BACKGROUND & AIMS: Serum levels of interferon-gamma inducible protein 10 (IP-10) are a marker for immune activity, and may predict response to peginterferon (PegIFN) therapy in chronic hepatitis B. METHODS: IP-10 was measured at baseline and on-treatment week 12 in 210 HBeAg-positive patients treated with PegIFN for 52 weeks. Response to treatment was assessed at 6 months post-treatment and defined as HBeAg loss, combined response (HBeAg loss with HBV DNA <10,000 c/ml) or HBsAg loss. RESULTS: Median baseline IP-10 levels were 158 pg/ml. Higher baseline IP-10 was associated with more HBV DNA, HBeAg and HBsAg decline from week 4 onwards, and IP-10 was higher in patients who achieved HBeAg loss (p=0.001) and combined response (p=0.052). A combination of high IP-10 (>150 pg/ml) with absence of precore (PC) and core promoter (BCP) mutants strongly predicted combined response and HBsAg loss: 48% of patients with high IP-10 and no detectable mutants achieved a combined response (p<0.001). A minimal non-significant decline from baseline was observed to week 12 (0.015 log pg/ml, p=0.52 compared to baseline), but decline was somewhat more pronounced in patients who achieved HBeAg loss (0.05 logpg/ml, versus an increase of 0.05 in patients without HBeAg loss, p=0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Higher pre-treatment IP-10 levels are associated with an increased probability of HBeAg loss after PegIFN therapy. A combination of high baseline IP-10 and absence of PC and BCP mutants identified patients with the highest probability of combined response and HBsAg loss. There appears little use for on-treatment quantification of IP-10 for prediction of response to PegIFN.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Serum levels of interferon-gamma inducible protein 10 (IP-10) are a marker for immune activity, and may predict response to peginterferon (PegIFN) therapy in chronic hepatitis B. METHODS:IP-10 was measured at baseline and on-treatment week 12 in 210 HBeAg-positive patients treated with PegIFN for 52 weeks. Response to treatment was assessed at 6 months post-treatment and defined as HBeAg loss, combined response (HBeAg loss with HBV DNA <10,000 c/ml) or HBsAg loss. RESULTS: Median baseline IP-10 levels were 158 pg/ml. Higher baseline IP-10 was associated with more HBV DNA, HBeAg and HBsAg decline from week 4 onwards, and IP-10 was higher in patients who achieved HBeAg loss (p=0.001) and combined response (p=0.052). A combination of high IP-10 (>150 pg/ml) with absence of precore (PC) and core promoter (BCP) mutants strongly predicted combined response and HBsAg loss: 48% of patients with high IP-10 and no detectable mutants achieved a combined response (p<0.001). A minimal non-significant decline from baseline was observed to week 12 (0.015 log pg/ml, p=0.52 compared to baseline), but decline was somewhat more pronounced in patients who achieved HBeAg loss (0.05 logpg/ml, versus an increase of 0.05 in patients without HBeAg loss, p=0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Higher pre-treatment IP-10 levels are associated with an increased probability of HBeAg loss after PegIFN therapy. A combination of high baseline IP-10 and absence of PC and BCP mutants identified patients with the highest probability of combined response and HBsAg loss. There appears little use for on-treatment quantification of IP-10 for prediction of response to PegIFN.
Authors: Anna Kramvis; Kyong-Mi Chang; Maura Dandri; Patrizia Farci; Dieter Glebe; Jianming Hu; Harry L A Janssen; Daryl T Y Lau; Capucine Penicaud; Teresa Pollicino; Barbara Testoni; Florian Van Bömmel; Ourania Andrisani; Maria Beumont-Mauviel; Timothy M Block; Henry L Y Chan; Gavin A Cloherty; William E Delaney; Anna Maria Geretti; Adam Gehring; Kathy Jackson; Oliver Lenz; Mala K Maini; Veronica Miller; Ulrike Protzer; Jenny C Yang; Man-Fung Yuen; Fabien Zoulim; Peter A Revill Journal: Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol Date: 2022-07-20 Impact factor: 73.082
Authors: Anika Wranke; Benjamin Heidrich; Stefanie Ernst; Beatriz Calle Serrano; Florin Alexandru Caruntu; Manuela Gabriela Curescu; Kendal Yalcin; Selim Gürel; Stefan Zeuzem; Andreas Erhardt; Stefan Lüth; George V Papatheodoridis; Birgit Bremer; Judith Stift; Jan Grabowski; Janina Kirschner; Kerstin Port; Markus Cornberg; Christine S Falk; Hans-Peter Dienes; Svenja Hardtke; Michael P Manns; Cihan Yurdaydin; Heiner Wedemeyer Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-07-29 Impact factor: 3.240