4.7 Article

Evolution and phenotypic characterization of whole HBV genome in compliant patients experiencing unexplained entecavir treatment failure

Journal

ANTIVIRAL RESEARCH
Volume 192, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2021.105106

Keywords

Hepatitis B; Antiviral agents; High-throughput nucleotide sequencing; Drug resistance; Microbial

Funding

  1. Thellie endowment fund

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The study found that treatment failure with entecavir does not necessarily require resistance mutations in the entire HBV genome; certain mutations may also be selected before or during treatment and contribute to treatment failure through mechanisms other than increased resistance.
Entecavir treatment failure can be observed in compliant patients despite an absence of detectable resistance mutations by Pol/RT Sanger sequencing. We hypothesized that these unexplained treatment failures could rely on other mechanisms of viral resistance, especially on mutations selected outside of the Pol/RT domain. Partial virological response to entecavir was observed in three patients treated with immunosuppressive drugs, without selection of Pol/RT resistance mutations. Mutations selected in the whole HBV genome during entecavir treatment and potentially associated with resistance were searched for using deep sequencing and characterized using a phenotypic resistance assay. Mutations Q206K (pre-core/core), Q120K (pre-S1/pre-S2, T-cell epitope) and A300E (spacer domain) were selected during entecavir treatment in patient #1 but were not associated with an increased level of resistance to entecavir or an increase in HBV replication capacity. Core promoter mutations T1753G, A1762T and G1764A were present as major mutations before and after treatment in patient #1. HBs Ag immune escape mutations were present as major mutations before and after treatment in patients #2 (sK122R, sT126I, sP127S and sG145R) and #3 (sM133I). We demonstrated that PVR to entecavir does not require selection of any resistance mutation in the whole HBV genome. Our results demonstrate that major mutations can be selected outside of the Pol/RT domain before or during entecavir treatment. These mutations could contribute to entecavir treatment failure by other mechanisms than an increased level of resistance.

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