.7±8.5 years; 27 males and 8 females). Overall, 21 received PEG-IFN monotherapy and 14 received IFN and ADV combination therapy. The decision to use IFN monotherapy or IFN and ADV combination therapy was made by the attending physician. The serum HBsAg titer was determined using an Abbott Architect HBsAg quantative II assay (Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL, USA). Serum HBV DNA levels were measured using a quantitative PCR assay (Abbott Laboratories). Serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), albumin, and total bilirubin concentrations, and the international normalized ratio (INR) for prothrombin time were measured using standard laboratory procedures. We examined the factors associated with a decrease in the HBsAg titer of >1.0 log IU/ml from baseline to the end of treatment and at 24 weeks after treatment.
The present study was conducted between November 2011 and June 2013 by Kobe University Hospital and three affiliated hospitals in Hyogo prefecture. The study protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee at Kobe University Hospital, and written informed consent was obtained from each patient before starting treatment.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS v16 software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). P<0.05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference.
Results
Serological and virological characteristics of the patients
The patient backgrounds are summarized in Table I. The mean age of the patients was 36.7±8.5 years. Overall, 29 patients had genotype C and 1 patient was genotype A. Twenty patients (57%) were positive for HB envelope antigen (HBeAg). Serum HBsAg, HBcrAg, and HBV-DNA were significantly lower in patients who received IFN monotherapy than in patients who received combination therapy.
HBsAg, HBV-DNA, and ALT levels during and after therapy
The mean HBsAg titer, HBV-DNA level, and ALT level in patients who received IFN monotherapy or combination therapy are shown in Fig. 1. The mean HBsAg titer and HBV-DNA level before therapy were much greater in patients who received combination therapy than in those who received IFN monotherapy. The mean ALT and HBV-DNA levels in patients who received combination therapy had re-increased at 24 weeks after treatment.
Factors associated with decreases in HBsAg titers during and after therapy
Although 13/35 (37%) patients achieved a decrease in HBsAg of >1 log IU/ml from baseline to the end of treatment, 6 (17%) patients experienced a relapse after therapy. In 7 (20%) patients, the reduction in HBsAg was maintained until 24 weeks after treatment (Tables II and III). HBcrAg before therapy (6.56±0.78 vs. 5.30±1.66 log IU/ml, P<0.05) and the proportion of patients with an increase in ALT of >2 times from baseline (62 vs. 14%, P<0.05) were significantly greater in patients with a decrease in HBsAg of >1 log IU/ml at the end of treatment than in patients whose HBsAg did not decrease.
Table III.Factors associated with a decrease in the HBsAg titer of >1 log IU/mL at 24 weeks after therapy. |
The mean ALT levels during and after therapy are shown in Fig. 2 according to the achievement of HBsAg reduction. Among patients without a decrease in HBsAg of >1 log IU/ml at the end of therapy, the ALT level increased markedly after completing treatment.
Discussion
IFN is commonly used to treat CHB, and studies have demonstrated its efficacy in HBeAg-negative patients in particular (18,19). In the present study, HBe seroconversion was detected in just 2 (10%) of 20 HBeAg-positive subjects, which indicates that IFN is less effective in HBeAg-positive patients. The therapeutic efficacy of IFN is usually evaluated in terms of undetectable HBV-DNA and normalization of ALT levels at the end of treatment and at 24–96 weeks after treatment. In the present study, 16 (45.7%) and 21 (60%) patients had undetectable HBV-DNA and normalization of ALT levels, respectively, at the end of treatment.
It is also well known that the efficacy of IFN differs among genotypes. In particular, the efficacy of IFN for treating CHB with genotype A and D, which are prevalent in European countries, is much greater than that of CHB with genotypes B and C, which are prevalent in Asian countries. In addition, its efficacy is less effective in genotype C, which is spreading throughout Japan, than in genotype B, which is spreading in South China, Taiwan, and Thailand (20,21). Although none of the patients with genotype C achieved loss of HBsAg, one patient with genotype A had undetectable HBV-DNA and loss of HBsAg at the end of treatment. These findings suggest that the HBV genotype is associated with the efficacy of IFN.
HBsAg is produced from HBV/S protein and the HBsAg titer is correlated with the HBV viral quantity in the liver (22). Recently, HBsAg seronegativity has become a focus of the long-term goal of treatment, and the decrease in the HBsAg titer is an important factor for evaluating the outcome of antiviral therapy (23,24). Of note, the decrease in the HBsAg titer during the early phase of IFN therapy is strongly associated with a sustained virological response (25). In the present study, a decrease in HBsAg of >1 log IU/ml was detected in 13 (37%) patients at the end of therapy and in 7 (20%) patients at 24 weeks after treatment. Thus, the HBsAg titer before starting treatment is an important factor associated with the outcome of antiviral therapy.
ADV is a NA of adenine and was reported to be effective in terms of reducing cccDNA (26,27). The efficacy of IFN and ADV combination therapy was clearly demonstrated in a meta-analysis (10), which showed that the proportions of patients with undetectable HBV-DNA, HBeAg seroconversion, and normalization of ALT levels were significantly greater in patients who received combination therapy than in those who received IFN monotherapy (10). The present study also revealed that the proportion of patients with normalization of ALT was slightly greater in those who received combination therapy than in those who received monotherapy (71.4 vs. 66.7%, respectively). However, the proportion of patients with undetectable HBV was lower in patients who received combination therapy (35.7 vs. 66.7%, respectively) and the proportion of patients with an increase in ALT levels after therapy was higher in patients with combination therapy. These findings may be explained by the higher viral load before therapy and the greater proportion of HBeAg-positive patients among the group who received combination therapy.
The present study revealed that HBcrAg before treatment and on-treatment ALT flares were associated with the therapeutic efficacy. It was reported that on-treatment ALT flares were associated with the response to IFN, and are related to the immune response derived from IFN therapy (24,28). In the present study, the proportion of patients with an ALT flare was similar between patients who received IFN monotherapy or combination therapy (33.3 vs. 35.7%, respectively). HBcrAg is used mainly as a serum marker reflecting intrahepatic cccDNA (29,30). In the present study, the HBcrAg titer before starting treatment was associated with the decrease in HBsAg at the end of treatment, although HBV-DNA was not associated with the reduction in HBsAg after treatment. These findings suggest that the HBcrAg titer is a superior serological marker for predicting the decrease in HBsAg elicited by IFN-based therapy.
In conclusion, the HBcrAg titer before starting treatment and the increase in ALT after treatment (host instruction flare) are important factors associated with the decrease in HBsAg after IFN-based therapy. The efficacy of IFN and ADV combination therapy was not apparent in terms of a decrease in HBsAg titers.
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