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Transition rates to cirrhosis and liver cancer by age, gender, disease and treatment status in Asian chronic hepatitis B patients

Authors
Liu, MattTseng, Tai-ChungJun, Dae WonYeh, Ming-LunHuy TrinhWong, Grace L. H.Chen, Chien-HungPeng, Cheng-YuanKim, Sung EunOh, HyunwooKwak, Min-SunCheung, MichaelToyoda, HidenoriHsu, Yao-ChunJeong, Jae YoonYoon, Eileen L.Ungtrakul, TeerapatZhang, JianXie, QingAhn, Sang BongEnomoto, MasaruShim, Jae-JunCunningham, ChrisJeong, Soung WonCho, Yong KyunOgawa, EiichiHuang, RuiLee, Dong-HyunTakahashi, HirokazuTsai, Pei-ChienHuang, Chung-FengDai, Chia-YenTseng, Cheng-HaoYasuda, SatoshiKozuka, RitsuzoLi, JiayiWong, ChristopherWong, Clifford C.Zhao, ChangqingHoang, JosephEguchi, YuichiroWu, ChaoTanaka, YasuhitoGane, EdTanwandee, TawesakCheung, RamseyYuen, Man-FungLee, Hyo-SukYu, Ming-LungKao, Jia-HorngYang, Hwai-, INguyen, Mindie H.
Issue Date
Feb-2021
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Hepatocellular carcinoma; Epidemiology; Asia pacific; Hepatitis B virus; Natural history; Disease progression; Antiviral therapy; Fibrosis; Multicenter; International
Citation
HEPATOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, v.15, no.1, pp.71 - 81
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
HEPATOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Volume
15
Number
1
Start Page
71
End Page
81
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/8000
DOI
10.1007/s12072-020-10113-2
ISSN
1936-0533
Abstract
Background: Increasing hepatitis-related mortality has reignited interest to fulfill the World Health Organization’s goal of viral hepatitis elimination by 2030. However, economic barriers have enabled only 28% of countries to implement countermeasures. Given the high disease burden among Asians, we aimed to present age, sex, disease activity and treatment-specific annual progression rates among Asian chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients to inform health economic modeling efforts and cost-effective public health interventions. Methods: We analyzed 18,056 CHB patients from 36 centers across the U.S. and seven countries/regions of Asia Pacific (9530 treated; 8526 untreated). We used Kaplan–Meier methods to estimate annual incidence of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Active disease was defined by meeting the APASL treatment guideline criteria. Results: Over a median follow-up of 8.55 years, there were 1178 incidences of cirrhosis and 1212 incidences of HCC (297 without cirrhosis, 915 with cirrhosis). Among the 8526 untreated patients (7977 inactive, 549 active), the annual cirrhosis and HCC incidence ranged from 0.26% to 1.30% and 0.04% to 3.80% in inactive patients, and 0.55 to 4.05% and 0.19 to 6.03% in active patients, respectively. Of the 9530 treated patients, the annual HCC rates ranged 0.03–1.57% among noncirrhotic males and 2.57–6.93% among cirrhotic males, with lower rates for females. Generally, transition rates increased with age, male sex, the presence of fibrosis/cirrhosis, and active disease and/or antiviral treatment. Conclusion: Using data from a large and diverse real-world cohort of Asian CHB patients, the study provided detailed annual transition rates to inform practice, research and public health planning.
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