Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Context</p> <p>Chronic HBV infection is a major cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) which meanwhile has become the 5<sup>th </sup>most reason for a fatal outcome of cancer. Worldwide, approximately 350 million people are chronically HB...

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Main Authors: Ziegler Susanne, Schildgen Verena, Tillmann Ramona L, Schildgen Oliver
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-07-01
Series:Virology Journal
Online Access:http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/167
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spelling doaj-8970f0e8a06748f5a0756a9753ce2a6a2020-11-24T21:11:25ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2010-07-017116710.1186/1743-422X-7-167Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly caseZiegler SusanneSchildgen VerenaTillmann Ramona LSchildgen Oliver<p>Abstract</p> <p>Context</p> <p>Chronic HBV infection is a major cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) which meanwhile has become the 5<sup>th </sup>most reason for a fatal outcome of cancer. Worldwide, approximately 350 million people are chronically HBV infected and as such of risk to develop HCC, of those an estimated high rate of children. Treatment of chronic infection is sufficient to reduce the rate of HCC but the rate of sustained virological response remains to low, not at least due to emergence of resistant virus strains. Less is known on HBV infection in children despite the extremely high rate of chronicity.</p> <p>Objective, Design, Setting, and Patient</p> <p>The case of a nine years old male with a 6 year history of chronic HBV infection, of those 5 years with antiviral treatment is described.</p> <p>Interventions and Main Outcome Measure(s)</p> <p>Before our lab was consulted, the patient was unsuccessfully treated with interferon, an obscure drug named Hepon, which should activate antiviral immune response, and Lamivudine, the latter most likely becoming ineffective due to the mergence of resistant subpopulations (rtL180 M, rtV207 M, two strains with stop codons at position rt188 and rt198, rtM204V (YVDD), rtM204K (YKDD)). Replacement of Lamivudine by adefovir displayed no advantage despite the lack of resistance mutations, thus no decrease in viremia was observed under adefovir treatment.</p> <p>Results and Conclusions</p> <p>Novel mutations in the YMDD motif and its direct neighbourhood were observed, both being compatible with Lamivudine resistance. No mutations were found that are associated with ADF resistance. Both, the clinical course of treatment and the genotypic resistance profile emphasize the need for systematic analyses of the HBV resistance mechanisms and structured therapy concept also for children chronically infected with HBV.</p> http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/167
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ziegler Susanne
Schildgen Verena
Tillmann Ramona L
Schildgen Oliver
spellingShingle Ziegler Susanne
Schildgen Verena
Tillmann Ramona L
Schildgen Oliver
Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
Virology Journal
author_facet Ziegler Susanne
Schildgen Verena
Tillmann Ramona L
Schildgen Oliver
author_sort Ziegler Susanne
title Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
title_short Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
title_full Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
title_fullStr Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
title_full_unstemmed Novel mutation in YMDD motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic HBV-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
title_sort novel mutation in ymdd motif and direct neighbourhood in a child with chronic hbv-infection and clinical lamivudine and adefovir resistance - a scholarly case
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2010-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Context</p> <p>Chronic HBV infection is a major cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) which meanwhile has become the 5<sup>th </sup>most reason for a fatal outcome of cancer. Worldwide, approximately 350 million people are chronically HBV infected and as such of risk to develop HCC, of those an estimated high rate of children. Treatment of chronic infection is sufficient to reduce the rate of HCC but the rate of sustained virological response remains to low, not at least due to emergence of resistant virus strains. Less is known on HBV infection in children despite the extremely high rate of chronicity.</p> <p>Objective, Design, Setting, and Patient</p> <p>The case of a nine years old male with a 6 year history of chronic HBV infection, of those 5 years with antiviral treatment is described.</p> <p>Interventions and Main Outcome Measure(s)</p> <p>Before our lab was consulted, the patient was unsuccessfully treated with interferon, an obscure drug named Hepon, which should activate antiviral immune response, and Lamivudine, the latter most likely becoming ineffective due to the mergence of resistant subpopulations (rtL180 M, rtV207 M, two strains with stop codons at position rt188 and rt198, rtM204V (YVDD), rtM204K (YKDD)). Replacement of Lamivudine by adefovir displayed no advantage despite the lack of resistance mutations, thus no decrease in viremia was observed under adefovir treatment.</p> <p>Results and Conclusions</p> <p>Novel mutations in the YMDD motif and its direct neighbourhood were observed, both being compatible with Lamivudine resistance. No mutations were found that are associated with ADF resistance. Both, the clinical course of treatment and the genotypic resistance profile emphasize the need for systematic analyses of the HBV resistance mechanisms and structured therapy concept also for children chronically infected with HBV.</p>
url http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/167
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