Long-term entecavir treatment reduces hepatocellular carcinoma incidence in patients with hepatitis B virus infection
- PMID: 23213040
- DOI: 10.1002/hep.26180
Long-term entecavir treatment reduces hepatocellular carcinoma incidence in patients with hepatitis B virus infection
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection leads to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Antiviral agents are thought to reduce HCC development, but agents such as lamivudine (LAM) have a high rate of drug resistance. We compared the incidence of HCC in 472 entecavir (ETV)-treated patients and 1,143 nontreated HBV patients (control group). Propensity score matching eliminated the baseline differences, resulting in a sample size of 316 patients per cohort. The drug mutation resistance was 0.8% (4/472) in the ETV group. The cumulative HCC incidence rates at 5 years were 3.7% and 13.7% for the ETV and control groups, respectively (P < 0.001). Cox proportional hazard regression analysis, adjusted for a number of known HCC risk factors, showed that patients in the ETV group were less likely to develop HCC than those in the control group (hazard ratio: 0.37; 95% confidence interval: 0.15-0.91; P = 0.030). Both cohorts were applied in three previously reported risk scales and risk scores were generated based on age, gender, cirrhosis status, levels of alanine aminotransferase, hepatitis B e antigen, baseline HBV DNA, albumin, and bilirubin. The greatest HCC risk reduction occurred in high-risk patients who scored higher on respective risk scales. In sub analyses, we compared treatment effect between nucleos(t)ide analogs, which included matched LAM-treated patients without rescue therapy (n = 182). We found HCC suppression effect greater in ETV-treated (P < 0.001) than nonrescued LAM-treated (P = 0.019) cirrhosis patients when they were compared with the control group.
Conclusion: Long-term ETV treatment may reduce the incidence of HCC in HBV-infected patients. The treatment effect was greater in patients at higher risk of HCC.
Copyright © 2012 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.
Comment in
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Does hepatitis B treatment reduce the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma?Hepatology. 2013 Jul;58(1):18-20. doi: 10.1002/hep.26317. Epub 2013 May 27. Hepatology. 2013. PMID: 23401270 No abstract available.
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Nucleos(t)ide analogs-based chemoprevention of liver cancer in hepatitis B patients: effective, yet in search of optimization.Gastroenterology. 2013 Nov;145(5):1155-6. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2013.09.018. Epub 2013 Sep 19. Gastroenterology. 2013. PMID: 24055637 No abstract available.
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Does long-term entecavir treatment really reduce hepatocellular carcinoma incidence in patients with hepatitis B virus infection?Hepatology. 2014 May;59(5):2053. doi: 10.1002/hep.26773. Epub 2014 Mar 24. Hepatology. 2014. PMID: 24122900 No abstract available.
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Reply: To PMID 23213040.Hepatology. 2014 May;59(5):2053-4. doi: 10.1002/hep.26774. Epub 2014 Mar 24. Hepatology. 2014. PMID: 24122922 No abstract available.
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