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Effect of ribavirin on viral kinetics and liver gene expression in chronic hepatitis C.

Authors :
Rotman Y
Noureddin M
Feld JJ
Guedj J
Witthaus M
Han H
Park YJ
Park SH
Heller T
Ghany MG
Doo E
Koh C
Abdalla A
Gara N
Sarkar S
Thomas E
Ahlenstiel G
Edlich B
Titerence R
Hogdal L
Rehermann B
Dahari H
Perelson AS
Hoofnagle JH
Liang TJ
Source :
Gut [Gut] 2014 Jan; Vol. 63 (1), pp. 161-9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Feb 08.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Objective: Ribavirin improves treatment response to pegylated-interferon (PEG-IFN) in chronic hepatitis C but the mechanism remains controversial. We studied correlates of response and mechanism of action of ribavirin in treatment of hepatitis C.<br />Design: 70 treatment-naive patients were randomised to 4 weeks of ribavirin (1000-1200 mg/d) or none, followed by PEG-IFNα-2a and ribavirin at standard doses and durations. Patients were also randomised to a liver biopsy 24 h before or 6 h after starting PEG-IFN. Hepatic gene expression was assessed by microarray and interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) expression quantified by nCounter platform. Temporal changes in ISG expression were assessed by qPCR in peripheral-blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and by serum levels of IP-10.<br />Results: After 4 weeks of ribavirin monotherapy, hepatitis C virus (HCV) levels decreased by 0.5±0.5 log10 (p=0.009 vs controls) and ALT by 33% (p<0.001). Ribavirin pretreatment, while modestly augmenting ISG induction by PEG-IFN, did not modify the virological response to subsequent PEG-IFN and ribavirin treatment. However, biochemical, but not virological, response to ribavirin monotherapy predicted response to subsequent combination treatment (rapid virological response, 71% in biochemical responders vs 22% non-responders, p=0.01; early virological response, 100% vs 68%, p=0.03; sustained virological response 83% vs 41%, p=0.053). Ribavirin monotherapy lowered serum IP-10 levels but had no effect on ISG expression in PBMC.<br />Conclusions: Ribavirin is a weak antiviral but its clinical effect seems to be mediated by a separate, indirect mechanism, which may act to reset IFN-responsiveness in HCV-infected liver.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1468-3288
Volume :
63
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23396509
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2012-303852