Methods: A total of 111 patients in total from different disease phases were recruited, including 21 in immune-tolerant (IT) phase, 49 in immune-clearance (IC) phases, 29 in immune-control or low replicative (LR) phase, and 12 in reactivation phases. Serum HBV RNA, anti-HBc, HBcrAg, and intrahepatic covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) were quantified and each of these indicator's correlation with liver inflammation was analyzed.
Results: HBeAg-positive individuals had significant higher serum levels of HBV RNA and HBcrAg than those who were HBeAg negative, similar to that of serum HBV DNA. Comparatively, HBV RNA ( =0.79, < 0.01) and HBcrAg ( =0.78, < 0.01) had almost same higher overall correlation with the cccDNA, as that of HBV DNA ( =0.81, < 0.01). Serum anti-HBc level ( = -0.52, < 0.05) is negatively correlated with cccDNA level at IT phase rather than the other three phases. When set the cutoff value at 4.00 log IU/mL, serum anti-HBc showed potential to indicate liver inflammation, with AUC as 0.79 and the specificities as 78.85% for HBeAg positive, and with AUC as 0.72 and the specificities as 62.16% for HBeAg-negative patients, respectively.
Conclusions: In treatment-naïve patients, levels of serological markers HBV RNA and HBcrAg could mirror intrahepatic cccDNA level, but were not superior to HBV DNA level. Serum anti-HBc level had certain potential to be used as a predicting marker for liver inflammation.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9303147 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/4133283 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!