4.0 Article

Glycomics-based serum markers as reliable tool for assessment of viral response after treatment with direct-acting antiviral drugs in hepatitis C virus infection

Journal

ACTA CLINICA BELGICA
Volume 78, Issue 2, Pages 96-102

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17843286.2022.2072110

Keywords

Glycome; glycosylation; hepatitis C virus infection; fibrosis; cirrhosis

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This study assessed the inflammation-related fibrosis regression during and after treatment of HCV with DAAs using serum glycomics. The results suggest that GlycoFibroTest is a serum biomarker for viral response in HCV patients, and the rapid decrease of this glycomics-based biomarker may reflect the improvement of liver inflammation.
Objectives Patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection have a genuine risk of developing liver fibrosis and cirrhosis, potentially resulting in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a risk that remains even after sustained viral response (SVR). Glycomics-based biomarkers are an attractive tool to closely monitor these patients during and after antiviral treatment, as alterations in the abundance of N-glycans reflect an altered state of the liver. This study assessed serum glycomics for the evaluation of inflammation-related fibrosis regression during and after treatment of HCV with DAAs. Methods The GlycoFibroTest and GlycoCirrhoTest were analyzed in the sera 36 HCV-infected patients with advanced fibrosis (F3) or established cirrhosis (F4), before (week 0), during (week 12) and after (week 24) a twelve-week oral administration of DAAs therapy - using an optimized glycomic technology on a DNA sequencer. Results All patients achieved SVR after treatment and two of them developed HCC in the subsequent five years. A significant decrease of the GlycoFibroTest (p < 0.0001) was seen after 12 weeks, consistent with other measured biomarkers (APRI, FIB-4, FibroTest). Statistical analysis was performed in IBM SPSS Statistics version 28.0, using the non-parametric Friedman's test with a statistical significance alpha level of 0.05. Conclusion This study suggests that the GlycoFibroTest is a serum biomarker for viral response in HCV patients. The rapid decrease of the glycomics-based biomarker probably reflects the amelioration of liver inflammation as underlying process, rather than the improvement of liver fibrosis itself.

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