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Immune-escape mutations and stop-codons in HBsAg develop in a large proportion of patients with chronic HBV infection exposed to anti-HBV drugs in Europe

Authors :
Luna Colagrossi
Lucas E. Hermans
Romina Salpini
Domenico Di Carlo
Suzan D. Pas
Marta Alvarez
Ziv Ben-Ari
Greet Boland
Bianca Bruzzone
Nicola Coppola
Carole Seguin-Devaux
Tomasz Dyda
Federico Garcia
Rolf Kaiser
Sukran Köse
Henrik Krarup
Ivana Lazarevic
Maja M. Lunar
Sarah Maylin
Valeria Micheli
Orna Mor
Simona Paraschiv
Dimitros Paraskevis
Mario Poljak
Elisabeth Puchhammer-Stöckl
François Simon
Maja Stanojevic
Kathrine Stene-Johansen
Nijaz Tihic
Pascale Trimoulet
Jens Verheyen
Adriana Vince
Snjezana Zidovec Lepej
Nina Weis
Tülay Yalcinkaya
Charles A. B. Boucher
Annemarie M. J. Wensing
Carlo F. Perno
Valentina Svicher
on behalf of the HEPVIR working group of the European Society for translational antiviral research (ESAR)
Source :
BMC Infectious Diseases, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMC, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract Background HBsAg immune-escape mutations can favor HBV-transmission also in vaccinated individuals, promote immunosuppression-driven HBV-reactivation, and increase fitness of drug-resistant strains. Stop-codons can enhance HBV oncogenic-properties. Furthermore, as a consequence of the overlapping structure of HBV genome, some immune-escape mutations or stop-codons in HBsAg can derive from drug-resistance mutations in RT. This study is aimed at gaining insight in prevalence and characteristics of immune-associated escape mutations, and stop-codons in HBsAg in chronically HBV-infected patients experiencing nucleos(t)ide analogues (NA) in Europe. Methods This study analyzed 828 chronically HBV-infected European patients exposed to ≥ 1 NA, with detectable HBV-DNA and with an available HBsAg-sequence. The immune-associated escape mutations and the NA-induced immune-escape mutations sI195M, sI196S, and sE164D (resulting from drug-resistance mutation rtM204 V, rtM204I, and rtV173L) were retrieved from literature and examined. Mutations were defined as an aminoacid substitution with respect to a genotype A or D reference sequence. Results At least one immune-associated escape mutation was detected in 22.1% of patients with rising temporal-trend. By multivariable-analysis, genotype-D correlated with higher selection of ≥ 1 immune-associated escape mutation (OR[95%CI]:2.20[1.32–3.67], P = 0.002). In genotype-D, the presence of ≥ 1 immune-associated escape mutations was significantly higher in drug-exposed patients with drug-resistant strains than with wild-type virus (29.5% vs 20.3% P = 0.012). Result confirmed by analysing drug-naïve patients (29.5% vs 21.2%, P = 0.032). Strong correlation was observed between sP120T and rtM204I/V (P

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712334
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.162243061cbc414bb1ca08196034caa5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-018-3161-2