Abstract

Many models have been developed to predict liver-related events (LRE) in chronic hepatitis B, few focused on compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis. We aimed to describe the incidence of LRE and to determine independent risk predictors of LRE in compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis patients receiving antiviral therapy using routinely available parameters. Prospective cohorts of treatment-naïve adults with compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis were enrolled. Patients were treated with entecavir (ETV) or ETV + thymosin-alpha1 (Thy-α1) or lamivudine (LAM) + adefovir (ADV). Data were collected at baseline and every 6months. LRE was defined as development of decompensation, HCC or death. Totally 937 patients were included, 608 patients treated with ETV, 252 with ETV + Thy-α1, and 77 with LAM + ADV. After a median follow-up of 4.5years, 88 patients developed LRE including 48 with HCC. The cumulative incidence of LRE at year 1, 3, and 5 was 2.1%, 7.0%, and 12.7%, respectively, and was similar for three treatment groups. All models using variables at month 6 or 12 had better fit than models using baseline values. The best model for prediction of LRE used PLT, GGT, and AFP at month 6 [AUC: 0.762 (0.678-0.814)], for hepatic decompensation-PLT, LSM and GGT at month 12 (AUC: 0.834 (0.675-0.919)), and for HCC-AFP and GGT at month 6 [AUC 0.763 (0.691-0.828)]. All models had negative predictive values of 94.0-98.8%. Models using on-treatment variables are more accurate than models using baseline variables in predicting LRE in patient with compensated HBV-induced cirrhosis receiving antiviral therapy. ClincialTrials.gov number NCT01943617, NCT01720238, NCT03366571, NCT02849132.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call