Treatment Discontinuation and Adherence in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B Infection Newly Initiating Nucleos(t)ide Analogues in Japan: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Shinya Kawamatsu, Kiran K. Rai, Vera Gielen, Amisha Patel, Olivia Massey, Seth W. Anderson, Yutaka Handa, Ethan Yichen Lee, Poppy Payne, Isabel Jimenez, Kejsi Begaj, Shayon Salehi, Jun Inoue, Afisi S. Ismaila

TL;DR
This study examines how patients in Japan stop or stick with long-term hepatitis B treatments, finding that most are adherent but some groups struggle.
Contribution
The study provides real-world data on treatment discontinuation and adherence patterns for second-generation nucleos(t)ide analogues in Japan.
Findings
20.3% of patients discontinued treatment, with a mean time to discontinuation of 20.4 months.
50.7% of patients who discontinued treatment later restarted nucleos(t)ide analogues.
Age 35–64, TAF use, and baseline hepatocellular carcinoma were linked to better adherence and less discontinuation.
Abstract
Nucleos(t)ide analogue (NA) therapy is the current standard of care for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) virus infection but rarely achieves functional cure, necessitating long‐term therapy, which often leads to nonadherence and increased treatment burden. This retrospective cohort study was designed to describe treatment discontinuation and adherence to second‐generation NAs among patients with CHB in Japan. We used the Japanese Medical Data Center Claims Database (JMDC Inc.) to identify adults with CHB who were newly initiated on a single‐agent, second‐generation NA between January 2007 and August 2023. Outcomes included treatment discontinuation and adherence, treatment restart after discontinuation, NA switching and factors associated with treatment discontinuation/adherence. Of the 2473 patients included in this study (mean age 49.9 years), 65.6% were male. The most common index NAs were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis B Virus Studies · Hepatitis C virus research · Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
