Molecular characterization of a variant virus that caused de novo hepatitis B without elevation of hepatitis B surface antigen after chemotherapy with rituximab |
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Authors: | Masami Miyagawa Masahito Minami Kota Fujii Rei Sendo Kojiro Mori Daisuke Shimizu Tomoaki Nakajima Kohichiroh Yasui Yoshito Itoh Masafumi Taniwaki Takeshi Okanoue Toshikazu Yoshikawa |
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Affiliation: | 1. Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan;2. Kyoto Prefectural Yosanoumi Hospital, Kyoto, Japan;3. Molecular Hematology and Oncology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan;4. Saiseikai Suita Hospital, Osaka, Japan |
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Abstract: | Hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)‐negative patients following treatment with rituximab has been reported increasingly. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying HBV reactivation in an HBsAg‐negative patient. HBV was reactivated in a 75‐year‐old man following chemotherapy with rituximab, without elevation of HBsAg. The patient's full‐length HBV genome was cloned and the entire sequence was determined. Transfection studies were performed in vitro using recombinant wild‐type HBV (wild‐type), the patient's HBV (patient), and two chimeric HBV constructs, in which the preS/S region of the patient and wild‐type virus had been exchanged with one another. Secreted HBsAg and intra‐ and extra‐cellular HBV DNA were measured. The number of amino acid substitutions in HBV from this patient was much higher than in previous reports of HBV mutants, such as occult HBV and vaccine escape HBV mutants. Levels of HBsAg and HBV DNA production in vitro were significantly lower in the patient compared to wild‐type transfections. From analyses of the chimeric constructs, the altered preS/S region was responsible mainly for this impairment. These results show that highly mutated HBV can reactivate after chemotherapy with rituximab, despite an unusually large number of mutations, resulting in impaired viral replication in vitro. Severe immune suppression, probably caused by rituximab, may permit reactivation of highly mutated HBV. These findings have important clinical implications for the prevention and management of HBV reactivation and may explain partially the mechanism of recent, unusual cases of HBV reactivation. J. Med. Virol. 80:2069–2078, 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. |
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Keywords: | occult HBV infection HBV reactivation mutation rituximab |
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