Abstract

The role of hepatitis C virus (HCV) heterogeneity in the severity of chronic hepatitis C infection remains unclear. Our aim was to study the hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) heterogeneity in patients with chronic hepatitis C infected with genotype 1b or 3 and with normal or abnormal alanine aminotransferase (ALT). HVR1 quasispecies were assessed by single strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) in 67 patients with chronic hepatitis C, including 35 with persistently normal ALT and 32 with abnormal ALT. Sixty-two patients underwent a liver biopsy. Among the 67 patients, 40 were infected with genotype 1b and 27 with genotype 3. In univariate analysis, low heterogeneity (<or= 3 bands at SSCP) was significantly associated with normal ALT (P < 0.001), milder histological lesions (activity, P=0.02; fibrosis, P=0.04), and at the limit of significance for genotype 1b (P=0.07). In multivariate analysis, low heterogeneity was significantly and independently associated with normal ALT (P=0.09) and genotype 1b (P=0.03). In patients with chronic hepatitis C, a low viral heterogeneity is significantly and independently associated with normal ALT and genotype 1b. These results are consistent with the view that patients with normal ALT have a different immune response against HCV resulting in a low HCV heterogeneity.

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