Prevalence of naturally occurring protease inhibitor resistance-associated variants in hemodialysis and renal transplant patients with hepatitis C virus infection.

Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol

aGastroenterology Division, Federal University of Sao Paulo bAlbert Einstein Medicina Diagnóstica, Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein cDepartment of Gastroenterology, School of Medicine, Laboratory of Tropical Gastroenterology and Hepatology 'João Alves de Queiroz and Castorina Bittencourt Alves', LIM-07, Institute of Tropical Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • NS3 protease inhibitors (PIs) are key antiviral treatments for hepatitis C, particularly beneficial for patients with chronic kidney issues who cannot use interferon.
  • A study assessed the prevalence of resistance-associated variants (RAVs) in 67 patients undergoing dialysis or renal transplants, finding that 18% had mutations affecting PIs, mostly in those with GT1a infection.
  • Despite the presence of these low-resistance variants, the Q80K polymorphism was rare, suggesting that PIs can still be effectively used in this patient population.

Article Abstract

Background NS3 protease inhibitors (PIs) were the first direct antiviral agents used for the treatment of hepatitis C virus. The combination of second-wave PIs with other direct antiviral agents enabled the use of interferon-free regimens for chronic kidney disease patients on dialysis and renal transplant (RTx) recipients, populations in which the use of interferon and ribavirin is limited. However, the occurrence of PI resistance-associated variants (RAVs), both baseline and induced by therapy, has resulted in the failure of many treatment strategies. Methods The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of PI RAVs and of the Q80K polymorphism in chronic kidney disease patients on hemodialysis and RTx recipients. Direct sequencing of the NS3 protease was performed in 67 patients (32 hemodialysis and 35 RTx).Results RAVs to PIs were detected in 18% of the patients: V55A (9%), V36L (1.5%), T54S (1.5%), S122N (1.5%), I170L (1.5%), and M175L (1.5%). Only 1.5% of the patients carried the Q80K polymorphism. The frequency of these mutations was more than two times higher in patients infected with GT1a (25%) than GT1b (9.7%) (P=0.1). The mutations were detected in 20% of treatment-naive patients and in 15.6% of peginterferon/ribavirin-experienced patients (P=0.64). Furthermore, no mutation that would confer high resistance to PIs was detected.Conclusion The Q80K polymorphism was rare in the population studied. The occurrence of RAVs was common, with predominance in GT1a. However, the variants observed were those associated with a low level of resistance to PIs, facilitating the use of these drugs in this special group of patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MEG.0000000000000866DOI Listing

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