| Literature DB >> 30702196 |
Hariklia Kranidioti1,2, Spilios Manolakopoulos2,3, George Kontos2, Michael S Breen1, Anastasia Kourikou2, Melanie Deutsch2, Maria Ester Quesada-Del-Bosque1, Rocio T Martinez-Nunez1, Mohammed M Naiyer1, Christopher H Woelk1, Tilman Sanchez-Elsner1, Emilia Hadziyannis3, George Papatheodoridis3, Salim I Khakoo1.
Abstract
The optimal duration of treatment with nucleos(t)ide analogues (NAs) for patients with HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is unknown. The aim of this study was to identify an immune signature associated with off-treatment remission to NA therapy. We performed microarray analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMCs) from six patients with chronic hepatitis B who stopped NA therapy (three with off-treatment remission, three with relapse) and five patients with chronic HBV infection (previously termed 'inactive carriers') served as controls. Results were validated using qRT-PCR on a second group of 21 individuals (17 patients who stopped treatment and four controls). PBMCs from 38 patients on long-term NA treatment were analysed for potential to stop treatment. Microarray analysis indicated that patients with off-treatment remission segregated as a distinct out-group. Twenty-one genes were selected for subsequent validation. Ten of these were expressed at significantly lower levels in the patients with off-treatment remission compared to the patients with relapse and predicted remission with AUC of 0.78-0.92. IFNγ, IL-8, FASLG and CCL4 were the most significant by logistic regression. Twelve (31.6%) of 38 patients on long-term NA therapy had expression levels of all these four genes below cut-off values and hence were candidates for stopping treatment. Our data suggest that patients with HBeAg-negative CHB who remain in off-treatment remission 3 years after NA cessation have a distinct immune signature and that PBMC RNA levels of IFNγ, IL-8, FASLG and CCL4 may serve as potential biomarkers for stopping NA therapy.Entities:
Keywords: chronic hepatitis B; nucleos(t)ide analogues; treatment discontinuation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30702196 DOI: 10.1111/jvh.13068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Viral Hepat ISSN: 1352-0504 Impact factor: 3.728