Full-genome analysis of hepatitis C virus in HIV-coinfected hemophiliac Japanese patients

Hepatol Res. 2020 Jun;50(6):763-769. doi: 10.1111/hepr.13498. Epub 2020 Mar 31.

Abstract

Aim: More than 1400 Japanese hemophiliacs acquired HIV infection around 1983 through contaminated blood products imported from the USA, most of whom also acquired hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. To delineate the HCV genetic relations in HIV-coinfected hemophiliacs, we analyzed stocked plasma samples of the patients seen at the largest referral center for HIV care in Japan.

Methods: Hepatitis C virus full-genome sequences were amplified and determined using next-generation sequencing, and genotyping and phylogenetic analyses of these sequences were carried out. The results of these hemophiliacs were compared with those of previously studied HIV-coinfected Japanese non-hemophiliacs who had undergone similar analysis of HCV full-genome sequences.

Results: From 1997 to the end of 2017, 72 HIV-infected Japanese hemophiliacs regularly visited our outpatient clinic. Of these, 51 patients had detectable plasma HCV-RNA. The HCV full genome was successfully amplified and sequenced in 50 patients. Not only HCV genotypes 1b (28%) and 2a (6%), which are common in Japan, but also HCV genotypes 1a (32%) and 3a (22%) were identified at high frequency. A single case of intergenotypic recombinant form (2b/1a) and a single case of mixed infection (1a and 3a) were also identified. Each sequence derived from hemophiliacs was more than 0.05 genetic distance away from the other sequences in phylogenetic analysis.

Conclusions: Various HCV genotypes were identified in Japanese hemophiliacs, a finding that reflects the HCV genotypic distribution in the USA. The genetic distance among them are the results of viral evolution in each patient plus HCV genetic diversity in the USA.

Keywords: HCV; HIV; hemophilia; intergenotypic recombination; mixed infection.