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A Randomized, Controlled Trial of Combination Therapy for Chronic Hepatitis B: Comparing Pegylated Interferon-α2b and Lamivudine with Lamivudine Alone

Authors :
Vincent Wai-Sun Wong
Choong-Tsek Liew
Nancy Leung
Henry Lik-Yuen Chan
John Siu-Lun Tam
Joseph J.Y. Sung
Lawrence Cheung-Tsui Hung
Alex Yui Hui
Christopher Wai-Kei Lam
Y. T. Lee
Francis K.I. Chan
Angel Mei-Ling Chim
Source :
Annals of Internal Medicine. 142:240
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
American College of Physicians, 2005.

Abstract

Conventional interferon and lamivudine monotherapy are unsatisfactory in treating hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection.To evaluate the efficacy and safety of pegylated interferon-alpha2b and lamivudine combination therapy for chronic hepatitis B.Randomized, controlled, open-label trial.Outpatient clinic in a referral center.100 treatment-naive patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive chronic hepatitis B and moderately elevated alanine aminotransferase levels.The primary end point was sustained virologic response (HBeAg seroconversion and HBV DNA level500,000 copies/mL) at 24 weeks after cessation of treatment.A staggered regimen of combination therapy with pegylated interferon-alpha2b (1.5 microg/kg of body weight per week; maximum, 100 microg) given for 32 weeks plus lamivudine (100 mg daily) given for 52 weeks versus lamivudine (100 mg daily) monotherapy given for 52 weeks. Of the 100 participants, 96% completed treatment and 80% completed post-treatment follow-up.The rate of sustained virologic response was 36% for the combination treatment group and 14% for the lamivudine monotherapy group (absolute difference, 22 percentage points [95% CI, 6 to 38 percentage points]). End-of-treatment outcomes showed that, compared with monotherapy, patients receiving combination therapy more often had virologic response (60% vs. 28% [absolute difference, 32 percentage points (CI, 14 to 50 percentage points)]); had more substantial reductions of HBV DNA (3.91 log10 copies/mL vs. 2.83 log10 copies/mL); and less often had lamivudine-resistant mutants (21% vs. 40%). The percentages of patients with normalization of alanine aminotransferase levels and histologic improvement did not differ. Adverse effects, such as transient influenza-like symptoms, alopecia, and local erythematous reactions, were more common with combination therapy.This study lacked a double-blind design and was conducted at 1 institution. Because of the staggered pegylated interferon-lamivudine regimen, patients assigned to combination therapy received treatment for 8 weeks longer than those assigned to monotherapy.In patients with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B, staggered combination treatment with pegylated interferon-alpha2b and lamivudine may lead to a higher rate of virologic response than lamivudine monotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
00034819
Volume :
142
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fac0ff245150362aaed3771b9b48ad35
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-142-4-200502150-00006