Abstract

BackgroundThe rate of non-response to pegylated interferon plus ribavirin (peg-IFN+RBV) in HCV/HIV coinfected patients is higher than in HCV-monoinfected patients. In this sense, the contribution of HCV genetic variability is unknown. The 5′ untranslated (5′UTR), the nonstructural 5A (NS5A) and the second envelope (E2) HCV genomic regions have been implicated to peg-IFN therapy response. The proteins appear to block interferon (IFN)-induced RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) and the 5′UTR may influence the viral lymphotropism. MethodsWe examined comparatively the pretreatment HCV variability between HIV coinfected and HCV monoinfected patients as well as assessed longitudinally the impact of peg-IFN+RBV on HCV variability when HIV is co-present. For this purpose, 15 HIV coinfected and 20 HCV monoinfected patients were compared. They were peg-IFN+RBV non-responders and infected with HCV 1a. ResultsIrrespectively of the HIV-coexistence, at baseline the amino acid variation in the NS5A-related domains was significantly higher than in the E2-PePHD (p<0.001). The number of amino acid variations (mean±SD) at the NS5A-ISDR domain was higher among HCV/HIV patients than HCV-monoinfected ones (1.80±0.77 vs. 0.95±1.05; p=0.009) but such difference was slightly lower when comparing NS5A-PKRBD sequences (2.47±1.13 vs. 1.60±1.57; p=0.06). No differences were found at the E2-PePHD (0±0 vs. 0.2±0.4). At intra-HIV coinfected patient level, only minor (HCV genetic analysis) or no (HCV substitution rate and quasispecies heterogeneity) changes were observed during therapy (basal, 24h, 4weeks, and 12weeks). ConclusionsAmong HCV-1a/HIV coinfected and HCV-monoinfected peg-IFN+RBV non-responder patients, the HCV variability at the 5′UTR, E2-PePHD and NS5A-PKRBD/ISDR domains was mostly comparable exhibiting a low number of variations. Four well-defined amino acid substitutions in NS5A-ISDR domain appeared most frequently when HIV coexists. The interferon-based therapy did not exert any effect in the variation, selection or diversity in the above mentioned HCV regions that could influence clinical responsiveness to IFN therapy.

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