Hepatitis C virus early kinetics and resistance-associated substitution dynamics during antiviral therapy with direct-acting antivirals.
Elena PerpiñánNoelia Caro-PérezNeris García-GonzálezJosep GregoriPatricia GonzálezConcepción BartresMaría Eugenia SoriaCelia PeralesSabela LensZoe MariñoMaría Carlota LondoñoXavier ArizaGeorge KoutsoudakisJosep QuerFernando Gonzáles-CandelasXavier FornsSofía Pérez-Del-PulgarPublished in: Journal of viral hepatitis (2018)
The emergence of resistance-associated substitutions (RASs) can compromise the high efficacy of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). Little is known about RASs selection at very early time points during DAA treatment. Therefore, we analyzed the potential emergence of RASs immediately after therapy initiation. Samples of 71 patients treated with different DAAs were collected at baseline, during therapy (hours 4 and 8; days 1-7; weeks 2-4) or until target not detected. HCV-RNA levels were determined by qPCR, and RASs were detected by deep sequencing. Sixty-three (89%) patients achieved a sustained virological response (SVR), 7 (10%) relapsed, and 1 (1%) experienced a breakthrough. Almost all non-SVR (7/8, 88%) showed RASs either at baseline or relapse. High-frequency RASs detected at baseline (Y93H and L159F+C316N) remained detectable at early time points during therapy and reappeared as most prevalent substitutions at relapse. Conversely, emergent RASs at relapse (Q80R, D168E/V, R155K and L31V) were not observed during the first hours-days, before HCV-RNA became undetectable. HCV-RNA decay and genetic evolution of the quasispecies followed a similar pattern during the first hours of therapy in SVR and non-SVR patients. In conclusion, the absence of early RASs selection and the similar dynamics of HCV kinetics and quasispecies in SVR and non-SVR patients after therapy initiation suggest that RASs selection may occur at later stages in the remaining reservoir, where viral populations persist hidden at very low replication levels. Nevertheless, we cannot completely exclude very early selection, when RASs are present below the sensitivity limit of deep sequencing.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis c virus
- end stage renal disease
- high frequency
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- human immunodeficiency virus
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- dna methylation
- risk assessment
- patient reported outcomes
- mesenchymal stem cells
- genome wide
- free survival
- hiv infected patients