Finite nucleos(t)ide analog therapy for functional cure in HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B: Recent development in the paradigm shift.
Long-term nucleos(t)ide analog (Nuc) therapy in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) may lead to HBV suppression, ALT normalization, improvement of histological lesions, and prevention of liver disease progressi
APA
Liaw YF, Papatheodoridis G (2026). Finite nucleos(t)ide analog therapy for functional cure in HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B: Recent development in the paradigm shift.. Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), 83(3), 679-692. https://doi.org/10.1097/HEP.0000000000001107
MLA
Liaw YF, et al.. "Finite nucleos(t)ide analog therapy for functional cure in HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B: Recent development in the paradigm shift.." Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.), vol. 83, no. 3, 2026, pp. 679-692.
PMID
39316697
Abstract
Long-term nucleos(t)ide analog (Nuc) therapy in chronic hepatitis B (CHB) may lead to HBV suppression, ALT normalization, improvement of histological lesions, and prevention of liver disease progression, but rarely achieve HBsAg loss, the hallmark of functional cure. HBeAg-negative patients with CHB have often been recommended to continue Nuc therapy until HBsAg loss, which usually means indefinitely. However, long-term/lifelong Nuc therapy is associated with increasing costs and concerns of adverse outcomes subsequent to poor adherence and/or self-cessation/loss-to-follow-up. Hence, 2012 Asian-Pacific guidelines recommended that HBeAg-negative patients with CHB can stop Nuc therapy after ≥12 months of HBV DNA undetectability. Subsequent Asian and few European studies have found the strategy of finite Nuc therapy to be feasible and reasonably safe. In 2016-2017, stopping Nuc was also included as a conditional strategy for HBeAg-negative patients with CHB in the American and European guidelines. Furthermore, progressively increasing HBsAg loss rates with prolongation of off-Nuc follow-up were documented, being higher in Caucasians and more apparent beyond years 4-5 in Asian patients. Recently, a large study in patients with HBV cirrhosis showed not only higher 10-year HBsAg loss rate (15.3% vs. 1.6%) but also ~50% lower 10-year HCC incidence (16.5% vs. 29.5%) and 60% lower liver-related mortality/transplantation rate (6.1 vs. 15.1%) after Nuc cessation, as compared with well-matched patients continuing Nuc therapy. Since novel drug development aiming for functional cure has not been satisfactory, the strategy of finite Nuc therapy in HBeAg-negative CHB seems to be the current best realistic option for functional cure today.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Hepatitis B, Chronic; Hepatitis B e Antigens; Antiviral Agents; Nucleosides; Hepatitis B virus; Nucleotides