4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Dynamic changes in innate immune responses during direct-acting antiviral therapy for HCV infection

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 362-372

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jvh.13041

Keywords

cytokines/chemokines; DAA therapy; hepatitis C; IFN-alpha; interferon-stimulated genes

Funding

  1. AbbVie [NCT02476617]
  2. NIH/NIAID [2U19 AI082630-06]
  3. MGH Research Scholars Program

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The role of the endogenous interferon (IFN) system has been well characterized during IFN-based therapy for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection; less is known for direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). In this phase 3b open-label study, we assessed changes in IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) in non-cirrhotic treatment-naive or pegIFN/RBV-experienced HCV-GT1a-infected patients receiving paritaprevir/ritonavir/ombitasvir + dasabuvir + ribavirin (PrOD + R) for 12 weeks. ISG expression was quantified from peripheral blood mononuclear cells at baseline, treatment weeks (TW)2, TW4, TW8, end of treatment (EOT) and at post-treatment week 12. Paired sera were used to assess IFN-alpha/IFN-related chemokines/cytokines. Twenty-five patients were enrolled. Overall sustained virologic response (SVR)12 was 92% (no virologic failure [VF]) and 100% for those completing the study protocol. Two patients were excluded from the ISG analysis due to lack of post-treatment samples. The majority of ISGs were downregulated at TW2-TW4 (nadir TW4); however, a relative increase was observed at TW8-EOT, although levels were lower than baseline. This downregulation was accompanied by increases in IFN-alpha/IFN-related chemokines, a finding not observed with T(H)1/2-related cytokines. Following SVR, ISG expression returned to TW2 levels. In conclusion, PrOD + R for 12 weeks was well-tolerated with no VF. Our data demonstrate dynamic alterations in innate immune profiles during highly potent IFN-free DAA therapy. The downregulation of ISG post-therapy suggests reversal of the exhausted ISG phenotype following SVR, and the rise in ISGs and IFN-alpha/IFN-responsive chemokines late during therapy suggests resetting of IFN responsiveness that may be relevant in determining duration of or immunological sequelae from DAA therapy, including HBV reactivation.

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