| Literature DB >> 32381025 |
Nicole L Allard1,2, Jennifer H MacLachlan3,4, Anouk Dev5, James Dwyer6, Geeta Srivatsa7, Timothy Spelman4,8, Alexander J Thompson4,9, Benjamin C Cowie3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is effective and can substantially reduce the risk of progressive liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma but is often administered for an indefinite duration. Adherence has been shown in clinical trials to maximize the benefit of therapy and prevent the development of resistance, however the optimal threshold for predicting clinical outcomes has not been identified. The aim of this study was to analyse adherence using the medication possession ration (MPR) and its relation to virological outcomes in a large multi-centre hospital outpatient population, and guide development of an evidence-based threshold for optimal adherence.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Antiviral therapy; Hepatitis B; Medication possession ratio
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32381025 PMCID: PMC7203797 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-020-01219-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Viral outcome categories for HBV treatment
| Favourable viral outcomes: | |
| Fully suppressed | HBV DNA undetectable for study period OR HBV DNA became undetectable with no further rise |
| Adequate viral suppression | Where treatment duration was < 2 years, HBV DNA decreased > 1 log10 |
| Transient rise | a single instance of increased DNA level < 150 IU/ML with return to undetectable at next test |
| Unfavourable viral outcomes: | |
| Not suppressed | Detectable HBV DNA after 2 years on treatment |
| Non-transient rise | < 1 log rise in HBV DNA which was not a transient rise |
| Viral breakthrough | ≥1x log10 rise in HBV DNA level from nadir which was not a transient rise |
Patient characteristics
| Number(%) | Median age (IQR) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 441(68.69) | 46.55 (38.00–56.31) |
| Female | 201 (31.31) | 46.66 (37.00–56.86) |
| Region of birth | ||
| Asia | 496 (77.26) | 46.00 (31.00–55.09) |
| Europe | 49 (7.63) | 61.00 (53.00–68.39) |
| Australia | 45 (7.01) | 44.00 (31.00–55.60) |
| Africa | 34 (5.30) | 40.76 (33.52–47.34) |
| Other | 10 (1.56) | 45.00 (53.00–59.39) |
| Not recorded | 8 (1.25) | |
Favourable and unfavourable viral outcomes by drug category
| Favourable outcomesa | Unfavourable outcomes | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs | Individuals | Individuals with 2 events | Fully suppressed (undetectable for study period) | Fully suppressed (became undetectable) | Transient rise | Adequate viral suppression | Total favourable outcomes | Viral breakthrough 1 log10 rise | Non-transient rise | Not suppressed | Total unfavourable outcomes |
| All | 642 | 40 | 340(48.85) | 179(26.25) | 55(8.06) | 47(6.89) | 17(2.49) | 42(6.54) | 2(< 0.01%) | ||
| First line therapy | |||||||||||
| Entecavir 0.5 mg | 407(63.40) | 22 | 216(50.35) | 118(27.21) | 35(8.16) | 27(3.96) | 8(1.86) | 24(5.90) | 1(<.01%) | ||
| Tenofovir | 143(22.27) | 11 | 61(39.61) | 48(31.17) | 10(6.49) | 19(2.79) | 6(3.90) | 9 (6.29) | 1(< 0.01%) | ||
| Other | |||||||||||
| Entecavir 1 mg | 29(4.52) | 1 | 16(53.33) | 2(10.00) | 6(20.00) | 1(3.33) | 2(6.67) | 2(6.90) | 0(0.00) | ||
| Older drugs | |||||||||||
| Lamivudine | 53(8.26) | 4 | 40(70.18) | 8(14.04) | 4(7.02) | 0(0.00) | 1(1.75) | 4(7.54) | 0(0.00) | ||
| Adefovir | 10(1.56) | 1 | 7(58.33) | 2(20.00) | 0(0.00) | 0(0.00) | 0(0.00) | 3(25.00) | 0(0.00) | ||
aSee Table 1 for definition of favourable and unfavourable outcomes
Hazard ratio for unfavourable events for each MPR cut off threshold, and interpretation of risk reduction of unfavourable events
| MPR threshold comparison | Hazard ratio for unfavourable events with MPR above threshold (95% CI) | Interpretation of risk reduction of unfavourable events with MPR above threshold |
|---|---|---|
| ≥0.80 vs < 0.80 | 0.214 (0.12–0.37) < 0.001 | 79% |
| ≥0.90 vs < 0.90 | 0.292 (0.17–0.50) < 0.001 | 71% |
| ≥0.95 vs < 0.95 | 0.334 (0.20–0.57) < 0.001 | 67% |
| ≥1.00 vs < 1.00 | 0.398 (0.22–0.73) 0.003 | 60% |
| ≥1.05 vs ≤1.05 | 0.600 (0.29–1.44) 0.287 | No evidence of association |
Fig. 1a-d Proportion of individuals experiencing unfavourable outcomes over time according to MPR cut-off points
Test parameters for MPR cut-offs in detecting unfavourable viral outcomes
| MPR category | Number of individuals in category | Number of individuals with unfavourable outcomes | Sensitivity % (95% CI) | Specificity % (95% CI) | PPV % (95% CI) | NPV % (95% CI) | ROCa area (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 0.80 | 97 | 21 | 65.6 (52.3–77.3) | 12.2 (9.8–15.1) | 6.8 (4.9–9.2) | 78.4 (68.8–86.1) | 0.39 (0.33–0.45) |
| < 0.90 | 137 | 24 | 60.7 (47.3–72.9) | 18.2 (15.2–21.5) | 6.8 (4.9–9.2) | 82.5 (75.1–88.4) | 0.39 (0.33–0.46) |
| < 0.95 | 197 | 31 | 49.2 (36.1–36.1) | 26.7 (23.3–30.4) | 6.2 (4.2–8.7) | 84.3 (78.4–89.1) | 0.38 (0.31–0.45) |
| < 1.00 | 346 | 44 | 27.9 (17.1–40.8) | 48.6 (44.6–52.6) | 5.1 (3.0–8.0) | 87.3 (83.3–90.6) | 0.38 (0.32–0.44) |
| < 1.05 | 510 | 52 | 14.8 (7.0–26.2) | 73.8 (70.1–77.2) | 5.2 (2.4–9.7) | 89.8 (86.8–92.3) | 0.44 (0.39–0.49) |
aThe average of sensitivity and specificity for the binary MPR cut-point being tested
PPV Positive predictive value, NPV Negative predictive value, ROC receiver operating characteristic
Viral outcome categories for HBV treatment used in sensitivity analysis
| Favourable viral outcomes: | |
| Fully suppressed | HBV DNA undetectable for study period OR HBV DNA became undetectable with no further rise |
| Adequate viral suppression | Where treatment duration was < 2 years, HBV DNA decreased > 1 log10 |
| Unfavourable viral outcomes: | |
| Not suppressed | Detectable HBV DNA after 2 years on treatment |
| Non-transient rise | < 1 log rise in HBV DNA which was not a transient rise |
| Viral breakthrough | ≥1x log10 rise in HBV DNA level from nadir which was not a transient rise |
| Transient rise | a single instance of increased DNA level < 150 IU/ML with return to undetectable at next test |
Hazard ratio for unfavourable events for each MPR cut off threshold, and interpretation of risk reduction of unfavourable events, using alternate classifications presented in Table 6 in Appendix (sensitivity analysis)
| MPR category | Number of individuals in category | Number of individuals with unfavourable outcomes | Hazard ratio for unfavourable events with MPR above threshold (95% CI) | Interpretation of risk reduction of unfavourable events with MPR above threshold |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 0.80 | 97 | 11 | 0.08 (0.03–0.21) < 0.001 | 92% |
| < 0.90 | 137 | 12 | 0.11 (0.04, 0.30) < 0.001 | 89% |
| < 0.95 | 197 | 13 | 0.16 (0.05, 0.45) 0.001 | 84% |
| < 1.00 | 346 | 16 | 0.26 (0.07, 0.91) 0.034 | 74% |
| < 1.05 | 510 | 18 | 0.31 (0.04, 2.33) 0.254 | No evidence of association |