| Literature DB >> 27861593 |
Martina Gambato1, Noelia Caro-Pérez1, Patricia González1, Nuria Cañete2, Zoe Mariño1, Sabela Lens1, Martín Bonacci1, Concepció Bartres1, José-María Sánchez-Tapias1, José A Carrión2, Xavier Forns1, Manel Juan3, Sofía Pérez-Del-Pulgar1, María-Carlota Londoño1.
Abstract
Real-life data showed an increased incidence of bacterial infections in patients with advanced liver disease receiving a protease inhibitor (PI)-containing antiviral regimen against hepatitis C (HCV). However, the causes of this event are unknown. We hypothesized that PIs might impair innate immune responses through the inhibition of proteases participating in the anti-bacterial functions of neutrophils and monocytes. The aims of the study were to assess phagocytic and oxidative burst capacity in neutrophils and monocytes obtained from patients receiving a PI containing-antiviral regimen, and to determine cytokine secretion after neutrophil stimulation with flagellin. Forty patients with chronic HCV (80% with cirrhosis) were enrolled in the study, 28 received triple therapy (Group A) with pegylated-interferon and ribavirin for 4 weeks followed by the addition of a PI (telaprevir, boceprevir or simeprevir), and 12 patients received an interferon-free regimen (Group B) with simeprevir and sofosbuvir. Phagocytosis and oxidative burst capacity were analyzed by flow cytometry at baseline, week 4, and week 8 of therapy. In neutrophils from Group A patients, oxidative burst rate and oxidative enzymatic activity per cell significantly decreased throughout the study period (p = 0.014 and p = 0.010, respectively). Pairwise comparisons showed a decrease between baseline and week 4 and 8 of therapy. No differences were observed after the introduction of the PI. The oxidative enzymatic activity per cell in monocytes significantly decrease during the study period (p = 0.042) due to a decrease from baseline to week 8 of therapy (p = 0.037) in patients from Group A. None of these findings were observed in Group B patients. Cytokine secretion did not significantly change during the study in both groups. In conclusion, our data suggest that the use interferon (rather than the PI) has a deleterious effect on neutrophil and monocyte phagocytic and oxidative burst capacity in this cohort of patients with HCV-related advanced liver fibrosis.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27861593 PMCID: PMC5115763 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic, clinical and virological characteristics of the patients included in the study.
| Characteristics(n = 40) | IFN-based triple therapy (PegIFN/RBV+TVR/BOC/SMV) (n = 28) | IFN-free therapy (SOF/SMV+RBV) (n = 12) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 59 (37–71) | 57 (43–77) | 0.998 |
| Liver disease stage; n (%) | 0.591 | ||
| • F0-1 | 0 | 1 (8%) | |
| • F2-3 | 7 (25%) | 0 | |
| • F4 | 21 (75% | 11 (92%) | |
| Previous IFN-based treatment; n (%) | 16 (76%) | 5 (42%) | 0.290 |
| Response to previous treatment; n (%) | 0.227 | ||
| • Non-Responder | 11 (56%) | 4 (80%) | |
| • Relapser | 7 (44%) | 1 (20%) | |
| IL28B Polymorphism; n (%) | 0.679 | ||
| • CC | 5 (18%) | 2 (17%) | |
| • CT | 13 (46%) | 7 (58%) | |
| • TT | 3 (11%) | 2 (17%) | |
| • Unknown | 7 (25% | 1 (8%) | |
| Protease inhibitor; n (%) | NA | ||
| • Telaprevir | 10 (36% | - | |
| • Boceprevir | 2 (7%) | - | |
| • Simeprevir | 16 (57%) | 12 (100%) | |
| Neutrophils (x 103 cells/mm3) | 2.9 (1.5–5.3) | 2.6 (1.2–4.2) | 0.688 |
| Monocytes (x 103 cells/mm3) | 0.4 (0.2–0.8) | 0.4 (0.2–0.9) | 0.745 |
| Platelets (x 103 cells x mm3) | 137 (68–204) | 92 (34–393) | 0.016 |
| • >100.000 | 4 (17%) | 8 (67%) | 0.006 |
| Total bilirubin (mg/dL)) | 0.8 (0.4–1.8) | 0.9 (0.3–2.1) | 0.344 |
| AST (IU/mL) | 77 (36–194) | 89 (51–170) | 0.420 |
| ALT (IU/mL) | 115 (45–221) | 79 (43–155) | 0.184 |
| Albumin (g/L) | 44 (38–50) | 43 (34–47) | 0.294 |
| • < 35 g/L | 0 | 1 (8%) | 0.343 |
| INR | 1.1 (0.9–1.2) | 1.2 (1–1.3) | 0.016 |
| MELD score | 8 (6–12) | 8 (6–12) | 0.123 |
| Child-Pugh score | 5 (5–6) | 5 (5–6) | 0.440 |
| Viral load (IU/ml x 106) | |||
| • Baseline | 1.8 (0.0011–24 | 2.9 (0.013–3) | 0.363 |
| • Week 4 (lead in in TT) | 0.002 (0–3.8) | 0 (0–0.0008) | 0.000 |
| • Week 8 | 0 (0–0.013 | 0 | 0.851 |
| Response to treatment; n (%) | 0.066 | ||
| • SVR12 | 18 (64% | 11 (92%) | |
| • Relapse | 3 (11%) | 1 (8%) | |
| • Breakthrough | 4 (14%) | ||
| • Stopping rule | 1 (4%) | ||
| • Stop due to adverse events | 2 (7%) | ||
| Side effects; n (%) | 0.000 | ||
| • Anemia | 8 (35%) | 0 | 0.021 |
| • Neutropenia | 2 (9%) | 0 | 0.425 |
| • Thrombocytopenia | 4 (17%) | 0 | 0.169 |
| • Infections | 3 (13%) | 0 | 0.271 |
Continuous data are expressed as median (range). PegIFN: Pegylated interferon, RBV: Ribavirin, TVR: Telaprevir, BOC: Boceprevir, SMV: Simeprevir, SOF: Sofosbuvir. AST: Aspartate-amino transferase, ALT: Alanin-amino transferase, INR: International Normalized Ratio, MELD: Model for End-Stage Liver disease, TT: Triple Therapy
Fig 1Oxidative burst capacity of neutrophils.
Panel A and B show the burst rate (B-R) in patients treated with triple therapy and IFN-free regimen, respectively. Panel C and D show the enzymatic activity per cell (median fluorescence intensity, B-MFI) in patients treated with triple therapy and IFN-free regimen, respectively. Data are analyzed at baseline (before starting antiviral therapy), and at week 4 and 8 of therapy. * These comparisons were performed by Friedman tests.
Fig 2Oxidative burst capacity of monocytes.
Panel A and B show the burst rate (B-R) in patients treated with triple therapy and IFN-free regimen, respectively. Panel C and D show the enzymatic activity per cell (median fluorescence intensity, B-MFI) in patients treated with triple therapy and IFN-free regimen, respectively. Data are analyzed at baseline (before starting antiviral therapy, n = 28), and at week 4 and 8 of therapy. * These comparisons were performed by Friedman tests.