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B-cell characteristics define HCV reinfection outcome.

Alexander P UnderwoodMoney GuptaBing-Ru WuAuda A EltahlaIrene BooJing Jing WangDavid AgapiouArunasingam AbayasingamArnold ReynaldiElizabeth KeoshkerianYanran ZhaoNicholas BrasherMelanie R WalkerJens BukhLisa MaherTom GordonMiles P DavenportFabio LucianiHeidi E DrummerAndrew R LloydRowena A Bull
Published in: Journal of hepatology (2024)
HCV continues to have a major health burden globally. Limitations in the health infrastructure for diagnosis and treatment, as well as high rates of reinfection, indicate that a vaccine that can protect against chronic HCV infection will greatly complement current efforts to eliminate HCV-related disease. With alternative approaches to testing vaccines, such as controlled human inoculation trials under consideration, we desperately need to identify the correlates of immune protection. In this study, in a small but rare cohort of high-risk injecting drug users who were reinfected multiple times, breadth of neutralisation was not associated with ultimate clearance of the reinfection event. Alternatively, characteristics of the HCV-specific B-cell response associated with B-cell proliferation were. This study indicates that humoral responses are important for protection and suggests that for genetically very diverse viruses, such as HCV, it may be beneficial to look beyond just antibodies as correlates of protection.
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