Fate and function of hepatitis-C-virus-specific T-cells during peginterferon-α2b therapy for acute hepatitis C

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Abstract

Background: Strong hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific T-cell responses are associated with spontaneous clearance of acute hepatitis C. However, recent studies described a decline in HCV-specific CD8+ T-cells during interferon treatment, suggesting that the success of acute HCV therapy might be independent of adaptive immunity. Methods: T-cell responses of eight human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A2-positive, acutely infected patients treated with peginterferon-α2b were studied by ELISPOT and proliferation assays and flow cytometry analysis using HCV-specific tetramers. Results: HCV-specific T-cells predominately declined during therapy. However, diverse patterns of CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell kinetics were observed. In patients with sustained virological response chemokine receptor 3 (CXCR-3) expression of HCV-specific CD8+ T-cells was upregulated, indicating homing to the liver. Low levels of T-cells remained detectable throughout treatment and follow up. In contrast, T-cells of a relapse patient did not upregulate CXCR-3 but displayed a higher staining for annexin-V, followed by a complete loss of peripheral virus-specific CD8+ T-cells by week 12. Conclusions: Kinetics of HCV-specific T-cell responses are heterogeneous in interferon-treated patients with acute hepatitis C. The decline of T-cells might be a consequence of both apoptosis and homing. The balance between cell death and regulation of chemokine receptors might lead to different long-term outcomes. © 2007 International Medical Press.

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Wiegand, J., Cornberg, M., Aslan, N., Schlaphoff, V., Sarrazin, C., Kubitschke, A., … Wedemeyer, H. (2007). Fate and function of hepatitis-C-virus-specific T-cells during peginterferon-α2b therapy for acute hepatitis C. Antiviral Therapy, 12(3), 303–316. https://doi.org/10.1177/135965350701200306

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