Serum levels of hepatitis B core antibodies and hepatitis B core-related antigen at the time of nucleos(t)ide analog cessation and risk of severe flares in patients with chronic hepatitis B.

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Tác giả: Kosh Agarwal, Adam Bakala, Michael Biermer, Marc Bourliere, Maria Buti, Sandra De Meyer, Kathleen Donohue, Ewa Janczewska, John Jezorwski, Thomas N Kakuda, Gloria Kim, Pietro Lampertico, Oliver Lenz, Florian van Bömmel, Thomas Vanwolleghem, Thierry Verbinnen

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Hepatology communications , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 732832

 BACKGROUND: In the nucleos(t)ide analog (NA)-control arm of the REEF-2 study (NCT04129554), virologic relapse (confirmed increase in HBV DNA >
 2000 IU/mL) and biochemical flare (ALT increases ≥3× upper limit of normal) were frequently observed after stopping NA treatment. We characterized the posttreatment virologic relapses and biochemical flares and assessed their association with end-of-treatment (EOT) HBV serum markers. METHODS: In REEF-2, a randomized-controlled study, virologically suppressed HBeAg-negative patients stopped treatment at week 48, followed by 48 weeks of follow-up. EOT HBV RNA, hepatitis B core-related antigen, and quantitative anti-hepatitis B core (HBc) IgG levels were assessed in 41/45 NA-control arm patients
  their association with off-treatment response was evaluated. RESULTS: A similar proportion of patients with EOT HBV RNA or hepatitis B core-related antigen detectable and target not detectable had virologic relapse or ALT flares (p>
 0.05). A higher frequency of severe virologic relapse (peak HBV DNA >
 100,000 IU/mL) and/or severe biochemical flares (peak ALT ≥10× upper limit of normal) was observed in patients with EOT detectable hepatitis B core-related antigen levels, HBsAg <
 1000 IU/mL, and/or anti-HBc IgG titers <
 300 IU/mL, respectively (p<
 0.05). None of the 11 patients with EOT anti-HBc titers ≥300 IU/mL had severe virologic or biochemical flare off treatment (100% positive predictive value and 48% negative predictive value). CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective study of patients who stopped NA, anti-HBc levels ≥300 IU/mL were associated with a low risk of developing virologic relapse and severe biochemical flares. Future research should confirm a potential protective effect of high anti-HBc IgG levels.
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