The balance of type 1 and type 2 immune responses in the contexts of hepatitis B infection and hepatitis D infection. Journal of gastroenterology and hepatology Townsend, E. C., Zhang, G. Y., Ali, R., Firke, M., Moon, M. S., Han, M. A., Fram, B., Glenn, J. S., Kleiner, D. E., Koh, C., Heller, T. 2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection is the most rapidly progressive chronic viral hepatitis. Little is understood about the immune responses to HDV.AIM: To characterize the systemic immune environments of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and HDV patients at various disease stages.METHODS: Evaluated 129 subjects; 53 HBV, 43 HDV, 33 healthy controls. HBV and HDV subjects were categorized by aspartate aminotransferase to platelet ratio index (APRI) into mild (APRI < 0.5), moderate, and severe (APRI > 1.0). Serum cytokines and immune markers were assessed at a single treatment-naive time-point.RESULTS: Type 1 cytokines are elevated in both HBV and HDV. Both groups show higher TNFa, IL-12p40, and CXCL9 when compared to controls (all p< 0.05). However, only HBV group displayed elevated IFNg compared to controls. Type 2 cytokines are elevated in HBV. HBV group shows higher IL-4, IL-13, and CCL26 compared to healthy controls and HDV. Chemokine CCL2 and CCL13 are lower in HDV. When assessing ratios, HDV displays higher IFNg/IL-4, TNFa/IL-4, and TNFa/IL-13 ratios than HBV and controls.CONCLUSION: HBV and HDV subjects show similarly elevated type 1 cytokines. HDV subjects display relatively lower type 2 cytokines. These differences in the systemic immune environments, particularly the predominance of type 1 responses, may contribute to the comparatively rapid progression of HDV disease.TRANSLATIONAL IMPACT: Characterization of the imbalance in type 1 and type 2 immunity unique HDV has the potential to provide immunological insights for designing therapeutic targets in HDV associated disease progression.

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