Cargando…

Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy

Nucleos(t)ide analogs are standard-of-care for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B and can effectively reduce hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication but rarely leads to cure. Nucleos(t)ide analogs do not directly eliminate the viral episome, therefore treatment cessation typically leads to rapid viral...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Burdette, Dara L, Lazerwith, Scott, Yang, Jenny, Chan, Henry L. Y., Delaney IV, William E., Fletcher, Simon P., Cihlar, Tomas, Feierbach, Becket
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8974970/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35363817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262516
_version_ 1784680312844845056
author Burdette, Dara L
Lazerwith, Scott
Yang, Jenny
Chan, Henry L. Y.
Delaney IV, William E.
Fletcher, Simon P.
Cihlar, Tomas
Feierbach, Becket
author_facet Burdette, Dara L
Lazerwith, Scott
Yang, Jenny
Chan, Henry L. Y.
Delaney IV, William E.
Fletcher, Simon P.
Cihlar, Tomas
Feierbach, Becket
author_sort Burdette, Dara L
collection PubMed
description Nucleos(t)ide analogs are standard-of-care for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B and can effectively reduce hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication but rarely leads to cure. Nucleos(t)ide analogs do not directly eliminate the viral episome, therefore treatment cessation typically leads to rapid viral rebound. While treatment is effective, HBV DNA is still detectable (although not quantifiable) in the periphery of the majority of nucleos(t)ide analog treated HBV patients, even after prolonged treatment. Addressing whether the detectable HBV DNA represents infectious virus is a key unknown and has important implications for the development of a curative treatment for HBV. The minimum HBV genome equivalents required to establish infection in human liver chimeric mice was determined by titration of HBV patient sera and the infectivity in chimeric mice of serum from patients (n = 7) suppressed to the limit of detection on nucleos(t)ide analog therapy was evaluated. A minimum of 5 HBV genome equivalents were required to establish infection in the chimeric mice, confirming this model has sufficient sensitivity to determine whether serum from virally suppressed patients contains infectious virus. Strikingly, serum from 75% (n = 3 out of 4) of nucleos(t)ide-treated HBV patients with DNA that was detectable, but below the lower limit of quantitation, also established infection in the chimeric mice. These results demonstrate that infectious virus is still present in some HBV patients on suppressive nucleos(t)ide therapy. This residual virus may support viral persistence via continuous infection and explain the ongoing risk for HBV-related complications despite long-term suppression on therapy. Thus, additional treatment intensification may facilitate HBV cure.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8974970
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89749702022-04-02 Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy Burdette, Dara L Lazerwith, Scott Yang, Jenny Chan, Henry L. Y. Delaney IV, William E. Fletcher, Simon P. Cihlar, Tomas Feierbach, Becket PLoS One Research Article Nucleos(t)ide analogs are standard-of-care for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B and can effectively reduce hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication but rarely leads to cure. Nucleos(t)ide analogs do not directly eliminate the viral episome, therefore treatment cessation typically leads to rapid viral rebound. While treatment is effective, HBV DNA is still detectable (although not quantifiable) in the periphery of the majority of nucleos(t)ide analog treated HBV patients, even after prolonged treatment. Addressing whether the detectable HBV DNA represents infectious virus is a key unknown and has important implications for the development of a curative treatment for HBV. The minimum HBV genome equivalents required to establish infection in human liver chimeric mice was determined by titration of HBV patient sera and the infectivity in chimeric mice of serum from patients (n = 7) suppressed to the limit of detection on nucleos(t)ide analog therapy was evaluated. A minimum of 5 HBV genome equivalents were required to establish infection in the chimeric mice, confirming this model has sufficient sensitivity to determine whether serum from virally suppressed patients contains infectious virus. Strikingly, serum from 75% (n = 3 out of 4) of nucleos(t)ide-treated HBV patients with DNA that was detectable, but below the lower limit of quantitation, also established infection in the chimeric mice. These results demonstrate that infectious virus is still present in some HBV patients on suppressive nucleos(t)ide therapy. This residual virus may support viral persistence via continuous infection and explain the ongoing risk for HBV-related complications despite long-term suppression on therapy. Thus, additional treatment intensification may facilitate HBV cure. Public Library of Science 2022-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8974970/ /pubmed/35363817 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262516 Text en © 2022 Burdette et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Burdette, Dara L
Lazerwith, Scott
Yang, Jenny
Chan, Henry L. Y.
Delaney IV, William E.
Fletcher, Simon P.
Cihlar, Tomas
Feierbach, Becket
Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title_full Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title_fullStr Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title_full_unstemmed Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title_short Ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
title_sort ongoing viral replication and production of infectious virus in patients with chronic hepatitis b virus suppressed below the limit of quantitation on long-term nucleos(t)ide therapy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8974970/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35363817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262516
work_keys_str_mv AT burdettedaral ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT lazerwithscott ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT yangjenny ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT chanhenryly ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT delaneyivwilliame ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT fletchersimonp ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT cihlartomas ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy
AT feierbachbecket ongoingviralreplicationandproductionofinfectiousvirusinpatientswithchronichepatitisbvirussuppressedbelowthelimitofquantitationonlongtermnucleostidetherapy