Abstract

Host immune response and viral factors are involved in disease progression in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. However, the relationship between HBV quasispecies and liver fibrosis progression remains unclear. In this study, 447 patients with chronic HBV infection, including 239 with chronic hepatitis B (CHB), 104 with liver cirrhosis (LC) and 104 with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were enrolled. The 239 CHB patients were divided into groups F1, F2, and F3 according to liver fibrosis score. Four fragments of the HBV genome were determined and analyzed using next-generation sequencing. Specific mutations, such as A1762T, G1764A and G1896A, in the BCP/PC region were more common in patients with advanced liver disease and formed the majority of the viral quasispecies pool in patients with LC and HCC. The viral complexity and diversity increased as the fibrosis progressed, especially in patients with CHB who were comparable in age but at different stages of fibrosis. Patients with early-stage fibrosis experienced higher purifying selection pressure in the four sequenced regions, whereas different protein-coding region experienced different negative selection with disease progression. HBV quasispecies diversity may increase fibrosis progression in CHB patients with aging under immune selection.

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