By 
                    Liz Highleyman
                    
                  Bettina 
                    Hansen from Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam 
                    and colleagues aimed to develop a model that could better 
                    predict at baseline which chronic hepatitis B patients would 
                    respond to pegylated interferon, 
                    and to establish an early indicator for when treatment should 
                    be halted.
                    
                    Pegylated interferon leads to virological response (undetectable 
                    HBV DNA) and hepatitis B "e" antigen (HBeAg) loss 
                    in only a minority of patients with HBeAg positive chronic 
                    hepatitis B. The treatment is expensive and can cause difficult 
                    side effects, so clinicians want to know when to stop therapy 
                    that is unlikely to produce a favorable outcome.
                    
                    Known baseline predictors of response to pegylated interferon 
                    include HBV genotype (B responds better than D), pre-treatment 
                    HBV viral load, and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level. 
                    The investigators looked at whether viral load reduction early 
                    in treatment also has predictive value.
                    
                    This analysis included 136 chronic hepatitis B patients treated 
                    with pegylated interferon. Response was defined as HBV DNA 
                    < 10,000 copies/mL and HBeAg loss 26 weeks after completion 
                    of treatment. The researchers used logistic regression analysis 
                    to develop a dynamic prediction model using HBV DNA during 
                    the first 32 weeks of therapy. 
                    
                     Results 
                    
                  
                     
                      |  | The 
                        researchers identified an early clinically useful rule 
                        for continuation or discontinuation of treatment, with 
                        a grid of cut-off values for HBV DNA decline during treatment. | 
                     
                      |  | Adding 
                        HBV DNA decline at weeks 4, 12, and 24 to baseline factors 
                        improved predictions of sustained response. | 
                     
                      |  | HBV 
                        DNA decline of at least 2?log(10), or 100-fold, within 
                        24 weeks of starting therapy was strongly associated with 
                        response when added to baseline predictors. | 
                  
                  These 
                    findings led the study authors to conclude, "A dynamic 
                    model including HBV DNA decline during treatment provides 
                    more accurate predictions of response to pegylated interferon."
                    
                    "The model strongly supports individual decision making 
                    on treatment (dis)continuation in patients with HBeAg positive 
                    chronic hepatitis B," they continued. "It is recommended 
                    that pegylated interferon treatment is stopped by 24 weeks 
                    if HBV DNA declined < 2?log(10)."
                    
                    Investigator affiliations: Departments of Gastroenterology 
                    & Hepatology, Biostatistics, and Public Health, Erasmus 
                    MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands; 
                    Department of L-Biostat, Catholic University of Leuven, Leuven, 
                    Belgium.
                    
                    8/20/10
                  Reference
                    BE Hansen, EHCJ Buster, EW Steyerberg, and others. Prediction 
                    of the response to peg-interferon-alfa in patients with HBeAg 
                    positive chronic hepatitis B using decline of HBV DNA during 
                    treatment. Journal of Medical Virology 82(7): 1135-1142 
                    (Abstract). 
                    July 2010.