Pharmaceuticals (Aug 2024)
Sustained Long-Term Decline in Anti-HCV Neutralizing Antibodies in HIV/HCV-Coinfected Patients Five Years after HCV Therapy: A Retrospective Study
Abstract
Background: This study evaluated titers and amplitudes of anti-E2 antibodies (anti-E2-Abs) and neutralizing antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV; anti-HCV-nAbs) in HIV/HCV-coinfected individuals over five years after successful HCV treatment completion. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 76 HIV/HCV-coinfected patients achieving sustained virologic response post-HCV treatment. Plasma levels of anti-E2-Abs and anti-HCV-nAbs against five HCV genotypes (Gt1a, Gt1b, Gt2a, Gt3a, and Gt4a) were determined using ELISA and microneutralization assays, respectively. Statistical analyses comparing the three follow-up time points (baseline, one year, and five years post-HCV treatment) were performed using generalized linear mixed models, adjusting p-values with the false discovery rate (q-value). Results: Compared to baseline, anti-E2-Abs titers decreased at one year (1.9- to 2.3-fold, q-value q-value q-value q-value q-value Conclusions: Humoral immune responses against HCV decreased consistently one and five years post-HCV treatment, regardless of HCV genotype and previous HCV therapy or type of treatment (IFN- or DAA-based therapy). This decline was more pronounced for anti-HCV-nAbs, particularly against Gt3.
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