Contrasting timing of virological relapse after discontinuation of tenofovir or entecavir in Hepatitis B e antigen-negative patients

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Abstract

Stopping long-term nucleos(t)ide analogue therapy increases hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) loss rates in HBV e antigen (HBeAg)-negative patients. Viral rebound may induce immune responses facilitating functional cure. We analyzed which factors are associated with timing of virological relapse in 220 Asian HBeAg-negative patients from the prospective ABX203 vaccine study. Unexpectedly, only the type of antiviral therapy was significantly associated with early virological relapse, defined as an HBV DNA load of >2000 IU/mL until week 12, and relapse occurred earlier in patients treated with tenofovir versus those treated with entecavir (median time, 6 vs 24 weeks; P < .0001). This should be considered for future trialsand monitoring of patients after treatment discontinuation.

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Zu Siederdissen, C. H., Hui, A. J., Sukeepaisarnjaroen, W., Tangkijvanich, P., Su, W. W., Nieto, G. E. G., … Cornberg, M. (2018). Contrasting timing of virological relapse after discontinuation of tenofovir or entecavir in Hepatitis B e antigen-negative patients. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 218(9), 1480–1484. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiy350

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