Hepatitis b virus covalently closed circular dna predicts postoperative liver cancer metastasis independent of virological suppression

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Abstract

New antiviral therapies against hepatitis B virus (HBV) focus on the elimination of cova-lently closed circular DNA (cccDNA). However, traditional cccDNA-specific quantitative PCR (qPCR) has a narrow effective range, hindering a reliable comparison between the levels of biopsy-derived cccDNAs. Collaterally, the prognostic role of cccDNA in HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cannot be clearly defined. Here, we developed a peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-clamping qPCR method to provide a wider range of specific cccDNA quantification (up to 5 logs of effective range). Extrachromosomal DNA was extracted from para-neoplastic tissues for cccDNA quantification. In total, 350 HBV-related HCC patients were included for an outcome analysis. Without differential pre-dilution, cccDNA levels in para-neoplastic liver tissues were determined, ranging from < 2 × 103 to 123.0 × 106 copies/gram. The multivariate linear regression analysis showed that cccDNA was independently correlated with the HBV e antigen (p < 0.001) and serum HBV-DNA levels (p = 0.012). The Cox proportional hazard model analysis showed that cccDNA independently predicted overall survival (p = 0.003) and extrahepatic metastasis-free survival (p = 0.001). In virologically suppressed HCC patients, cccDNA still effectively predicted intrahepatic recurrence-free (p = 0.003) and ex-trahepatic metastasis-free (p = 0.009) survivals. In conclusion, cccDNA independently predicted postoperative extrahepatic metastasis-free survival.

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Hsu, C. W., Chu, Y. D., Lai, M. W., Lin, C. L., Liang, K. H., Lin, Y. H., & Yeh, C. T. (2021). Hepatitis b virus covalently closed circular dna predicts postoperative liver cancer metastasis independent of virological suppression. Cancers, 13(3), 1–19. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13030538

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