4.5 Review

Hepatocellular Carcinoma Mechanisms Associated with Chronic HCV Infection and the Impact of Direct-Acting Antiviral Treatment

期刊

JOURNAL OF HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA
卷 7, 期 -, 页码 45-76

出版社

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/JHC.S221187

关键词

hepatitis C virus; HCV; hepatocellular carcinoma; HCC; interferon; IFN; directacting antiviral; DAA; endoplasmic reticulum stress; ER stress; autophagy

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资金

  1. Veterans Affairs Merit Review Grant [1I01BX004516-01A1, 1P20GM121288]
  2. Louisiana Clinical and Translational Science (LACaTS) Center Grant [U54 GM104940]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the major risk factor for liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The mechanisms of HCC initiation, growth, and metastasis appear to be highly complex due to the decade-long interactions between the virus, immune system, and overlapping bystander effects of host metabolic liver disease. The lack of a readily accessible animal model system for HCVis a significant obstacle to understand the mechanisms of viral carcinogenesis. Traditionally, the primary prevention strategy of HCC has been to eliminate infection by antiviral therapy. The success of virus elimination by antiviral treatment is determined by the SVR when the HCVis no longer detectable in serum. Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) and its analogs, pegylated IFN-alpha (PEG-IFN-alpha) alone with ribavirin (RBV), have been the primary antiviral treatment of HCV for many years with a low cure rate. The cloning and sequencing of HCV have allowed the development of cell culture models, which accelerated antiviral drug discovery. It resulted in the selection of highly effective direct-acting antiviral (DAA)-based combination therapy that now offers incredible success in curing HCVinfection in more than 95% of all patients, including those with cirrhosis. However, several emerging recent publications claim that patients who have liver cirrhosis at the time of DAAs treatment face the risk of HCC occurrence and recurrence after viral cure. This remains a substantial challenge while addressing the long-term benefit of antiviral medicine. The host-related mechanisms that drive the risk of HCC in the absence of the virus are unknown. This review describes the multifaceted mechanisms that create a tumorigenic environment during chronic HCV infection. In addition to the potential oncogenic programming that drives HCC after viral clearance by DAAs, the current status of a biomarker development for early prediction of cirrhosis regression and HCC detection post viral treatment is discussed. Since DAAs treatment does not provide full protection against reinfection or viral transmission to other individuals, the recent studies for a vaccine development are also reviewed.

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