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Human genomics of acute liver failure due to hepatitis B virus infection: An exome sequencing study in liver transplant recipients

Asgari, Samira; Chaturvedi, Nimisha; Scepanovic, Petar; Hämmerle, Christian; Semmo, Nasser; Giostra, Emiliano; Müllhaupt, Beat; Angus, Peter; Thompson, Alexander J; Moradpour, Darius; Fellay, Jacques (2019). Human genomics of acute liver failure due to hepatitis B virus infection: An exome sequencing study in liver transplant recipients. Journal of Viral Hepatitis, 26(2):271-277.

Abstract

Acute liver failure (ALF) or fulminant hepatitis is a rare, yet severe outcome of infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) that carries a high mortality rate. The occurrence of a life-threatening condition upon infection with a prevalent virus in individuals without known risk factors is suggestive of pathogen-specific immune dysregulation. In the absence of established differences in HBV virulence, we hypothesized that ALF upon primary infection with HBV could be due to rare deleterious variants in the human genome. To search for such variants, we performed exome sequencing in 21 previously healthy adults who required liver transplantation upon fulminant HBV infection and 172 controls that were positive for anti-HBc and anti-HBs but had no clinical history of jaundice or liver disease. After a series of hypothesis-driven filtering steps, we searched for putatively pathogenic variants that were significantly associated with case-control status. We did not find any causal variant or gene, a result that does not support the hypothesis of a shared monogenic basis for human susceptibility to HBV-related ALF in adults. This study represents a first attempt at deciphering the human genetic contribution to the most severe clinical presentation of acute HBV infection in previously healthy individuals.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Health Sciences > Hepatology
Life Sciences > Virology
Health Sciences > Infectious Diseases
Language:English
Date:2019
Deposited On:29 Aug 2022 11:52
Last Modified:19 Mar 2025 02:55
Publisher:Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
ISSN:1352-0504
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvh.13019
PubMed ID:30315682
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