Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.
Graduate Institute of Clinical Medicine, National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan.
Hepatol Int. 2021 Aug;15(4):833-851. doi: 10.1007/s12072-021-10223-5. Epub 2021 Jul 23.
Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is currently incurable. Long-term treatment with potent and safe nucleos(t)ide analogs (NAs) can reduce hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and cirrhosis-related complications through profound viral suppression. However, indefinite therapy raises several crucial issues with pros and cons. Because seroclearance of hepatitis B surface (HBsAg) as functional cure is not easily achievable, a finite therapy including sequential 48-week pegylated interferon therapy may provide an opportunity to facilitate HBsAg seroclearance by the rejuvenation of exhausted immune cells. However, the cost of stopping NA is the high incidence of virological relapse and surge of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels, which may increase the risk of adverse outcomes (e.g., decompensation, fibrosis progression, HCC, or liver-related mortality). So far, the APASL criteria to stop NA treatment is undetectable HBV DNA levels with normalization of ALT; however, this criterion for cessation of treatment is associated with various incidence rates of virological/clinical relapse and more than 40% of NA-stoppers eventually receive retreatment. A very intensive follow-up strategy and identification of low-risk patients for virological/clinical relapse by different biomarkers are the keys to stop the NA treatment safely. Recent studies suggested that decreasing HBsAg level at the end-of-treatment to < 100-200 IU/mL seems to be a useful marker for deciding when to discontinue NAs therapy. In addition, several viral and host factors have been reviewed for their potential roles in predicting clinical relapse. Finally, the APASL guidance has proposed rules to stop NA and the subsequent follow-up strategy to achieve a better prognosis after stopping NA. In general, for both HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative patients who have stopped treatment, these measurements should be done every 1-3 months at the minimum until 12 months.
慢性乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)感染目前无法治愈。长期使用强效和安全的核苷(酸)类似物(NAs)治疗可以通过深度抑制病毒来降低肝细胞癌(HCC)和肝硬化相关并发症的发生。然而,无限期的治疗带来了一些利弊问题。由于乙肝表面抗原(HBsAg)的血清清除作为功能治愈并不容易实现,包括序贯 48 周聚乙二醇干扰素治疗在内的有限疗程治疗可能通过耗尽免疫细胞的再生提供实现 HBsAg 血清清除的机会。然而,停止 NA 治疗的代价是病毒学复发和丙氨酸氨基转移酶(ALT)水平升高的发生率很高,这可能会增加不良结局(例如失代偿、纤维化进展、HCC 或与肝脏相关的死亡)的风险。到目前为止,APASL 停止 NA 治疗的标准是检测不到 HBV DNA 水平伴 ALT 正常化;然而,这种停药标准与不同的病毒学/临床复发发生率相关,超过 40%的 NA 停药者最终需要再次治疗。非常密集的随访策略和通过不同生物标志物识别低风险病毒学/临床复发患者是安全停止 NA 治疗的关键。最近的研究表明,治疗结束时 HBsAg 水平下降到<100-200 IU/mL似乎是决定何时停止 NAs 治疗的有用标志物。此外,已经对几种病毒和宿主因素进行了综述,以评估它们在预测临床复发中的潜在作用。最后,APASL 指南提出了停止 NA 的规则以及随后的随访策略,以实现停止 NA 后的更好预后。一般来说,对于已经停止治疗的 HBeAg 阳性和 HBeAg 阴性患者,这些检测应至少每 1-3 个月进行一次,直至 12 个月。