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ITPA genotype protects against anemia during peginterferon and ribavirin therapy but does not influence virological response
Author(s) -
Holmes Jacinta A.,
Roberts Stuart K.,
Ali Rachel J.,
Dore Gregory J.,
Sievert William,
McCaughan Geoffrey W.,
Crawford Darrell H.,
Cheng Wendy S.,
Weltman Martin D.,
Bonanzinga Sara,
Visvanathan Kumar,
Sundararajan Vijaya,
Desmond Paul V.,
Bowden D. Scott,
Matthews Gail V.,
Thompson Alexander J.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.27022
Subject(s) - itpa , ribavirin , medicine , anemia , inosine monophosphate , endocrinology , biology , hepatitis c virus , virology , biochemistry , nucleotide , virus , gene
On‐treatment anemia is associated with higher sustained virological response (SVR) rates during peginterferon plus ribavirin (RBV) therapy. Inosine triphosphatase (ITPA) variants causing ITPase deficiency have been shown to protect against RBV‐induced anemia. However, ITPase activity has not been associated with SVR. To study this discrepancy, we examined the relationships between ITPase activity, on‐treatment anemia, SVR, and RBV levels in hepatitis C virus genotype 1 (HCV‐1) patients from the CHARIOT study. ITPA genotype (rs7270101, rs1127354) was used to define ITPase activity in 546 patients. Plasma RBV levels were measured using high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Relationships between ITPase activity, on‐treatment hemoglobin (Hb) levels, RBV levels, and SVR were tested using regression modeling, survival analysis, and locally weighted scatterplot smoothing (LOWESS) plot analysis. Hb decline was independently associated with SVR ( P  < 0.0001). ITPase deficiency was present in 35%. ITPase deficiency strongly protected against Hb decline ( P  < 0.0001), but was not associated with SVR ( P  = 0.28). The probability of SVR increased with lower nadir Hb for both wild‐type and deficient ITPase activity, but the association curve shifted to describe a parallel relationship at higher Hb levels in patients with ITPase deficiency. In a subset (n = 203), we tested the hypothesis that the association between Hb decline and SVR reflected RBV levels rather than actual Hb level. RBV levels were associated with on‐treatment Hb decline and SVR, but not ITPase activity. In regression models, adjustment for RBV levels attenuated the association between Hb decline and SVR. Conclusion : ITPase deficiency protects against RBV‐induced anemia, but is not associated with SVR. Our data suggest that the relationship between Hb decline and SVR is not mechanistic, but is linked to RBV levels. (H epatology 2014;59:2152–2160)

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