Fatty liver is not independently associated with rates of complete response to oral antiviral therapy in chronic hepatitis B patients

2020 
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and chronic hepatitis B (CHB) are common liver diseases. Concurrent NAFLD may affect antiviral treatment outcomes in CHB patients. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of NAFLD on complete viral suppression ([CVS], HBV DNA .05), but NAFLD had higher cumulative rates of CVS + BR, compared with non-NAFLD patients (32.5% vs 22.8%, P = .03). In multivariate analyses, NAFLD was not independently associated with CVS and/or BR outcomes. Receipt of entecavir or tenofovir (vs older therapies) and lower baseline HBV DNA or higher ALT were positively associated with achieving CVS or BR. CONCLUSION: Concomitant NAFLD had no impact on the long-term rates of CVS and/or BR in treated CHB patients.
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