Literature DB >> 33185325

A transient early HBV-DNA increase during PEG-IFNα therapy of hepatitis D indicates loss of infected cells and is associated with HDV-RNA and HBsAg reduction.

Olympia E Anastasiou1, Cihan Yurdaydin2, Benjamin Maasoumy3, Svenja Hardtke4,5, Florin Alexandru Caruntu6, Manuela G Curescu7, Kendal Yalcin8, Ulus S Akarca9, Selim Gürel10, Stefan Zeuzem11, Andreas Erhardt12, Stefan Lüth13, George V Papatheodoridis14, Monica Radu6, Stephanie Liebig3, Heike Bantel3, Birgit Bremer3, Michael P Manns3,5, Markus Cornberg3,5, Heiner Wedemeyer3,5,15.   

Abstract

HBV-DNA levels are low or even undetectable in the majority HDV-infected patients. The impact of PEG-IFNα on HBV-DNA kinetics in HDV-infected patients has not been studied in detail. We analysed data of a prospective treatment trial where 120 HDV-RNA-positive patients were randomized to receive PEG-IFNα-2a plus tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate (PEG-IFNα/TDF, n = 59) or placebo (PEG-IFNα/PBO; n = 61) for 96 weeks. At week 96, HBV-DNA was still quantifiable in 71% of PEG-IFNα/PBO-treated patients but also in 76% of PEG-IFNα/TDF-treated patients, despite low HBV-DNA baseline values. Surprisingly, a transient HBV-DNA increase between weeks 12 and 36 was observed in 12 in PEG-IFNα/TDF-treated and 12 PEG-IFNα/PBO-treated patients. This increase was positively associated with HBsAg loss [(P = 0.049, odds ratio (OR) 5.1] and HDV-RNA suppression (P = 0.007, OR 4.1) at week 96. Biochemical markers of cell death (M30 and ALT) were higher during the HBV-DNA peak but no distinct systemic immune pattern could be observed by screening 91 soluble inflammatory markers. In conclusion, an early increase in HBV-DNA during PEG-IFNα-2a therapy occurred in more than 20% of patients, even in TDF-treated patients. This transient HBV-DNA rise may indicate PEG-IFNα-induced cell death and lead to long-term HDV-RNA suppression and HBsAg loss.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HBV; HDV; hepatitis B; hepatitis D; interferon; viral kinetics

Year:  2020        PMID: 33185325     DOI: 10.1111/jvh.13439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Viral Hepat        ISSN: 1352-0504            Impact factor:   3.728


  2 in total

Review 1.  Human hepatitis D virus-specific T cell epitopes.

Authors:  Matin Kohsar; Johanna Landahl; Christoph Neumann-Haefelin; Julian Schulze Zur Wiesch
Journal:  JHEP Rep       Date:  2021-04-23

2.  HBcrAg Levels Are Associated With Virological Response to Treatment With Interferon in Patients With Hepatitis Delta.

Authors:  Heiner Wedemeyer; Benjamin Maasoumy; Lisa Sandmann; Cihan Yurdaydin; Katja Deterding; Benjamin Heidrich; Svenja Hardtke; Patrick Lehmann; Birgit Bremer; Michael P Manns; Markus Cornberg
Journal:  Hepatol Commun       Date:  2021-09-24
  2 in total

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