OBJECTIVES:The clinical significance of HBeAg/HBeAb coexistence in pediatric chronic hepatitis B (CHB) remains unclear. This study assessed antiviral efficacy and predictors of functional cure in HBeAg/HBeAb-positive children/adolescents treated with PEG-IFNα-2a or entecavir (ETV).
METHODS:We retrospectively analyzed 54 CHB patients (<18 years) treated from 2016-2022, stratified by treatment (PEG-IFNα-2a vs. ETV), age (≤7 vs. >7 years), and 48-week HBsAg seroconversion status. Biochemical and virological responses were assessed at 4, 12, 24 and 48 weeks. Cumulative incidence was calculated via Kaplan-Meier analysis, and predictive performance was evaluated using ROC curves and DeLong tests.
RESULTS:ETV demonstrated superior ALT (24 weeks: 54.2% vs 16.0%, X2=7.873, p = 0.005; 48 weeks: 64.0% vs 20.8%, X2=9.317, p = 0.002) and AST normalization rate (24 weeks: 45.8% vs 16.0%, X2=5.131, p = 0.024; 48 weeks: 64.0% vs 12.5%, X2=13.680, p < 0.001), and faster HBV DNA decline (4 weeks: 5.16 vs 6.72 log10IU/mL, Z=-2.843, p = 0.004; 12 weeks: 3.00 vs 5.06 log10IU/mL, Z=-1.895, p = 0.058) than PEG-IFNα-2a. However, PEG-IFNα-2a achieved greater HBsAg reduction (late phase, all p < 0.01) and higher HBsAg serological response (48 weeks: 36.0% vs 12.0%, X2=3.947, p = 0.047) and seroconversion (48 weeks: 28.0% vs 12.0%, X2=2.000, p = 0.157). Younger patients (≤7 years) had higher HBsAg seroconversion rates (48 weeks: 28.1% vs 5.6%, X2=3.668, p = 0.055). Early qHBsAg levels (weeks 12/24) strongly predicted functional cure (AUC > 0.90).
CONCLUSIONS:ETV was more effective for short-term viral suppression and hepatic inflammation reduction, while PEG-IFNα-2a promoted HBsAg decline and functional cure. Younger age and early qHBsAg levels were key predictors of treatment success.