Five-year follow-up of 96 weeks peginterferon plus tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in hepatitis D

  • Olympia E Anastasiou
  • Florin A Caruntu
  • Manuela G Curescu
  • Kendal Yalcin
  • Ulus S Akarca
  • Selim Gürel
  • Stefan Zeuzem
  • Andreas Erhardt
  • Stefan Lüth
  • George V Papatheodoridis
  • Onur Keskin
  • Kerstin Port
  • Monica Radu
  • Mustafa K Celen
  • Ramazan Idilman
  • Benjamin Heidrich
  • Ingmar Mederacke
  • Heiko von der Leyen
  • Julia Kahlhöfer
  • Maria von Karpowitz
  • Svenja Hardtke
  • Markus Cornberg
  • Cihan Yurdaydin
  • Heiner Wedemeyer

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Until recently, pegylated interferon-alfa-2a (PEG-IFNa) therapy was the only treatment option for patients infected with hepatitis D virus (HDV). Treatment with PEG-IFNa with or without tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) for 96 weeks resulted in HDV RNA suppression in 44% of patients at the end of therapy but did not prevent short-term relapses within 24 weeks. The virological and clinical long-term effects after prolonged PEG-IFNa-based treatment of hepatitis D are unknown.

METHODS: In the HIDIT-II study patients (including 40% with liver cirrhosis) received 180 μg PEG-IFNa weekly plus 300 mg TDF once daily (n = 59) or 180 μg PEG-IFNa weekly plus placebo (n = 61) for 96 weeks. Patients were followed until week 356 (5 years after end of therapy).

RESULTS: Until the end of follow-up, 16 (13%) patients developed liver-related complications (PEG-IFNa + TDF, n = 5 vs PEG-IFNa + placebo, n = 11; p = .179). Achieving HDV suppression at week 96 was associated with decreased long-term risk for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (p = .04) and hepatic decompensation (p = .009). Including complications irrespective of PEG-IFNa retreatment status, the number of patients developing serious complications was similar with (3/18) and without retreatment with PEG-IFNa (16/102, p > .999) but was associated with a higher chance of HDV-RNA suppression (p = .024, odds ratio 3.9 [1.3-12]).

CONCLUSIONS: Liver-related clinical events were infrequent and occurred less frequently in patients with virological responses to PEG-IFNa treatment. PEG-IFNa treatment should be recommended to HDV-infected patients until alternative therapies become available. Retreatment with PEG-IFNa should be considered for patients with inadequate response to the first course of treatment.

CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT00932971.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1478-3223
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.2024

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2023 The Authors. Liver International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PubMed 37787009