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Progression Rates by Age, Sex, Treatment, and Disease Activity by AASLD and EASL Criteria: Data for Precision Medicine

Authors :
Masaru Enomoto
Yong Kyun Cho
Teerapat Ungtrakul
Hidenori Toyoda
Yasuhito Tanaka
Jiayi Li
Ming-Lung Yu
Tai-Chung Tseng
Cheng Yuan Peng
Soung Won Jeong
Hirokazu Takahashi
Hyunwoo Oh
Ritsuzo Kozuka
Min Sun Kwak
Jae Yoon Jeong
Man-Fung Yuen
Eileen L. Yoon
Satoshi Yasuda
Cheng Hao Tseng
Clifford Wong
Pei-Chien Tsai
Ka Shing Cheung
Edward Gane
Rui Huang
Hwai I. Yang
An K. Le
Jia-Horng Kao
Chien-Hung Chen
Sang Bong Ahn
Jae-Jun Shim
Chao Wu
Dae Won Jun
Dong Hyun Lee
Chung Feng Huang
Eiichi Ogawa
Hyo Suk Lee
Ming Lun Yeh
Huy N. Trinh
Mindie H. Nguyen
Qing Xie
Tawesak Tanwandee
Chia-Yen Dai
Grace Lai-Hung Wong
Joseph Hoang
Sung Eun Kim
Ramsey Cheung
Jian Zhang
Christopher Wong
Yao-Chun Hsu
Yuichiro Eguchi
Changqing Zhao
Chris Cunningham
Jiyoon Park
Source :
Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology : the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. 20(4)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background & AIMS Antiviral treatment criteria are based on disease progression risk, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance recommendations for patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) without cirrhosis is based on an annual incidence threshold of 0.2%. However, accurate and precise disease progression estimate data are limited. Thus, we aimed to determine rates of cirrhosis and HCC development stratified by age, sex, treatment status, and disease activity based on the 2018 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and 2017 European Association for the Study of the Liver guidelines. Methods We analyzed 18,338 patients (8914 treated, 9424 untreated) from 6 centers from the United States and 27 centers from Asia-Pacific countries. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate annual progression rates to cirrhosis or HCC in person-years. Results The cohort was 63% male, with a mean age of 46.19 years, with baseline cirrhosis of 14.3% and median follow up of 9.60 years. By American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases criteria, depending on age, sex, and disease activity, annual incidence rates ranged from 0.07% to 3.94% for cirrhosis, from 0.04% to 2.19% for HCC in patients without cirrhosis, and from 0.40% to 8.83% for HCC in patients with cirrhosis. Several subgroups of patients without cirrhosis including males younger than 40 years of age and females younger than 50 years of age had annual HCC risk near or exceeding 0.2%. Similar results were found using European Association for the Study of the Liver criteria. Conclusion There is great variability in CHB disease progression rates even among “lower-risk” populations. Future CHB modeling studies, public health planning, and HCC surveillance recommendation should be based on more precise disease progression rates based on sex, age, and disease activity, plus treatment status.

Details

ISSN :
15427714
Volume :
20
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology : the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....84a14019199f2f8dd1fe592c5415318f