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HBV Carrying Drug-Resistance Mutations in Chronically Infected Treatment-Naive Patients

Authors :
Gomes-Gouvêa, Michele S
Ferreira, Ariana C
Teixeira, Rosangela
Andrade, José R
Ferreira, Adalgisa SP
Barros, Lena MF
Rezende, Rosamar EF
Nastri, Ana CS Santos
Leite, Andrea GB
Piccoli, Leonora Z
Galvan, Josiane
Conde, Simone RSS
Soares, Manoel CP
Kliemann, Dimas A
Bertolini, Dennis A
Kunyoshi, Aline SO
Lyra, André C
Oikawa, Marcio K
De Araújo, Luciano V
Carrilho, Flair J
Mendes-Corrêa, Maria CJ
Pinho, João R Rebello
Source :
Antiviral Therapy; May 2015, Vol. 20 Issue: 4 p387-395, 9p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background Nucleoside/nucleotide analogue (NA) treatment causes selection pressure for HBV strains carrying mutations conferring NA resistance. Drug-resistance mutations occur in the reverse transcriptase (RT) region of the HBV polymerase gene and spontaneously arise during viral replication. These mutations can also alter the hepatitis B surface (HBs) protein and in some cases reduce binding to HBs antibodies. The spread of NA-resistant HBV may impact the efficacy of antiviral treatment and hepatitis B immunization programmes. In this study, we used direct sequencing to assess the occurrence of HBV carrying known mutations that confer NA resistance in the largest cohort of treatment-naive patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) to date.Methods HBV DNA samples isolated from 702 patients were sequenced and the RT region subjected to mutational analysis.Results There was high genetic variability among the HBV samples analysed: A1 (63.7%), D3 (14.5%), A2 (3.3%), A3 (0.1%), B1 (0.1%), B2 (0.1%), C2 (0.9%), D1 (0.9%), D2 (4.6%), D4 (5.1%), D unclassified sub-genotype (0.7%), E (0.6%), F2a (4.6%), F4 (0.4%) and G (0.4%). HBV strains harbouring mutations conferring NA resistance alone or combined with compensatory mutations were identified in 1.6% (11/702) of the patients.Conclusions HBV strains harbouring resistance mutations can comprise the major population of HBV quasispecies in treatment-naive patients. In Brazil, there is a very low frequency of untreated patients who are infected with these strains. These findings suggest that the spread and natural selection of drug-resistant HBV is an uncommon event and/or most of these strains remain unstable in the absence of NA selective pressure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13596535
Volume :
20
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Antiviral Therapy
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs57467488
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3851/IMP2938