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Hepatitis B treatment with entecavir or tenofovir lowers, but does not eliminate, liver cancer risk
Liz Highleyman, 2013-11-06 17:00:00

Long-term treatment with entecavir can reduce the likelihood that people with chronic hepatitis B will develop hepatocellular carcinoma, according to findings presented this week at The Liver Meeting 2013, the 64th annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) in Washington, DC. Another study, however, found that while entecavir and tenofovir can reduce the risk, people with hepatitis B should continue to undergo regular monitoring for liver cancer and better predictive models may be needed for Caucasian patients.

Over years or decades, chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection can lead to severe liver disease including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a type of primary liver cancer.

Chronic hepatitis B is treated with oral nucleoside/nucleotide analogues including adefovir (Hepsera), entecavir (Baraclude), lamivudine (Epivir), telbivudine (Sebivo or Tyzeka) and tenofovir (Viread). While these drugs can reduce HBV viral load to an undetectable level, they typically do not eradicate the virus completely and cure hepatitis B; nevertheless, suppressing viral replication lessens disease progression.

Tung-Hung Su of National Taiwan University Hospital presented findings from the Cirrhosis Taiwanese Entecavir Multicenter Study (C-TEAM), which assessed whether entecavir reduces liver cancer incidence in people with HBV-related cirrhosis. 

The researchers also looked at the effect of treatment on cirrhosis complications including ascites (abdominal fluid accumulation), hepatic encephalopathy, oesophageal or gastric bleeding and bacterial peritonitis (inflammation of the abdominal lining), as well as liver-related death.

This observational cohort study included 666 chronic hepatitis B patients with liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh stage A, Metavir F4 or Ishak 5) from 17 academic medical centres in Taiwan, followed from 2006 through to March 2013. Participants were on long-term entecavir monotherapy, with entecavir being the first hepatitis B drug they had used. Three quarters were men, the mean age was 55 years and 77% were hepatitis B 'e' antigen (HBeAg)-negative. People who developed HCC within the first year of treatment and those who also had hepatitis C were excluded.

These participants were compared against a historical control group of 621 untreated chronic hepatitis B patients with compensated cirrhosis followed from 1985 through to 1995. In this group, 75% were men, the mean age was 49 years and 75% were HBeAg-negative. Compared with the control group, treated patients were significantly older and had more advanced liver disease.

Overall, a total of 16 cases of HCC were recorded in the entecavir group over an average follow-up period of 2.6 years, while in the control group there were 141 cases over 8.5 years of follow-up. 

Looking at the first three years of follow-up, 16 people (2.4%) in the entecavir group and 32 people (5.2%) in the untreated group developed HCC, giving incidence rates of 9.19 and 14.19 per 1000 person-years, respectively, a difference that fell short of statistical significance (p=0.08). Over a lifetime, liver cancer incidence was about 60% lower for entecavir-treated patients (adjusted hazard ratio 0.41).

In a multivariate analysis entecavir treatment was the only factor that significantly predicted increased risk of developing HCC (hazard ratio 0.41; p=0.015). Age, sex, being HBeAg positive or negative and HBV viral load were not significant after controlling for other factors. 

Looking at other outcomes over the first three years, entecavir treatment was not associated with decreased risk of cirrhosis complications including hepatic encephalopathy (two new cases in both the treated and control groups) and bleeding (10 vs 8 new cases), nor with reduced liver-related mortality (0.2 vs 0.6%, respectively).

However, Su noted, follow-up in the entecavir group is still too short for many of these secondary complications to have occurred and differences may emerge with longer duration.

Based on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Prolonged entecavir therapy possibly reduces HCC development in hepatitis B-related compensated cirrhotic patients and a longer-term follow-up is required to see its impact on cirrhotic complications."

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