| Literature DB >> 23874527 |
Huw Price1, David Dunn, Deenan Pillay, Firouze Bani-Sadr, Theodora de Vries-Sluijs, Mamta K Jain, Noriyoshi Kuzushita, Stefan Mauss, Marina Núñez, Reto Nüesch, Marion Peters, Thomas Reiberger, Christoph Stephan, Lionel Tan, Richard Gilson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B coinfection is common in HIV-positive individuals and as antiretroviral therapy has made death due to AIDS less common, hepatitis has become increasingly important. Several drugs are available to treat hepatitis B. The most potent and the one with the lowest risk of resistance appears to be tenofovir (TDF). However there are several questions that remain unanswered regarding the use of TDF, including the proportion of patients that achieves suppression of HBV viral load and over what time, whether suppression is durable and whether prior treatment with other HBV-active drugs such as lamivudine, compromises the efficacy of TDF due to possible selection of resistant HBV strains.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23874527 PMCID: PMC3707972 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author | Publication year | Study design | N included in meta-analysis | HBeAgpositive | Baseline HBV viral load test | Level of detection | Duration of follow-up | Additional data | Funding |
| Avihingsanon | 2010 | RCT | 10 | 6/10 | Yes | 34 | 48 weeks | No | GS |
| Bani-Sadr | 2004 | Prospective cohort | 6 | 3/6 | Yes | 40 | 96 weeks | Yes | NS |
| Butt | 2006 | Retrospective cohort | 5 | Unknown | Yes | 20 | 36 months | No |
|
| de Vries-Sluijs | 2010 | Prospective cohort | 78 | 67/82 | Yes | 20 | 10–84 months | Yes | GS |
| Dore | 2004 | RCT | 5 | 4/5 | Yes | 200 | 48 weeks | No | GS, |
| Engell | 2011 | Retrospective cohort | 24 | 18/31 | Yes | 6 | 24 months | No |
|
| Gutiérrez | 2008 | Retrospective cohort | 6 | Unknown | Yes | Not given | 15–45 months | No | NS |
| Jain | 2007 | Retrospective cohort | 28 | 27/28 | Yes | 400 | 12–24 months | Yes | NS |
| Kosi | 2012 | Retrospective cohort | 49 | 35/49 | Yes | 20 | 2–171 months | Yes | NS |
| Kuzushita | 2010 | Prospective cohort | 16 | 15/16 | Yes | 60 | 6–63 months | Yes | NS |
| Lee | 2009 | Retrospective cohort | 17 | 34/43 | 7/17 |
| 12–63 months | Yes |
|
| Marcelin | 2003 | Retrospective cohort | 10 | 9/10 | Yes | 40 | 12 months | No | NS |
| Matthews | 2008 | RCT | 22 | 13/22 | Yes | 34 | 48 weeks | No | GS |
| Nelson | 2006 | RCT | 39 | Unknown | Yes | 80 | 48 weeks | No | NS |
| Nüesch | 2008 | RCT | 5 | 2/5 | Yes | 400 | 48–96 weeks | Yes | R, |
| Peters | 2006 | RCT | 18 | 23/27 | Yes | 40 | 48 weeks | Yes |
|
| Quiros-Roldan | 2008 | Retrospective cohort | 10 | 5/10 | Yes | 400 | 63–258 weeks | No |
|
| Rodriguez | 2010 | Prospective cohort | 6 | 6/6 | Yes | 25 | 48 weeks | No | GSK |
| Schmutz | 2006 | Prospective cohort | 75 | 75/75 | Yes | 200 | 26–206 weeks | Yes | NS |
| Stephan | 2005 | Retrospective cohort | 23 | 19/31 | Yes | 400 | 48 weeks | Yes | NS |
| Tan | 2009 | Retrospective cohort | 39 | 39/39 | 38/39 |
| 69–290 weeks | Yes | None |
| Tuma | 2008 | Retrospective cohort | 38 | Unknown | 29/38 | 10 | 48 weeks | No | NS |
| van Bommel | 2004 | Prospective cohort | 21 | 21/21 | Yes | 80 | 72–130 weeks | No |
|
RCT: Randomised controlled trial. GS: Gilead Sciences. R: Roche. GSK: GlaxoSmithKline. NS: not stated.
Copies/mL converted to IU/mL by dividing by 5.
The limit of detection of the HBV viral load assays used fell during the course of follow up in two studies.
Individual patient data available.
National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing (Canberra, Australia).
supported in part by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Medical Student Summer Research Training Program, supported through grants from the National Institutes of Health; Wake Forest University School of Medicine Departments, Centers, and Institutes; and private gifts.
Swiss National Science Foundation through the Swiss HIV Cohort Study, the Wilsdorf, Sidaide, and de Brocard Foundations, Geneva, from the Departments of Social Affairs and Economics, Geneva.
In part by the Adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; virology support funding by the NIH/NIAID and the Adult ACTG Central Group; the Birmingham VA Medical Center, UAB CFAR core clinic and laboratory facilities; and NIDDK UCSF Liver Center.
Italian Ministry of University.
In part by the German BMBF Network of Competence for Viral Hepatitis (Hep Net).
Figure 1Summary of study search and inclusion (PRISMA flow diagram).
Results available for meta-analysis.
| Year | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
| Group | Author | S/N | S/N | S/N | S/N | S/N | S/N | S/N |
| A | Nelson | 3/10 | ||||||
| Matthews | 9/12 | |||||||
| Kosi | 8/9 | 9/11 | ||||||
| Tan | 0/1 | 1/1 | 1/1 | |||||
| B | Dore | 4/5 | ||||||
| Bani-Sadr | 5/6 | 6/6 | ||||||
| Stephan | 4/6 | |||||||
| Nelson | 2/6 | |||||||
| Schmutz | 15/24 | 15/17 | 12/13 | 4/5 | ||||
| Jain | 7/9 | |||||||
| Matthews | 7/10 | |||||||
| Nüesch | 5/5 | 2/2 | ||||||
| Tuma | 9/9 | |||||||
| Kosi | 8/12 | 11/14 | ||||||
| Lee | 2/8 | 2/4 | 5/6 | 2/2 | 1/1 | |||
| Tan | 3/6 | 4/6 | 2/4 | 4/4 | 3/3 | |||
| Kuzushita | 9/14 | 12/13 | 8/8 | 5/5 | 5/5 | |||
| Avihingsanon | 9/10 | |||||||
| de Vries-Sluijs | 12/28 | 18/24 | 19/23 | 14/14 | 6/6 | 1/1 | ||
| Rodriguez | 3/6 | |||||||
| Engell | 6/10 | 5/5 | ||||||
| C | van Bommel | 11/11 | ||||||
| Stephan | 1/3 | |||||||
| Nelson | 4/12 | |||||||
| Schmutz | 27/48 | 38/40 | 30/32 | 9/9 | ||||
| Lee | 1/1 | |||||||
| Kosi | 1/3 | 2/3 | ||||||
| Tan | 0/2 | 2/2 | 1/1 | |||||
| D | Marcelin | 3/10 | ||||||
| van Bommel | 10/10 | |||||||
| Stephan | 8/14 | |||||||
| Nelson | 6/11 | |||||||
| Peters | 7/18 | |||||||
| Jain | 10/19 | 1/2 | ||||||
| Gutiérrez | 3/6 | 2/2 | 1/1 | |||||
| Quiros-Roldan | 7/10 | 8/9 | 7/7 | 5/5 | 1/1 | |||
| Tuma | 22/29 | |||||||
| Lee | 2/3 | 3/3 | 2/2 | |||||
| Kosi | 11/15 | 13/16 | ||||||
| Tan | 14/20 | 12/15 | 10/14 | 7/8 | 7/9 | |||
| de Vries-Sluijs | 14/50 | 34/49 | 38/47 | 33/38 | 21/23 | 8/8 | 1/1 | |
| Engell | 3/11 | 4/13 | ||||||
| Butt | 2/5 | 3/5 | 3/5 |
S: number of HBV viral load test results showing viral suppression (below the level of detection).
N: number of patients with a HBV viral load test performed.
Figure 2Forest plots of study arms included in the meta-analysis at years 1–3.
Figure 3Log of HBV viral load assay cut-off against proportion undetectable at one year.
Suppression at yearly time points.
| Number suppressed/number tested (% suppressed) | ||||||||||
| Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D | All | ||||||
| Year | S/N | % | S/N | % | S/N | % | S/N | % | S/N | % |
| 1 | 20/32 | 62.5 | 110/174 | 63.2 | 44/79 | 55.7 | 122/231 | 52.8 | 296/516 | 57.4 |
| 2 | 10/12 | 83.3 | 75/91 | 82.4 | 42/45 | 93.3 | 80/114 | 70.2 | 207/262 | 79.0 |
| 3 | 1/1 | 100 | 46/54 | 85.2 | 32/34 | 94.1 | 58/71 | 81.7 | 137/160 | 85.6 |
S: number of HBV viral load test results showing viral suppression (below the level of detection).
N: number of patients with a HBV viral load test performed.
Figure 4Percentage with undetectable HBV viral load over time, by HBeAg status.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis of effects of prior and concomitant 3TC/FTC on virological suppression.
| Effect of prior 3TC/FTC | Effect of concomitant 3TC/FTC | |||||||||||
| Monotherapy | Dual therapy | Overall | 3TC/FTC naive | Prior 3TC/FTC exposure | Overall | |||||||
| Year | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI |
| 1 | 0.37 | 0.09 to 1.59 | 0.64 | 0.39 to 1.06 | 0.69 | 0.45 to 1.08 | 1.13 | 0.40 to 3.15 | 2.14 | 0.75 to 6.12 | 1.24 | 0.68 to 2.24 |
| 2 | 0.80 | 0.06 to 11.50 | 0.55 | 0.20 to 1.49 | 0.69 | 0.35 to 1.39 | 0.94 | 0.19 to 4.70 | 0.23 | 0.03 to 1.64 | 0.37 | 0.11 to 1.30 |
| 3 | – | – | 0.77 | 0.30 to 2.03 | 0.75 | 0.29 to 1.96 | – | – | 0.28 | 0.06 to 1.96 | 0.25 | 0.05 to 1.14 |
Monotherapy: patients treated with TDF without concomitant 3TC/FTC, i.e. groups A and C.
Dual therapy: patients treated with TDF with concomitant 3TC/FTC, i.e. groups B and D.
3TC/FTC naïve: patients not previously exposed to 3TC/FTC before TDF treatment, i.e. groups A and B.
Prior 3TC/FTC exposure: patients previously exposed to 3TC/FTC before TDF treatment, i.e. groups C and D.
OR: odds ratio.
CI: confidence interval The effects comparing groups A and C and comparing groups A and B in year 3 were non-estimable as there is only one patient in group A.
Figure 5Funnel plot of standard error against proportion undetectable at one year – all study arms (with pseudo 95% confidence limits).