- 现金
- 62111 元
- 精华
- 26
- 帖子
- 30437
- 注册时间
- 2009-10-5
- 最后登录
- 2022-12-28
|
Anti-HBc levels are associated with liver inflammation and response to peginterferon in chronic hepatitis B patients
Sylvia M Brakenhoff 1 , Robert J de Knegt 1 , Jeffrey Oliveira 1 , Annemiek A van der Eijk 2 , Anneke J van Vuuren 1 , Bettina E Hansen 3 4 , Harry L A Janssen 3 , Robert A de Man 1 , André Boonstra 1 , Milan J Sonneveld 1
Affiliations
Affiliations
1
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
2
Department of Viroscience, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
3
Toronto Center for Liver Disease, Toronto Western and General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada.
4
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
PMID: 35599306 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiac210
Abstract
Background: Emerging evidence suggests a pivotal role for B-cell responses in the natural history of chronic hepatitis B (CHB). Serum levels of antibodies to HBcAg (anti-HBc) vary across infection stages, but their role in predicting response to antiviral therapy is uncertain.
Methods: Anti-HBc levels were assessed before peginterferon (PEG-IFN) therapy in CHB patients who either initiated de novo PEG-IFN (n = 299; 195 HBeAg-positive), or started PEG-IFN as add-on to an existing nucleo(s)tide analogue backbone (n = 91, all HBeAg-positive). Associations were explored between anti-HBc and (1)serum biomarkers, (2)liver histology and (3)treatment response.
Results: We studied 390 patients. HBV-genotypes were A/B/C/D in 24/9/16/49%, and 72% were Caucasian. Among currently untreated HBeAg-positive patients, anti-HBc correlated with HBV DNA, HBcrAg, HBsAg and HBV RNA, but not with ALT. Higher anti-HBc was associated with more severe histological inflammatory activity (p < 0.001), irrespective of HBeAg-status. After de novo PEG-IFN, higher anti-HBc was associated with HBeAg-loss, sustained response, HBsAg-decline and HBsAg-clearance (p < 0.050). Among patients treated with add-on PEG-IFN, higher anti-HBc was associated with HBeAg-loss (p = 0.012).
Conclusions: Serum anti-HBc levels correlate with histological inflammatory activity. Higher anti-HBc levels were associated with favourable treatment outcomes. These findings suggest that anti-HBc could be used to select patients most likely to respond to immunomodulatory-therapy.
Keywords: B cell; Hepatitis B; Serum biomarkers; anti-HBc; liver inflammation.
|
|