At a glance
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Serum Hepatitis B Surface Antigen Levels to Guide the Stopping of Entecavir in HBeAg-negative Chronic Hepatitis B
In Brief
An observational study for Chronic Hepatitis B. Completed, enrolled 82 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
This will be a multi-center study in Hong Kong. This is a retrospective-prospective study in HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B patients. HBeAg-negative patients on entecavir followed up in the liver clinics will be identified from the existing database. All patients had HBV DNA testing every 6 months as a clinic routine. Serum HBsAg levels will be tested in the residual serum samples at the pre-treatment and last follow-up visits. Eligible patients will be discussed on the plan of stopping entecavir therapy. All patients will have written informed consent before recruited into this study. All patients will be followed up for 12 months after stopping entecavir treatment. As entecavir is most commonly used antiviral drug in Hong Kong and in the Western countries, the investigators aim to investigate and validate the use of serum HBsAg quantification to guide the timing of stopping entecavir in HBeAg-negative patients. The results of this study will provide scientific evidence on the use of this new serum marker to predict sustained remission after stopping entecavir. In the long-run, it can improve patient compliance, reduce the need of long-term antiviral and reduce the drug cost in the management of HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B. All patients will stop entecavir according to the Asian Pacific guideline with written informed consent and close subsequent monitoring. In the protocol, there is a safety net for re-treatment. There will not be any invasive procedure. There is no major ethical issue.