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Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up

The measurement and interpretation of HBV DNA and RNA levels in HBV infected patients treated with antiviral therapy supports the objective of HBV disease management. Here, we quantified circulating HBV RNA through a standardized and sensitive assay in follow-up samples from both naive and treated p...

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Autores principales: Cortese, Maria Francesca, Riveiro-Barciela, Mar, Tabernero, David, Rodriguez-Algarra, Francisco, Palom, Adriana, Sopena, Sara, Rando-Segura, Ariadna, Roade, Luisa, Kuchta, Alison, Ferrer-Costa, Roser, Quer, Josep, Pacin, Beatriz, Vila, Marta, Casillas, Rosario, Garcia-Garcia, Selene, Esteban, Rafael, Pumarola, Tomás, Buti, Maria, Rodriguez-Frias, Francisco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9045303/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35377229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02149-21
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author Cortese, Maria Francesca
Riveiro-Barciela, Mar
Tabernero, David
Rodriguez-Algarra, Francisco
Palom, Adriana
Sopena, Sara
Rando-Segura, Ariadna
Roade, Luisa
Kuchta, Alison
Ferrer-Costa, Roser
Quer, Josep
Pacin, Beatriz
Vila, Marta
Casillas, Rosario
Garcia-Garcia, Selene
Esteban, Rafael
Pumarola, Tomás
Buti, Maria
Rodriguez-Frias, Francisco
author_facet Cortese, Maria Francesca
Riveiro-Barciela, Mar
Tabernero, David
Rodriguez-Algarra, Francisco
Palom, Adriana
Sopena, Sara
Rando-Segura, Ariadna
Roade, Luisa
Kuchta, Alison
Ferrer-Costa, Roser
Quer, Josep
Pacin, Beatriz
Vila, Marta
Casillas, Rosario
Garcia-Garcia, Selene
Esteban, Rafael
Pumarola, Tomás
Buti, Maria
Rodriguez-Frias, Francisco
author_sort Cortese, Maria Francesca
collection PubMed
description The measurement and interpretation of HBV DNA and RNA levels in HBV infected patients treated with antiviral therapy supports the objective of HBV disease management. Here, we quantified circulating HBV RNA through a standardized and sensitive assay in follow-up samples from both naive and treated patients as a marker of infection evolution. HBV DNA (HBV DNA for use in Cobas 6800/8800 Automated Roche Molecular Systems), RNA (Roche HBV RNA Investigational Assay for use in the Cobas 6800/8800; Roche), HBeAg and HBsAg (Elycsys HBsAg chemiluminescence immunoassay by Cobas 8000; Roche), and core-related antigen (Lumipulse G chemiluminescence assay; Fujirebio) levels were measured in cohorts of untreated or nucleos(t)ide treated, HBV-infected subjects in an outpatient hospital setting. HBV DNA levels in untreated people were 3.6 log(10) higher than corresponding RNA levels and were stable over 5 years of observation. While only five of 52 treated patients had DNA levels below the lower limit of quantification (10 IU/mL) at the end of follow-up, 13 had HBV RNA levels persistently above this limit, including eight with undetectable DNA. In samples with undetectable core-related antigen we observed a median HBsAg titer 2.7-fold higher than in samples with undetectable RNA (adjusted P = 0.012). Detectable HBV RNA with undetectable HBV DNA was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL (P = 0.03). In naive patients the difference between HBV DNA and RNA was higher than previously reported. HBV RNA rapidly decreased during treatment. However, in some cases, it was detectable even after years of effective therapy, being a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease. The investigational RNA assay for use on the Cobas 6800/8800 instruments is a sensitive and standardized method that could be applied in general management of HBV infection. IMPORTANCE This study focused on the quantification of circulating HBV RNA by using a standardized and sensitive assay. Thanks to this system we observed a higher difference between circulating HBV DNA and RNA than previously reported. In treated patients, HBV RNA decreased together with DNA, although some patients presented detectable levels even after years of successful antiviral treatment, suggesting a persistent viral transcription. Of note, the detection of viral RNA when HBV DNA is undetectable was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL. This assay could be extremely helpful in HBV patients management to study viral transcription and to identify those treated patients that may achieve sustained viral suppression.
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spelling pubmed-90453032022-04-28 Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up Cortese, Maria Francesca Riveiro-Barciela, Mar Tabernero, David Rodriguez-Algarra, Francisco Palom, Adriana Sopena, Sara Rando-Segura, Ariadna Roade, Luisa Kuchta, Alison Ferrer-Costa, Roser Quer, Josep Pacin, Beatriz Vila, Marta Casillas, Rosario Garcia-Garcia, Selene Esteban, Rafael Pumarola, Tomás Buti, Maria Rodriguez-Frias, Francisco Microbiol Spectr Research Article The measurement and interpretation of HBV DNA and RNA levels in HBV infected patients treated with antiviral therapy supports the objective of HBV disease management. Here, we quantified circulating HBV RNA through a standardized and sensitive assay in follow-up samples from both naive and treated patients as a marker of infection evolution. HBV DNA (HBV DNA for use in Cobas 6800/8800 Automated Roche Molecular Systems), RNA (Roche HBV RNA Investigational Assay for use in the Cobas 6800/8800; Roche), HBeAg and HBsAg (Elycsys HBsAg chemiluminescence immunoassay by Cobas 8000; Roche), and core-related antigen (Lumipulse G chemiluminescence assay; Fujirebio) levels were measured in cohorts of untreated or nucleos(t)ide treated, HBV-infected subjects in an outpatient hospital setting. HBV DNA levels in untreated people were 3.6 log(10) higher than corresponding RNA levels and were stable over 5 years of observation. While only five of 52 treated patients had DNA levels below the lower limit of quantification (10 IU/mL) at the end of follow-up, 13 had HBV RNA levels persistently above this limit, including eight with undetectable DNA. In samples with undetectable core-related antigen we observed a median HBsAg titer 2.7-fold higher than in samples with undetectable RNA (adjusted P = 0.012). Detectable HBV RNA with undetectable HBV DNA was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL (P = 0.03). In naive patients the difference between HBV DNA and RNA was higher than previously reported. HBV RNA rapidly decreased during treatment. However, in some cases, it was detectable even after years of effective therapy, being a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease. The investigational RNA assay for use on the Cobas 6800/8800 instruments is a sensitive and standardized method that could be applied in general management of HBV infection. IMPORTANCE This study focused on the quantification of circulating HBV RNA by using a standardized and sensitive assay. Thanks to this system we observed a higher difference between circulating HBV DNA and RNA than previously reported. In treated patients, HBV RNA decreased together with DNA, although some patients presented detectable levels even after years of successful antiviral treatment, suggesting a persistent viral transcription. Of note, the detection of viral RNA when HBV DNA is undetectable was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL. This assay could be extremely helpful in HBV patients management to study viral transcription and to identify those treated patients that may achieve sustained viral suppression. American Society for Microbiology 2022-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9045303/ /pubmed/35377229 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02149-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Cortese et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Cortese, Maria Francesca
Riveiro-Barciela, Mar
Tabernero, David
Rodriguez-Algarra, Francisco
Palom, Adriana
Sopena, Sara
Rando-Segura, Ariadna
Roade, Luisa
Kuchta, Alison
Ferrer-Costa, Roser
Quer, Josep
Pacin, Beatriz
Vila, Marta
Casillas, Rosario
Garcia-Garcia, Selene
Esteban, Rafael
Pumarola, Tomás
Buti, Maria
Rodriguez-Frias, Francisco
Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title_full Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title_fullStr Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title_full_unstemmed Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title_short Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up
title_sort standardized hepatitis b virus rna quantification in untreated and treated chronic patients: a promising marker of infection follow-up
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9045303/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35377229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02149-21
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