MORE POTENT HBV DNA SUPPRESSION DOES NOT RESULT IN A HIGHER SUPPRESSION OF HEPATITIS B e ANTIGEN LEVEL
Chee K HUI, Sophie CL HUI, Kit HUI- General Medicine
- General Earth and Planetary Sciences
- General Environmental Science
- General Medicine
- Ocean Engineering
- General Medicine
- General Medicine
- General Medicine
- General Medicine
- General Earth and Planetary Sciences
- General Environmental Science
- General Medicine
Background: Despite more potent anti-hepatitis B virus (HBV) activity of newer agents, there appears to be a “ceiling” effect with regards to hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) seroconversion in HBeAg-positive chronic HBV patients after 48-weeks of therapy. Aim: This study aims to determine the effect of viral suppression on HBeAg suppression. Methods: One-hundred-and-seventy-one consecutive HBeAg-positive patients treated with adefovir (n=59), entecavir (n=58) or lamivudine (n=54) for 48 weeks (end-of-follow-up) without drug resistance were included into this study. HBeAg was retrospectively quantied with a microparticle enzyme-immunoassay. Results: The entecavir group had the lowest HBV DNA at end-of-follow-up [mean±standard error of mean (SEM) 2.18±0.16 logIU/ml] followed by the lamivudine group (mean±SEM 3.74±0.22 log IU/ml) and the adefovir group (mean±SEM 5.16±0.25 logIU/ml, p<0.001). However, there was no signicant difference in the end-of-followup HBeAg level in the entecavir group (mean±SEM 2.13±1.31 log PEIU/ml) when compared w ith the lamivudine (mean±SEM 2.40±1.76 log PEIU/ml) and the adefovir groups (mean±SEM 2.17±1.63 log PEIU/ml), (p=0.10). HBeAg level below the lower-limit-of-detection at end-offollow-up was not higher in the entecavir group when compared with the adefovir group [26/58 (44.8%) vs. 25/59 (42.4%), p=0.79] Conclusion: Potent HBV DNA suppression during therapy does not result in higher HBeAg suppression.