Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2022)

Association of Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Pi*Z Allele Frequency and Progressive Liver Fibrosis in Two Chronic Hepatitis C Cohorts

  • Victoria Therese Mücke,
  • Janett Fischer,
  • Marcus Maximilian Mücke,
  • Alexander Teumer,
  • Alexander Koch,
  • Johannes Vermehren,
  • Malin Fromme,
  • Stefan Zeuzem,
  • Christian Trautwein,
  • Christoph Sarrazin,
  • Thomas Berg,
  • Biaohuan Zhou,
  • Karim Hamesch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12010253
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 253

Abstract

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(1) Background: The inherited alpha-1 antitrypsin (A1AT) deficiency variant ‘Pi*Z’ emerged as a genetic modifier of chronic liver disease. Controversial data exist on the relevance of heterozygous Pi*Z carriage (‘Pi*MZ’ genotype) as an additional risk factor in patients with chronic viral hepatitis C to develop progressive liver fibrosis. (2) Methods: Two prospectively recruited cohorts totaling 572 patients with therapy-naïve chronic viral hepatitis C (HCV) were analyzed. The Frankfurt cohort included 337 patients and a second cohort from Leipzig included 235 patients. The stage of liver fibrosis was assessed by liver biopsy, AST-to-platelet ratio index (APRI) score and Fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) score (Frankfurt) as well as liver stiffness measurement (LSM) via transient elastography (Leipzig). All patients were genotyped for the Pi*Z variant (rs28929474) of the SERPINA1 gene. (3) Results: In the Frankfurt cohort, 16/337 (4.7%) patients carried the heterozygous Pi*Z allele while 10/235 (4.3%) in the Leipzig cohort were Pi*Z carriers. In both cohorts, there was no higher proportion of Pi*Z heterozygosity in patients with cirrhosis compared to patients without cirrhosis or patients with cirrhosis vs. no liver fibrosis. Accordingly, Pi*Z frequency was not different in histological or serological stages of liver fibrosis (F0–F4) and showed no clear association with LSM. (4) Conclusions: Evaluation in two representative HCV cohorts does not indicate Pi*Z heterozygosity as a clinically relevant disease modifier in chronic HCV infection. However, validation in even larger cohorts with longitudinal follow-up is warranted.

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