Abstract

Recurrence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection after liver transplantation is associated with varying degree of graft damage. The aim of the study was to investigate longitudinally the changes of wild-type and precore A1896HBV mutant viral populations after reinfection and their impact on liver graft damage. The wild-type HBV and A1896HBV strains were quantitated before and serially after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in 14 hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive liver graft recipients (4 hepatitis B e antigen [HBeAg]+; 10 anti-HBe+). Before OLT, the wild-type precore HBV was present in all 4 HBeAg-positive patients and in 2/10 anti-HBe-positive patients; a mixed virus population was present in 6 patients; and A1896HBV mutant alone in 2 patients. After OLT, A1896HBV mutant appeared and gradually accumulated in 5/6 patients who had the wild-type HBV before OLT and 1 of these patients seroconverted from HBeAg to anti-HBe 52 months after transplantation. A mixed HBV population was present continuously in 6 patients before and after OLT. Of the 2 patients with A1896HBV only pre-OLT, the wild type appeared in one patient and the other patient retained persistently the A1896HBV mutant. There was no relationship between liver graft histology and the type of viral population at reinfection or at the end of follow up. Changes in the HBV population occur during follow up of recurrent hepatitis B in liver transplant recipients with frequent accumulation of precore A1896HBV mutants, but the type of viral population does not determine the severity of hepatitis B in the graft.

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