Author:
Kawagishi Naoki,Suda Goki,Sakamori Ryotaro,Matsui Takeshi,Onozawa Masahiro,Yang Zijian,Yoshida Sonoe,Ohara Masatsugu,Kimura Megumi,Kubo Akinori,Maehara Osamu,Fu Qingjie,Hosoda Shunichi,Tokuchi Yoshimasa,Suzuki Kazuharu,Nakai Masato,Sho Takuya,Morikawa Kenichi,Natsuizaka Mitsuteru,Ogawa Koji,Sakai Hajime,Ohnishi Shunsuke,Baba Masaru,Takehara Tetsuo,Sakamoto Naoya
Abstract
AbstractDe novo hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation occurs during direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients with resolved HBV infection. We evaluated the predictive factors, mechanical insight, and differences of cytokine levels during anti-cancer/immunosuppressive and DAA. Eleven, 35, and 19 HCV-infected patients with previous HBV infection with HBV reactivation during DAA treatment, previous HBV infection without HBV reactivation during DAA treatment, and without HBV infection resolution receiving DAA treatment, respectively, were enrolled. Clinical data and baseline cytokine levels were analyzed. Low baseline serum interleukin (IL)-1β levels predicted de novo HBV reactivation during DAA treatment (odds ratio: 47.6, 95% confidence interval: 6.94–333.3). HCV-infected patients with the IL-1β gene single nucleotide polymorphism rs16944 AA allele had significantly higher IL-1β levels; no HCV-infected patient with the IL-1β AA allele experienced HBV reactivation during DAA treatment. Compared to HCV-infected patients with HBV infection resolution, non-HCV infected patients with or without HBV reactivation during anti-cancer/immunosuppressive therapy or bone marrow transplantation had remarkably lower baseline IL-1β levels. Low IL-1β levels were not associated with HBV reactivation. IL-1β levels before DAA for HCV-infected patients with resolved HBV infection could predict HBV reactivation during DAA treatment.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
4 articles.
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