Literature DB >> 22610885

Vitamin D binding protein gene polymorphisms and baseline vitamin D levels as predictors of antiviral response in chronic hepatitis C.

Edmondo Falleti1, Davide Bitetto, Carlo Fabris, Giovanna Fattovich, Annarosa Cussigh, Sara Cmet, Elisa Ceriani, Ezio Fornasiere, Michela Pasino, Donatella Ieluzzi, Mario Pirisi, Pierluigi Toniutto.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Vitamin D deficiency seems to predict the unsuccessful achievement of sustained viral response (SVR) after antiviral treatment in hepatitis C virus (HCV) difficult-to-treat genotypes. Vitamin D binding protein (GC) gene polymorphisms are known to influence vitamin D levels. This study was performed to assess whether the interaction between basal circulating vitamin D and the GC polymorphism plays a role in influencing the rate of antiviral responses in patients affected by chronic hepatitis C. In all, 206 HCV patients treated with a combination therapy of pegylated (PEG)-interferon plus ribavirin were retrospectively evaluated. GC rs7041 G>T, GC rs4588 C>A, and IL-28B rs12979860 C>T polymorphisms were genotyped. Frequencies of GC rs7041 G>T and rs4588 C>A polymorphisms were: G/G = 64 (31.1%), G/T = 100 (48.5%), T/T = 42 (20.4%) and C/C = 108 (52.4%), C/A = 84 (40.8%), A/A = 14 (6.8%). Patients were divided into those carrying ≥3 major alleles (wildtype [WT]+: G-C/G-C, G-C/T-C, G-C/G-A, N = 100) and the remaining (WT-: G-C/T-A, T-A/T-C, T-A/T-A, T-C/T-C, N = 106). Four groups were identified: vitamin D ≤20 ng/mL and WT-, vitamin D ≤20 and WT+, vitamin D >20 and WT-, vitamin D >20 and WT+. In difficult-to-treat HCV genotypes the proportion of patients achieving SVR significantly increased with a linear trend from the first to the last group: 6/25 (24.0%), 9/24 (37.5%), 12/29 (41.4%), 19/29 (65.5%) (P = 0.003). At multivariate analysis, having basal vitamin D >20 ng/mL plus the carriage of GC WT+ was found to be an independent predictor of SVR (odds ratio 4.52, P = 0.015).
CONCLUSION: In difficult-to-treat HCV genotypes, simultaneous pretreatment normal serum vitamin D levels and the carriage of GC-globulin WT isoform strongly predicts the achievement of SVR after PEG-interferon plus ribavirin antiviral therapy.
Copyright © 2012 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22610885     DOI: 10.1002/hep.25848

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  29 in total

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2.  25-OH vitamin D level has no impact on the efficacy of antiviral therapy in naïve genotype 1 HCV-infected patients.

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6.  Vitamin D receptor polymorphisms in hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

Authors:  Vania B Rezende; Valeria C Sandrim; Ana C Palei; Lorena Machado; Ricardo C Cavalli; Geraldo Duarte; Jose E Tanus-Santos
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Review 7.  Vitamin D and chronic hepatitis C: effects on success rate and prevention of side effects associated with pegylated interferon-α and ribavirin.

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8.  Role of genetic polymorphisms in hepatitis C virus chronic infection.

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9.  The association between serological and dietary vitamin D levels and hepatitis C-related liver disease risk differs in African American and white males.

Authors:  D L White; S Tavakoli-Tabasi; F Kanwal; D J Ramsey; A Hashmi; J Kuzniarek; P Patel; J Francis; H B El-Serag
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10.  Effect of vitamin D-binding protein genotype on the development of asthma in children.

Authors:  Aledie Navas-Nazario; Fang Yong Li; Veronika Shabanova; Pnina Weiss; David E C Cole; Thomas O Carpenter; Alia Bazzy-Asaad
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