A case of hepatitis B conversion after taking traditional Chinese medicine

A year ago, I was in charge of a patient in the ward who had an acute attack of slow hepatitis B. After liver protection treatment, his liver function returned to normal and he was discharged from the hospital to an old Chinese medicine doctor to take Chinese herbal medicine to turn negative. Before taking it, he sent me his prescription and asked if he could take it. The recipe is transcribed as follows: roasted tortoise board 180, wolfberry 150, antler cream 120, Xianmao 100, Xianling spleen 150, rehmannia 120, nightshade 120, cypress seed 120, red peony 150, salvia 150, American ginseng 180, prince’s ginseng 150, reishi 120, astragalus 300, poria 120, sand 100, poria 100, fried coix seed 150, release wind 100, Atractylodes macrocephala 120, bitter ginseng 120, sanguisorba 120, leaves under the pearl 150, tongue snake grass 150, licorice 100. The above medicine is powdered, refined pills, swallowed. Each time about 10 grams, 2-3 times a day. At that time, I did not think that the drug was complicated, but it could be taken. I didn’t expect that after a few months the patient’s hepatitis B indexes would all turn negative and surface antibodies would be produced! Did the patient turn negative on his own, or was it the result of herbal treatment? I mentioned to my colleagues that I thought it was the former. I’ve been analyzing this formula over and over again, but it’s hard to understand the mystery, and I don’t dare to use it in the clinic. Is there a colleague who is willing to help analyze it?