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Genetic variation in the interleukin-28B gene is associated with spontaneous clearance and progression of hepatitis C virus in Moroccan patients

Genetic variation in the interleukin-28B gene is associated with spontaneous clearance and progression of hepatitis C virus in Moroccan patients
Genetic variation in the interleukin-28B gene is associated with spontaneous clearance and progression of hepatitis C virus in Moroccan patients
Background: Genetic variation in the IL28B gene has been strongly associated with treatment outcomes, spontaneous clearance and progression of the hepatitis C virus infection (HCV). The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of polymorphisms at this locus with progression and outcome of HCV infection in a Moroccan population.

Methods: We analyzed a cohort of 438 individuals among them 232 patients with persistent HCV infection, of whom 115 patients had mild chronic hepatitis and 117 had advanced liver disease (cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma), 68 individuals who had naturally cleared HCV and 138 healthy subjects. The IL28B SNPs rs12979860 and rs8099917 were genotyped using a TaqMan 5' allelic discrimination assay.

Results: The protective rs12979860-C and rs8099917-T alleles were more common in subjects with spontaneous clearance (77.9% vs 55.2%; p = 0.00001 and 95.6% vs 83.2%; p = 0.0025, respectively). Individuals with clearance were 4.69 (95% CI, 1.99-11.07) times more likely to have the C/C genotype for rs12979860 polymorphism (p = 0.0017) and 3.55 (95% CI, 0.19-66.89) times more likely to have the T/T genotype at rs8099917. Patients with advanced liver disease carried the rs12979860-T/T genotype more frequently than patients with mild chronic hepatitis C (OR = 1.89; 95% CI, 0.99-3.61; p = 0.0532) and this risk was even more pronounced when we compared them with healthy controls (OR = 4.27; 95% CI, 2.08-8.76; p = 0.0005). The rs8099917-G allele was also associated with advanced liver disease (OR = 2.34; 95% CI, 1.40-3.93; p = 0.0100).

Conclusions: In the Moroccan population, polymorphisms near the IL28B gene play a role both in spontaneous clearance and progression of HCV infection.
1932-6203
e54793
Ezzikouri, Sayeh
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Alaoui, Rhimou
1177a984-7431-417a-a38e-0a00f121157a
Rebbani, Khadija
7ccaeb86-64c8-4c21-a2ea-915ae90bb39c
Brahim, Ikram
1dc3c984-800a-4180-9040-77fd551c9e85
Fakhir, Fatima-Zohra
cadbab3c-77fa-40c3-a596-8c9cf1162358
Nadir, Salwa
548acb20-3f96-4cf7-9d61-b5033b6753d8
Diepolder, Helmut
6045c3c9-5a81-46c9-abe5-726e7fe40e84
Khakoo, Salim I.
6c16d2f5-ae80-4d9b-9100-6bfb34ad0273
Thursz, Mark
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Benjelloun, Soumaya
0405f38a-90ac-463c-834e-59bd20869c4e
Ezzikouri, Sayeh
2a21c1d7-2a43-4b50-b6d6-5bcc7d1c3e4a
Alaoui, Rhimou
1177a984-7431-417a-a38e-0a00f121157a
Rebbani, Khadija
7ccaeb86-64c8-4c21-a2ea-915ae90bb39c
Brahim, Ikram
1dc3c984-800a-4180-9040-77fd551c9e85
Fakhir, Fatima-Zohra
cadbab3c-77fa-40c3-a596-8c9cf1162358
Nadir, Salwa
548acb20-3f96-4cf7-9d61-b5033b6753d8
Diepolder, Helmut
6045c3c9-5a81-46c9-abe5-726e7fe40e84
Khakoo, Salim I.
6c16d2f5-ae80-4d9b-9100-6bfb34ad0273
Thursz, Mark
9639d985-1173-4f71-9d24-f404dd9e5c95
Benjelloun, Soumaya
0405f38a-90ac-463c-834e-59bd20869c4e

Ezzikouri, Sayeh, Alaoui, Rhimou, Rebbani, Khadija, Brahim, Ikram, Fakhir, Fatima-Zohra, Nadir, Salwa, Diepolder, Helmut, Khakoo, Salim I., Thursz, Mark and Benjelloun, Soumaya (2013) Genetic variation in the interleukin-28B gene is associated with spontaneous clearance and progression of hepatitis C virus in Moroccan patients. PLoS ONE, 8 (1), e54793. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0054793). (PMID:23358556)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Genetic variation in the IL28B gene has been strongly associated with treatment outcomes, spontaneous clearance and progression of the hepatitis C virus infection (HCV). The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of polymorphisms at this locus with progression and outcome of HCV infection in a Moroccan population.

Methods: We analyzed a cohort of 438 individuals among them 232 patients with persistent HCV infection, of whom 115 patients had mild chronic hepatitis and 117 had advanced liver disease (cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma), 68 individuals who had naturally cleared HCV and 138 healthy subjects. The IL28B SNPs rs12979860 and rs8099917 were genotyped using a TaqMan 5' allelic discrimination assay.

Results: The protective rs12979860-C and rs8099917-T alleles were more common in subjects with spontaneous clearance (77.9% vs 55.2%; p = 0.00001 and 95.6% vs 83.2%; p = 0.0025, respectively). Individuals with clearance were 4.69 (95% CI, 1.99-11.07) times more likely to have the C/C genotype for rs12979860 polymorphism (p = 0.0017) and 3.55 (95% CI, 0.19-66.89) times more likely to have the T/T genotype at rs8099917. Patients with advanced liver disease carried the rs12979860-T/T genotype more frequently than patients with mild chronic hepatitis C (OR = 1.89; 95% CI, 0.99-3.61; p = 0.0532) and this risk was even more pronounced when we compared them with healthy controls (OR = 4.27; 95% CI, 2.08-8.76; p = 0.0005). The rs8099917-G allele was also associated with advanced liver disease (OR = 2.34; 95% CI, 1.40-3.93; p = 0.0100).

Conclusions: In the Moroccan population, polymorphisms near the IL28B gene play a role both in spontaneous clearance and progression of HCV infection.

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Published date: 24 January 2013
Additional Information: This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 356220
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/356220
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 58bdcde1-b310-4048-9024-49b1d96ebeb9
ORCID for Salim I. Khakoo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4057-9091

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2013 13:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:12

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Contributors

Author: Sayeh Ezzikouri
Author: Rhimou Alaoui
Author: Khadija Rebbani
Author: Ikram Brahim
Author: Fatima-Zohra Fakhir
Author: Salwa Nadir
Author: Helmut Diepolder
Author: Salim I. Khakoo ORCID iD
Author: Mark Thursz
Author: Soumaya Benjelloun

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