Behaviour of Occult HBV Infection in HCV-Infected Patients under Treatment with Direct-Acting Antivirals
2018; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 24; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.3851/imp3288
ISSN2040-2058
AutoresCristina Musolino, Irene Cacciola, Gianluca Tripodi, Daniele Lombardo, G. Raffa, Angela Alibrandi, Giovanni Squadrito, Giovanni Raimondo, Teresa Pollicino,
Tópico(s)Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
ResumoBackground There is controversial data on possible occult HBV reactivation in HCV patients successfully treated with direct-acting antivirals (DAA). However, diagnosis of occult HBV infection (OBI) was not performed by gold standard procedures in any study. Methods By using several highly sensitive assays, we examined serially collected serum samples from 40 HBV-surface-negative DAA-treated HCV patients with OBI identified by testing liver biopsy specimens through nested-PCR technique. Serum samples were obtained at four time points from each patient (at baseline, at 4 weeks after starting, at the end and 12 weeks after stopping therapy) and tested for HBV DNA by nested-PCR and real-time PCR techniques. Results All tested serum samples were negative by both quantitative HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) and HBV core-related antigen assays. 26/40 patients were anti-HBs-positive and in all of them, the amount of this antibody was stable at the four time points evaluated. Serum HBV DNA was detected in 10 samples at baseline, in 6 samples 4 weeks after starting therapy, in 11 samples at the end of therapy and in 21 samples 12 weeks after stopping treatment ( P=0.001). Aminotransferase values dropped within the normal levels at week 4 of therapy and persisted normal over time in all cases. Conclusions A slight increase in the amount of HBV DNA 3 months after stopping DAA therapy was the only parameter showing a possible reappearance of HBV activity in OBI patients cured for a concomitant HCV infection, but it was insufficient to lead toward a virological reactivation capable of inducing liver injury.
Referência(s)