Interferon-γ inducible protein-10 and interleukin 28b gene polymorphism as predictive markers for genotype 4 hepatitis c virus treatment response
Abd El-Maksoud, E. A.; Salem, A. M.; Hegazy MGA; Maher. A. M. El-Hashash;
Abstract
HCV genotype 4 dominates the HCV epidemic in Egypt. Drug resistance was the most serious side effect that reflects bad clinical outcome. Several studies had demonstrated that baseline serum interferon-γ-inducible-protein 10 (IP-10) levels and interleukin 28B polymorphisms were associated with the resistance to the standard of care pegylated interferon alpha and ribavirin (PEG-IFNα/RBV) therapy and development of post-treatment relapse. Our purpose was to assess the predictive value of combining IP-10 levels and IL28B genotypes to PEG-IFNα/RBV therapy response in Egyptian chronic HCV infection patients with genotype 4. Ninety Egyptian patients chronically infected by HCV genotype-4 treated with pegylated interferon alpha and ribavirin (PEG-IFNα/RBV) therapy were enrolled. Serum IP-10 levels were determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay pre-and post-treatment. IL-28B (rs12979860 and rs8099917) polymorphisms were performed by PCR-RFLP in all patients. Overall, 38 patients (42.2%) achieved sustained virologic response (SVR) and 52 (57.8%) patients have non-viral response (NVR). Pretreatment serum IP-10 mean levels were significantly lower in patients who achieved SVR than in NVR (P<0.05). CC genotype in IL-28B polymorphism (rs12979860) was the favorable genotype as 65.8% achieved SVR, while TT genotype in IL-28B polymorphism (rs8099917) was the favorable genotype as 81.5% achieved SVR. Baseline IP-10 was significantly correlated to genotypes CC in rs12979860 and TT in rs8099917. Combined use of serum baseline IP-10 levels with IL-28B polymorphisms could improve the prediction of SVR to PEG-IFNα/RBV therapy in Egyptian chronic HCV infection patients with genotype 4.
Other data
| Title | Interferon-γ inducible protein-10 and interleukin 28b gene polymorphism as predictive markers for genotype 4 hepatitis c virus treatment response | Authors | Abd El-Maksoud, E. A.; Salem, A. M.; Hegazy MGA ; Maher. A. M. El-Hashash | Issue Date | 1-Jan-2020 | Journal | Tropical Biomedicine | ISSN | 01275720 | DOI | 10.47665/TB.37.4.1083 | PubMed ID | 33612760 | Scopus ID | 2-s2.0-85099814407 |
Recommend this item
Similar Items from Core Recommender Database
Items in Ain Shams Scholar are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.