Variability of the hepatitis B surface protein in HBV-infected liver transplant recipients |
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Authors: | Hermann M Schätzl MD Emilia Sieger Wolfgang Jilg Hans Nitschko Reinhart Zachoval |
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Institution: | (1) Max von Pettenkofer Institute of Medical Virology, Germany;(2) Department of Internal Medicine and Liver Transplantation Group, Klinikum Grosshadern, University of Munich, Germany;(3) Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University of Regensburg, Germany |
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Abstract: | Variations in the major surface proteins (HBsAg) of hepatitis B virus (HBV) have been implicated in the high rate of reinfection in HBV-infected recipients of orthotopic liver transplantations (OLT). Sera from 6 OLT patients positive for HBsAg and from 3 recipients negative for it prior to transplantation were analyzed over several years, and 39 HBsAg sequences were compared. Despite anti-HBs immunoprophylaxis resulting in the disappearance of HBsAg, HBV DNA was detectable by a sensitive nested PCR in almost all sera. In 1 patient, a significant temporary shift in HBV subtypes was observed, indicating a mixed infection or the presence of multiple HBV populations in this patient; this was also true for other patients. Amino acid substitutions compared to wild-type HBV subtypes in 7 patients and variations within patients in 5 patients were detectable over time; the escape mutation at amino acid position 145 was detected in 2 patients. Our data suggest that the high rate of reinfection in OLT recipients seems not to be associated with specific sequence variations in the major HBs gene, but shows a remarkable inter- and intraindividual variability. Obviously, no correlation between heterogeneity in this gene and clinical outcome was present.The following investigators and institutions were members of the Liver Transplantation Group: U. Beuers, M. Bilzer, W. Caselmann, A. Gerbes, R. Hoffmann, C. Jung, G.R. Pape (Medical Department II), J. Briegel, J. Groh, M. Haller (Institute of Anesthesiology), H.J. Krämling, H. Rauh and M. Stangl (Department of Surgery). |
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Keywords: | Hepatitis B surface protein Genomic variability Escape mutation Liver transplantation Hepatitis B virus |
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