Literature DB >> 34120896

Liver stiffness assessed by shear-wave elastography declines in parallel with immunoregulatory proteins in patients with chronic HCV infection during DAA therapy.

Georg Peschel1, Jonathan Grimm1, Christa Buechler1, Manuela Gunckel1, Kirstin Pollinger1, Elisabeth Aschenbrenner1, Sylvia Kammerer2, Ernst-Michael Jung2, Michael Haimerl2, Jens Werner3, Martina Müller1, Kilian Weigand1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A rapid decline of liver stiffness (LS) was detected by non-invasive methods in patients with chronic hepatitis C (HCV) infection during treatment with direct-acting antivirals (DAA).
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the influence of inflammation on LS.
METHODS: We prospectively examined LS by sonographic shear-wave elastography in 217 patients during DAA therapy from treatment initiation (BL) to 12 weeks after end of therapy (SVR12). Demographic data, laboratory findings and serum levels of cytokines were determined.
RESULTS: Values of LS decreased from 1.86 m/s to 1.68 m/s (p = 0.01) which was most pronounced in patients who had F4 fibrosis at BL (3.27 m/s to 2.37 m/s; p < 0.001). Initially elevated values of aminotransferases, ferritin, IgG (p < 0.001 each) and international normalized ratio (p < 0.003) declined, thrombocyte count (p = 0.007) increased. Correlations of these laboratory parameters with BL levels of LS measurement (LSM) were most apparent in patients with F1-F3 fibrosis. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α (p = 0.031), interleukin (IL)-10 (p = 0.005) and interferon y inducible protein (IP)-10 (p < 0.001) decreased in parallel with LSM under DAA therapy and corelated with BL values.
CONCLUSION: Decrease of systemic inflammatory parameters correlated with LSM under DAA therapy. We conclude that regression of LSM is attributable to the decline of inflammation rather than reflecting fibrosis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HCV; fibrosis; inflammation; shear-wave elastography

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34120896     DOI: 10.3233/CH-211193

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Hemorheol Microcirc        ISSN: 1386-0291            Impact factor:   2.375


  2 in total

1.  IP-10 Interferes With the Antiviral Response of Direct-Acting Antiviral Agents for Hepatitis C Virus Infection.

Authors:  Yadong Wang; Yangyang Hu; Xing Zhang; Yue Luo; Luyuan Ma; Jingjing Lu; Qianfei Liang; Chengjun Xu; Caiyan Zhao; Calvin Q Pan
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-07-18

2.  Serum Ceramide Species Are Associated with Liver Cirrhosis and Viral Genotype in Patients with Hepatitis C Infection.

Authors:  Marcus Höring; Georg Peschel; Jonathan Grimm; Sabrina Krautbauer; Martina Müller; Kilian Weigand; Gerhard Liebisch; Christa Buechler
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-08-29       Impact factor: 6.208

  2 in total

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