4.8 Article

Changes of natural killer cells' phenotype in patients with chronic hepatitis B in intermittent interferon therapy

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1116689

Keywords

natural killer cell; chronic hepatitis B; antiviral treatment; intermittent therapy; PEG-IFN alpha

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the changes in natural killer (NK) cell phenotype during interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) treatment for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) and its relationship with clinical indicators. The results showed that long-term IFN treatment led to continuous depletion of the killer subpopulation of NK cells and differentiation of the regulatory subpopulation into the killer subpopulation. In the plateau phase, after discontinuation of IFN for a period of time, the number of NK cell subsets gradually recovered but remained lower than that in the initial treatment group.
Background: To investigate the changes of natural killer (NK) cell phenotype in the interferon alpha (IFN-alpha) treatment of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) and its relationship with clinical indicators. Methods: The CHB patients who did not receive any antiviral treatment were set as initial treatment group and used pegylated interferon alpha (PEG-IFN alpha). Peripheral blood samples were collected at baseline, 4 weeks, and 12-24 weeks. For IFN-treated patients who entered the plateau were set as plateau group, and PEG-IFN alpha was discontinued and resumed after an interval of 12-24 weeks. Besides, we also enrolled some patients who had received oral drug for more than 6 months as oral drug group without follow up. Peripheral blood was collected during the plateau period, which was set as baseline, and after 12-24 weeks of intermittent treatment, and after 12-24 weeks of additional treatment with PEG-IFN alpha. The aim of the collection was to detect hepatitis B virus (HBV) virology, serology and biochemical indicators, and the NK cell related phenotype was detected by flow cytometry. Results: In the plateau group, subgroup of CD69(+)CD56(dim) was higher with statistical significance when comparing with the initial treatment group and oral drug group [10.49 (5.27, 19.07) vs 5.03 (3.67, 8.58), Z =-3.11, P = 0.002; 10.49 (5.27, 19.07) vs 4.04 (1.90, 7.26), Z =-5.30, P < 0.001)]. CD57(+)CD56(dim) was significantly lower than that in initial treatment group and oral drug group respectively [68.42 +/- 10.37 vs 55.85 +/- 12.87, t = 5.84, P < 0.001; 76.38 +/- 9.49 vs 55.85 +/- 12.87, t =-9.65, P < 0.001]. The CD56(bright)CD16- subgroup in the plateau group was higher with statistical significance compared with initial treatment group and oral drug group respectively [11.64 (6.05, 19.61) vs 3.58 (1.94, 5.60), Z =-6.35, P < 0.001; 11.64 (6.05, 19.61) vs 2.37 (1.70, 4.30), Z =-7.74, P < 0.001)]. CD57(+)CD56(dim) in the plateau group had a significant higher percentage than that at baseline after IFN discontinuation for 12-24 weeks (55.85 +/- 12.87 vs 65.95 +/- 12.94, t =-2.78, P = 0.011). Conclusion: During the long-term treatment of IFN, the killer subgroup of NK cells is continuously depleted, leading to the differentiation of the regulatory subgroup into the killer subgroup. In the killing subgroup, although the number is continuously depleted, the activity of the subgroup is continuously increased. In the plateau phase, after stopping IFN for a period of time, the number of NK cell subsets would gradually recover, but was still lower than that in the initial treatment group.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available