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Ten-Year Follow-Up After 96 Weeks Treatment With Peginterferon Plus Tenofovir in Hepatitis D (HIDIT-II): Improved Clinical Outcome After Combination Therapy

  • Cihan Yurdaydin
  • , Julia Kahlhöfer
  • , Florin Alexandru Caruntu
  • , Kendal Yalcin
  • , Selim Gürel
  • , Ulus S. Akarca
  • , Kathrin Sprinzl
  • , Hans H. Bock
  • , Jan Hendrik Bockmann
  • , George V. Papatheodoridis
  • , Uta Merle
  • , Münevver Demir
  • , Svenja Hardtke
  • , Onur Keskin
  • , Ramazan Idilman
  • , Markus Cornberg
  • , Heiner Wedemeyer
  • , Anika Wranke
  • Koc University
  • Hannover Medical School
  • HepNet Study-House/German Liver Foundation
  • D-SOLVE Consortium an EU Horizon Europe funded project (No 101057917)
  • Institutul National de Boli Infectioase “Prof Dr Matei Bals”
  • Dicle University
  • Uludag University
  • Ege University
  • Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
  • University of Hamburg
  • Hamburg-Lübeck-Borstel-Riems Site
  • National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
  • Heidelberg University 
  • Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
  • Ankara University
  • Partner Site Hannover-Braunschweig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Chronic delta hepatitis represents a major health burden. Until recently, pegylated interferon-alfa-2a (PEG-IFNα) therapy was the only treatment option for patients infected with hepatitis D virus (HDV). The aim of this study was to evaluate 10-year long-term clinical and virological outcomes after 96 weeks of treatment with PEG-IFNα with or without tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF). Methods: We conducted a retrospective follow-up study of the Hep-Net-International-Delta-Hepatitis-Intervention-Study 2 (HIDIT-II trial). Patients had received 96 weeks of treatment with either PEG-IFNα-2a plus TDF or PEG-IFNα-2a alone. Patients were included if they had completed the 96-week treatment period and had at least one follow-up visit (PEG-IFNα-2a + TDF; n = 51, PEG-IFNα-2a alone; n = 56). Results: Patients who received PEG-IFNα-2a + TDF were younger (37 vs. 42 years) and no significant differences were observed in other baseline characteristics between the two treatment arms. A total of 26 patients (24%) developed one or more liver-related endpoints after a mean time of 8.4 years. The incidence of endpoints was significantly lower in the combination group (14% vs. 34%, p = 0.02). The development of liver-related endpoints was also associated with non-response to therapy (HDV RNA and HBsAg), elevated HBV DNA at week 72, and baseline age, cirrhosis, platelets, INR, AST, GGT, bilirubin and albumin according to the Cox regression model. Conclusions: The long-term follow-up of this large randomised clinical trial demonstrates that combination therapy with TDF and virological response to PEG-IFNα-2a (undetectable HDV RNA and HBsAg loss) were associated with better clinical outcomes. Trial Registration: NCT00932971, EudraCT 2008-005560-13.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70153
JournalUnited European Gastroenterology Journal
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2026

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • cirrhosis
  • clinical long-term outcome
  • hepatitis delta
  • liver decompensation
  • nucleos(t)ide analogues
  • pegylated interferon alpha
  • therapy

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