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Clinical Trial
. 2014 Sep;61(3):538-43.
doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2014.05.043. Epub 2014 Jun 4.

Restoration of HCV-specific CD8+ T cell function by interferon-free therapy

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Restoration of HCV-specific CD8+ T cell function by interferon-free therapy

Bianca Martin et al. J Hepatol. 2014 Sep.

Abstract

Background & aims: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is characterised by a failure of virus-specific CD8+ T cells that is mainly caused by viral escape and T cell exhaustion. Constant antigen stimulation has been suggested to contribute to HCV-specific CD8+ T cell exhaustion. However, IFN-based therapies failed to recover HCV-specific CD8+ T cell function suggesting that the damage to CD8+ T cells may be permanent even after antigen removal. It was therefore the objective of this study to analyse the impact of inhibition of ongoing viral replication by IFN-free therapy with direct acting antivirals (DAA) on the phenotype and function of HCV-specific CD8+ T cells.

Methods: Virus-specific CD8+ T cells obtained from a patient cohort of 51 previously untreated chronically infected patients undergoing IFN-free therapy with a combination of faldaprevir (a protease inhibitor) and deleobuvir (a non-nucleoside polymerase inhibitor) with or without ribavirin were analysed ex vivo and after in vitro expansion at baseline, wk4, wk 12, and after treatment.

Results: Our results show the rapid restoration of proliferative HCV-specific CD8+ T cells in the majority of patients with SVR12 within 4 weeks of therapy suggesting that IFN-free therapy mediated antigen removal may restore CD8+ T cell function.

Conclusions: This study indicates a specific restoration of proliferative HCV-specific CD8+ T cells under IFN-free therapy. This is in contrast to PegIFN-based therapies that have been shown not to restore T cell function during and after chronic infection.

Keywords: Antiviral therapy; DAA; Hepatitis C virus; Immune response; T cell exhaustion; T cell restoration.

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