| Literature DB >> 29499724 |
Natalia Echeverría1, Daniela Chiodi2, Pablo López3, Adriana Sanchez Ciceron2, Jenniffer Angulo4, Marcelo López-Lastra4, Paola Silvera3, Adrian Canavesi2, Carla Bianchi5, Valentina Colistro6, Juan Cristina1, Nelia Hernandez7, Pilar Moreno8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Host single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) near the interleukin 28B (IL28B) locus are associated with sustained virological response to antiviral therapy and with spontaneous Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) clearance. Prevalence of these SNPs varies depending on ethnicity. The impact of IL28B SNPs in HCV-infected patients is currently unknown in Uruguay. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate and compare the distribution of polymorphisms in the IL28B gene (rs12979860 and rs8099917) among HCV-infected patients and healthy individuals in Uruguay and thus assess their possible association with the establishment of HCV infection.Entities:
Keywords: Genotypic distribution; Hepatitis C; rs12979860; rs8099917
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29499724 PMCID: PMC5833045 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-018-0946-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Demographic characteristics of both populations studied
| Variable | Total population ( | HCV-infected population ( | Uninfected population ( | Statistical test and value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Male (%) | 115 (67.6) | 48 (61.5) | 67 (72.8) | χ2 2.457 | 0.117 |
| Female (%) | 55 (32.4) | 30 (38.5) | 25 (27.2) | ||
|
| 42.7 ± 12.6 | 46.3 ± 13.1 | 40 ± 11.4 | t = 3.230 | 0.002* |
|
| |||||
| G1 | 45 (57.7) | ||||
| G2 | 3 (3.8) | ||||
| G3 | 12 (15.4) | ||||
| Not determined | 18 (23.1) | ||||
|
| |||||
| 1 | 10 (20.4) | ||||
| 2 | 10 (20.4) | ||||
| 3 | 5 (10.2) | ||||
| 4 | 24 (49.0) | ||||
χ2 Chi-square test; t: Student’s t-test; *p < 0.05
Fig. 1IL28B polymorphisms in a Uruguayan HCV-infected population (n = 78) and a Uruguayan uninfected population (n = 92). a SNP rs12979860 genotype distribution, where CC is considered as the good genotype and CT/TT as the unfavourable genotypes. The difference between groups is statistically significant (χ2 test - codominant model, p = 0.045). b SNP rs8099917 genotype distribution, where TT is considered as the good genotype and TG/GG as the unfavourable genotypes. c SNP rs12979860 allelic distribution. The distribution between both populations is statistically significant (χ2 test, p = 0.010). d SNP rs8099917 allelic distribution
Genotype frequency of SNP rs12979860 and rs8099917 in both populations
| IL28B SNP | HCV-infected population ( | Uninfected population ( | Statistical test and value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| χ2cd 6.185 | 0.045* | ||
| CC | 23 (29.5) | 42 (45.7) | ||
| CT | 37 (47.4) | 39 (42.4) | ||
| TT | 18 (23.1) | 11 (11.9) | ||
| CT + TT d | 55 (70.5) | 50 (54.3) | χ2d 4.671 | 0.031* |
| CC + CT r | 60 (76.9) | 81 (88.0) | χ2r 3.689 | 0.055 |
|
| χ2cd 3.850 | 0.146 | ||
| TT | 45 (57.7) | 56 (60.9) | ||
| TG | 22 (28.2) | 31 (33.7) | ||
| GG | 11 (14.1) | 5 (5.4) | ||
| TG + GG d | 33 (42.3) | 36 (39.1) | χ2d 0.177 | 0.674 |
| TT + TG r | 67 (85.9) | 87 (94.6) | χ2r 3.720 | 0.054 |
χ2 Chi-square test; cd = Codominant model; d = Dominant model; r = Recessive model; *p < 0.05
Logistic regression of each polymorphism in cases (chronic HCV-infected patients) versus controls (uninfected individuals)
| Factor | Univariable Models | Multivariable Model | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | OR (95% CI) | Estimate | OR (95% CI) | |||
|
| ||||||
| CC | NA | 1 | NA | 1 | ||
| TT | 1.095 | 2.988 (1.208–7.395) | 0.018* | 1.755 | 5.783 (1.279–26.142) | 0.023* |
| TC | 0.550 | 1.732 (0.879–3.415) | 0.113 | 1.127 | 3.086 (1.247–7.642) | 0.015* |
|
| ||||||
| TT | NA | 1 | NA | 1 | ||
| GG | 1.007 | 2.738 (0.886–8.454) | 0.080 | −0.240 | 0.787 (0.141–4.375) | 0.784 |
| TG | −0.124 | 0.883 (0.451–1.730) | 0.717 | −0.672 | 0.511 (0.197–1.325) | 0.167 |
|
| 0.051 | 1.052 (1.023–1.082) | <0.001* | 0.036 | 1.037 (1.008–1.067) | 0.012* |
|
| −0.516 | 0.597 (0.312–1.141) | 0.118 | 0.546 | 1.727 (0.843–3.537) | 0.135 |
Odds ratio were constructed considering favourable genotypes (rs12979860-CC and rs 8,099,917-TT) as reference. OR: Odds ratio; CI: Confidence Interval; *p < 0.05
Il28B favourable genotype prevalence reported in different countries
| IL28B SNP | Uninfected population % ( | HCV-infected population % ( | Country | Year of publication |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 44.7 (378) | 45.6 (283) | Spain | 2010 [ | |
| 45.1 (122) | 26.9 (108) | Egypt | 2015 [ | |
| 44.6 (92) | 32.1 (136) | Turkey | 2015 [ | |
| 43.7 (142) | 38.0 (921) – 42.0 (100) | Iran | 2012 [ | |
| 86.9 (320) | 88.6 (297) | China | 2015 [ | |
| ND | 24.1 (83) | Mexico | 2012 [ | |
| 35.7 (185) | ND | Bolivia | 2014 [ | |
| 38.1 (76) | ND | Peru | 2014 [ | |
| 38.8 (98) | ND | Paraguay | 2014 [ | |
| 37.0 (405) | 20.2 (99) | Chile | 2013 [ | |
| 51.6 (991) | 18.4 (102) | Argentina | 2014 [ | |
| 47.4 (190) | 24.0 (221) – 30.9 (175) | Brazil | 2012 [ | |
| 45.6 (92) | 29.5 (78) | Uruguay | This study | |
|
| ||||
| 64.1 (142) | 58.3 (921) | Iran | 2012 [ | |
| 88.7 (320) | 89.6 (297) | China | 2015 [ | |
| 89.3 (197) | 81.0 (400) | Taiwan | 2016 [ | |
| ND | 27.5 (80) | Mexico | 2012 [ | |
| 46.9 (405) | 29.3 (99) | Chile | 2013 [ | |
| ND | 40.2 (102) | Argentina | 2011 [ | |
| 67.8 (199) | 54.2 (177) – 63.1 (222) | Brazil | 2015 [ | |
| 60.9 (92) | 57.7 (78) | Uruguay | This study | |
Rs12979860 favourable genotype (CC) prevalence reported according to ethnicity in HCV-infected patients
| HCV-infected population % ( | Ethnicity | Year of publication |
|---|---|---|
| 33.3 (2582) – 37.2 (1171) | Caucasians | 2016 [ |
| 22.9 (105) – 29.3 (116) | Hispanics | 2016 [ |
| 10.4 (48) – 14.0 (300) | African Americans/Black | 2016 [ |
| 49.2 (181) | Asian | 2016 [ |