Abstract

We analysed the hepatitis B virus (HBV) core-promoter (CP) and precore (PC) regions before, during and after interferon treatment in young Caucasian cancer survivors who had acquired HBV infection during chemotherapy for malignancies. Fourteen patients with chronic hepatitis B [hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) /HBV-DNA positive] received alpha-2a interferon (IFN), 5 MU/m2 t.i.w. for 12 months. HBV CP and PC region sequences were analysed following polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification. Sera from responders were studied at: T(0) (before starting IFN), T(1) [at alanine aminotransferase (ALT) peak preceding HBeAg seroconversion], T(2) (at ALT normalization), T(3) (at end of IFN) and T(4) (at one year after IFN) and in nonresponders at time points T(0), T(3) and T(4). Amplified HBV-DNA was cloned and sequenced automatically. Six of 14 patients (43%) responded to IFN treatment. Five of the six (83%) responders displayed the double CP mutation A1762T/G1764A always in association with a T1753C change. None of the nonresponders showed these mutations at any time point. The G1896A change creating the PC stop codon mutation was never detected in any of the patients. In our cancer survivors, IFN-induced HBeAg/anti-HBe seroconversion appeared to correlate with CP mutations and was not influenced by previous chemotherapy. These mutations in addition to low HBV DNA levels and elevated ALT can be considered favourable factors of response to IFN-induced anti-HBe seroconversion.

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