Abstract

Pegylated IFNα (PEG‐IFN) is one of the treatment options for chronic HBV (CHB) patients. However, the high patient treatment burden and limited response rate together clearly ask for biomarkers to predict PEG‐IFN response. Soluble CD14 (sCD14) is considered a marker for immune activation and has been shown to predict clinical outcome of HIV infection. However, studies on sCD14 in CHB infection are inconclusive, and its relationship with clinical outcome is largely unknown. Here, we measured sCD14 levels in CHB patients and investigated whether changes in sCD14 level related to PEG‐IFN response. Serum sCD14 levels were determined in 15 healthy controls, 15 acute self‐limited HBV, 60 CHB patients in different disease phases and 94 HBeAg+ CHB patients at week 0 and week 12 of a 52‐week PEG‐IFN treatment. Response to PEG‐IFN treatment was defined as HBeAg seroconversion or HBeAg loss at 26 weeks post‐treatment. The mean sCD14 level in acute HBV patients (3.0 µg/mL) was significantly higher than in CHB patients (2.4 µg/mL) and healthy controls (2.4 µg/mL). In CHB patients receiving PEG‐IFN, a significant increase in sCD14 was found after 12‐week treatment (median week 0:2.1 µg/mL; week 12:3.7 µg/mL). After 12‐week treatment, the fold change (FC = w12/w0) in sCD14 was significantly higher in responders compared to nonresponders (HBeAg seroconversion: median FCresponder = 2.1 vs FCnonresponder = 1.6; HBeAg loss: median FCresponder = 2.2 vs FCnonresponder = 1.5). Receiver operating characteristic curves demonstrated that FC‐sCD14wk12/wk0 levels can be of significant value as a stopping rule to select patients at week 12 who are not likely to benefit from further PEG‐IFN treatment.

Highlights

  • About 1/3 of the world's population has been exposed to hepatitis B virus (HBV) during their lifetime, and over 250 million individu‐ als worldwide suffer from chronic HBV (CHB) infection.[1]

  • This is the first study to describe the association of Soluble CD14 (sCD14) levels with pegylated IFNα (PEG‐IFN) treatment response in CHB

  • We found that a high rise in serum sCD14 in CHB patients at the first 12 weeks of PEG‐IFN

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

About 1/3 of the world's population has been exposed to hepatitis B virus (HBV) during their lifetime, and over 250 million individu‐ als worldwide suffer from chronic HBV (CHB) infection.[1]. We measured and analysed sCD14 levels in acute HBV in‐ fection, treatment‐naive CHB patients from various disease stages and HBeAg+ CHB patients receiving PEG‐IFN. For the latter, we characterized the relationship of sCD14 serum levels to PEG‐IFN treatment response and assessed the value of sCD14 as an early. | 1077 on‐treatment indicator to stop treatment of patients who are un‐ likely to respond

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| Study design
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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