Study Design: Observational
Conditions: Hepatitis B, Hepatitis, Viral, Liver Diseases
Division: DDN
Duration: 2012-2021
# Recruitment Centers: 21
Treatment: Tenofovir; Peginterferon-alfa 2a and tenofovir
Available Genotype Data: No
Image Summary: No
Transplant Type: None
Does it have dialysis patients: No
Clinical Trials URL:
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01369212
Study Website: https://www.hepbnet.org/
Data Package Version Number: 1 (December 6, 2023)
The Combination Therapy of Peginterferon Alfa-2a and Tenofovir versus Tenofovir Monotherapy in HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative Chronic Hepatitis B (HBRN Immune Active) study sought to compare the long-term efficacy of combination therapy with peginterferon plus tenofovir versus tenofovir monotherapy in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B. This randomized (1:1) parallel group trial compared (i) tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) 300 mg daily for 192 weeks (4 years) and (ii) peginterferon (PegIFN) alfa-2a 180 µg weekly for 24 weeks plus TDF 300 mg daily for 192 weeks (4 years). Enrolled participants were stratified by HBeAg status (positive/negative), genotype (A versus all others), and cirrhosis (present versus absent). After 192 weeks of treatment, participants meeting criteria for treatment discontinuation stopped treatment and were followed for 48 weeks (total duration of treatment and follow up was 240 weeks). Emtricitabine/tenofovir coformulated as Truvada, approved for treatment of HIV but not for treatment of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, was offered to patients with primary nonresponse, partial virological response, or confirmed virologic breakthrough.
The objectives of the study were to define the role of limited duration peginterferon alfa-2a in the presence of tenofovir in treating patients with chronic hepatitis B by:
The primary outcome measure was the percent of participants with hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss by week 240.
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria are documented in the study protocol.
Of 201 participants randomized to TDF+PegIFN (n=102) or TDF alone (n=99), 6 participants had lost HBsAg at the end of the treatment phase, 5 in the combination group, and 1 in the TDF alone group. By week 240, there were 9 participants that had cleared HBsAg, 5.3% in combination, and 4.1% in the monotherapy arm. HBsAg decline and loss occurred earlier with TDF+PegIFN than with TDF alone, with a ≥ 1-log IU/mL qHBsAg decline by week 24 in 28% in TDF+PegIFN compared with 6% in TDF alone. HBsAg loss occurred in 7 of 12 (58%) with hepatitis B virus subgenotype A2 (all HBeAg positive), compared with only 2 of 189 (1%) with other hepatitis B virus genotypes, and in 8 of 93 (8.6%) HBeAg positive versus 1 of 87 (1.1%) HBeAg negative. PegIFN combined TDF followed by protocolized TDF withdrawal led to earlier but not higher percentages of HBsAg clearance.