Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6105614 | Journal of Hepatology | 2010 | 9 Pages |
Background & AimsIncreasing age is associated with impaired immune function and in chronic HCV infection specifically, with progressive fibrosis, liver failure, HCC and impaired responses to antiviral therapy. T-lymphocyte telomere length declines with age. We hypothesised that shorter T-lymphocyte telomere length would be associated with poor clinical outcome in HCV infection.MethodsCirculating T-lymphocyte telomere length, an objective measure of immune senescence, was measured by flow-FISH in 135 HCV-RNA-positive, treatment-naïve patients and 41 healthy controls in relation to clinical outcome.ResultsShorter CD4+CD45RO+ T-lymphocyte telomeres were associated with severe fibrosis (p = 0.003), independent of male sex (p = 0.04), CMV positivity (p = 0.003), previous HBV infection (p = 0.007), and age (p = ns) in viraemic patients compared to controls. There were inverse correlations between CD4+CD45RO+ telomere length and fibrosis stage (p <0.001), portal tract inflammatory grade (p = 0.035), prothrombin time (p <0.001) and bilirubin (p = 0.001). One hundred and twenty-four viraemic individuals were followed prospectively to a composite endpoint of death, hepatic decompensation or HCC. Independent of age, those with shorter CD4+CD45RO+ telomeres were less likely to be complication free after 2-years than those with longer telomeres (86% versus 96%, p = 0.009) with an age-adjusted hazard ratio of 0.93 (0.90-0.96). In addition, CD4+CD45RO+ telomere length predicted successful antiviral therapy (p = 0.001) independent of other factors.ConclusionsCD4+ T-lymphocyte telomere length, independent of age, was related to inflammatory grade, fibrosis stage, laboratory indices of severity, subsequent hepatic decompensation and treatment outcome in patients with chronic HCV infection.