Factors Affecting Serum Concentrations of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) RNA in HCV Genotype 1-Infected Patients with Chronic Hepatitis

Abstract
The serum concentration of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA is usually stable (4 to 8 log10IU/ml) in untreated patients with chronic hepatitis C. While this baseline HCV RNA concentration ([HCV RNA]BL) is predictive of a sustained virologic response to treatment, its determinants are only partially identified. We therefore analyzed the baseline characteristics of 2,472 HCV genotype 1-infected patients to identify correlations with gender, age, race, weight, body mass index (BMI), HCV acquisition mode, HCV subtype, alanine aminotransferase concentration, or histopathologic changes in the liver. After separation of the data according to four [HCV RNA]BLgroups (≤5.0, >5.0 to 5.6, >5.6 to 5.9, and >5.9 log10IU/ml), we determined that increasing [HCV RNA]BLcorrelated (P< 0.05) with increasing proportions of patients who were male, >40 years of age, or heavier (a weight of >85 kg or a BMI of >27 kg/m2). Histologic activity index (HAI) data were available for 1,304 of these patients: increasing [HCV RNA]BLcorrelated with higher fibrosis and necrosis-inflammation scores. As a continuous variable, [HCV RNA]BLcorrelated with age, gender, weight (continuous or ≤85 versus >85 kg), BMI (continuous or ≤27 versus >27 kg/m2), subtype, fibrosis score, and necrosis-inflammation score; however, multiple-regression analysis yieldedPvalues of 27 kg/m2), and fibrosis score. While our findings are suggestive of a role for these factors in maintenance of the pretreatment state of HCV infection, the multiple-regression model accounted for only ≤4.6% of the [HCV RNA]BLdifferences between individuals (R2= 0.046 for 1,304 patients with HAI scores; 0.043 for all 2,472 patients).