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Mutations in the X region and core promoter are rare and have little impact on response to interferon therapy for chronic hepatitis B

✍ Scribed by Charles Hannoun; Peter Horal; Kim Krogsgaard; Magnus Lindh


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
204 KB
Volume
66
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Therapy for chronic hepatitis B with interferon‐α (IFN) may result in viral clearance and hepatitis B e seroconversion in 30–40% of patients. It is still unclear whether viral genetic variability influences response rates. However, certain core promoter mutations were recently associated with a better response to IFN. In the present study, the entire X region, including the core promoter, of hepatitis B virus (HBV) from 26 HBeAg‐positive patients treated with IFN for 12 weeks, was sequenced. Serum samples pre‐treatment, at end‐of‐treatment, and at follow‐up of 18 sustained and 8 nonsustained responders were analyzed. Most patients were of European origin and had moderate aminotransferase elevation (mean 2.4 × upper limit of normal) and genotype A infection. Before treatment, 16 patients had an X region identical to a consensus sequence of the corresponding genotype; in the remaining 10 patients, a median of 1.5 mutations were found. After treatment, 1–4 new mutations (mean 1.8) had emerged in 5 patients. There was no association between specific mutations, or the number of mutations, and response to IFN. The low frequency of mutations indicates that analysis of this region is of limited clinical value and that emerging mutations in this region are not major determinants of response to treatment with IFN‐α. J. Med. Virol. 66:171–178, 2002. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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