Abstract

Multiple studies of hepatitis B virus (HBV) genetic variability and its relationship with the disease pathogenesis are currently ongoing, stemming from growing evidence of the clinical significance of HBV mutations. It is becoming increasingly evident that patients with hematologic malignancies may be particularly prone to a higher frequency of such mutations. The present report is the first extensive study of the prevalence of escape mutations in S-HBsAg, performed using isolates from 59 patients from hospital hematology departments with diagnoses of leukemia (n = 32), lymphoma (n = 20), multiple myeloma (n = 3), and non-tumor blood diseases (n = 4). The isolates were serologically examined for the presence of HBV markers and sequenced using either next-generation sequencing (NGS) or Sanger sequencing. Occult hepatitis B was found in 5.1% of cases. Genetic analysis of the region corresponding to S-HBsAg demonstrated an exceptionally high mutation frequency in patients with leukemias (93.4%) and lymphomas (85.0%), along with the prominent mutation heterogeneity. Additionally, more than 15 mutations in one sample were found in patients with leukemias (6.3% of cases) and lymphomas (5.0% of cases). Most of the mutations were clinically significant. The study analyzes the mutation profile of HBV in different oncohematological diseases and the frequency of individual mutations. The data strongly suggest that the NGS method, capable of detecting minor populations of HBV mutations, provides a diagnostic advantage, lays the foundation for the development of screening methods, and allows for the study of the virological and pathogenetic aspects of hepatitis B.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe emergence of immunological escape mutations is one of the urgent problems associated with hepatitis B

  • In the Russian population, there is a high incidence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection among hospitalized patients in hematology departments who were not vaccinated against hepatitis B

  • HBV DNA was detected in 10.1% of the examined patients, while 3.9% of people had occult forms of hepatitis B

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The emergence of immunological escape mutations is one of the urgent problems associated with hepatitis B. These mutations generally occur in the main hydrophilic loop of the a-determinant region of the hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg). B virus (HBV) is a DNA virus; it has a complex replication cycle involving a reverse transcriptase [1], which determines the HBV high variability comparable to that of retroviruses [2,3]. Measuring the frequency of nucleotide sequence substitutions in the HBV genome is hampered by the existence of overlapping reading frames and the absence of similar sites in most coding regions. It is believed that the HBV mutation rate

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call