In hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the clinical significance of soluble immune checkpoint protein levels as predictors of patient outcomes or therapeutic responses has yet to be defined. This study profiled the baseline levels of sixteen soluble checkpoint proteins and their changes following sorafenib treatment for HCC. Plasma samples were obtained from 53 patients with advanced HCC at baseline, week 1, 2 and 4 of sorafenib treatment and tested the concentrations of 16 soluble checkpoint proteins using multiplexed fluorescent bead-based immunoassays. Multivariate analysis showed high sBTLA levels at baseline were an independent predictor of poor overall survival (p = 0.038). BTLA was highly expressed in T cells and macrophages in peritumoral areas. At week 2, sCD27 levels were decreased compared to baseline. By contrast, the concentrations of most inhibitory proteins, including sBTLA, sLAG-3, sCTLA-4, sPD-1, sCD80, sCD86 and sPD-L1, had significantly increased. The fold-changes of soluble checkpoint receptors and their ligands, including sCTLA-4 with sCD80/sCD86, sPD-1 with sPD-L1; and the foldchanges of sCTLA-4 with sBTLA or sPD-1 were positively correlated. sBTLA may be a good biomarker for predicting overall survival in HCC patients. Sorafenib treatment in patients with advanced HCC revealed dynamic changes of soluble checkpoint protein levels.
Aim Patients who undergo the Fontan procedure for complex congenital heart disease are prone to liver cirrhosis. Liver stiffness (LS) reflects liver fibrosis stage in patients with chronic viral hepatitis; however, its accuracy in predicting liver fibrosis stage in Fontan patients is controversial. We aimed to clarify the correlation between LS and liver fibrosis stage in Fontan patients. Methods Fifty‐eight Fontan patients were prospectively measured for LS with transient elastography. We undertook liver biopsy, cardiac catheterization, and laboratory tests in 22 of these patients (median age, 14.7 years; range, 9.9–32.1 years) with LS > 11.0 kPa (median, 19.2 kPa; range, 12.2–39.8 kPa); these elevated LS values suggest liver cirrhosis. Results Histologically, all patients showed mild‐to‐severe portal and sinusoidal fibrosis but no cirrhosis. Statistically, LS did not predict histological liver fibrosis scores (p = 0.175). Liver stiffness was not correlated with central venous pressure (p = 0.456) or with the hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG; p = 0.062), although the p value for HVPG was only slightly above the threshold for significance. Conclusions Fontan patients are prone to developing both portal and sinusoidal fibrosis. Liver stiffness could be influenced by HVPG, and using the conventional cut‐off values for LS overestimates and overtreats liver fibrosis in these patients.
Stress can affect our body and is known to lead to some diseases. However, the influence on the development of non-alcohol fatty liver disease (NAFLD) remains unknown. This study demonstrated that chronic restraint stress attenuated hepatic lipid accumulation via elevation of hepatic -muricholic acid (MCA) levels in the development of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in mice. Serum cortisol and corticosterone levels, i.e., human and rodent stress markers, were correlated with serum bile acid levels in patients with NAFLD and methionine-and choline-deficient (MCD) diet-induced mice, respectively, suggesting that stress is related to bile acid (BA) homeostasis in NASH. In the mouse model, hepatic MCA and cholic acid (CA) levels were increased after the stress challenge. Considering that a short stress enhanced hepatic CYP7A1 protein levels in normal mice and corticosterone increased CYP7A1 protein levels in primary mouse hepatocytes, the enhanced Cyp7a1 expression was postulated to be involved in the chronic stress-increased hepatic MCA level. Interestingly, chronic stress decreased hepatic lipid levels in MCD-induced NASH mice. Furthermore, MCA suppressed lipid accumulation in mouse primary hepatocytes exposed to palmitic acid/oleic acid, but CA did not. In addition, Cyp7a1 expression seemed to be related to lipid accumulation in hepatocytes. In conclusion, chronic stress can change hepatic lipid accumulation in NASH mice, disrupting BA homeostasis via induction of hepatic Cyp7a1 expression. This study discovered a new MCA action in the liver, indicating the possibility that MCA is available for NAFLD therapy.
Objective Patients who undergo Fontan surgery for complex cardiac anomalies are prone to developing liver and gastrointestinal complications. In particular, gastroesophageal varices (GEVs) can occur, but their prevalence is unknown. We aimed to elucidate the occurrence of GEVs and the predicting parameters of GEVs in these patients. Materials and methods Twenty-seven patients (median age, 14.8 years; median time since surgery, 12.9 years) who had undergone the Fontan surgery and were examined by abdominal dynamic computed tomography (CT) for the routine follow-up were included in the study. Radiological findings including GEVs and extraintestinal complications were retrospectively evaluated by experienced radiologists in a blinded manner. Relationships between blood-biochemical and demographic parameters and the presence of GEVs were statistically analyzed. Results Dynamic CT revealed gastric varices (n = 3, 11.1%), esophageal varices (n = 1, 3.7%), and gastrorenal shunts (n = 5, 18.5%). All patients with gastric varices had gastrorenal shunts. All gastric varices were endoscopically confirmed as being isolated and enlarged, with indications for preventive interventional therapy. A platelet count lower than 119 × 109 /L was identified as a predictor of GEV (area under the receiver operating curve, 0.946; sensitivity, 100%; and specificity, 87%). Conclusions GEVs are important complications that should not be ignored in patients who have undergone a Fontan procedure. Platelet counts lower than 119 × 109 /L may help to prompt patient screening by using abdominal dynamic CT to identify GEVs and their draining collateral veins in these patients.
The appropriate management of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection during pregnancy has not been established in Japan. We herein report five HBV-infected pregnant Japanese women who received tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF). Two of them had been born after the introduction of nationwide immunoprophylaxis and were vertically infected with HBV, highlighting the need to address mother-to-child transmission further. In both entecavir-experienced and nucleoside/nucleotide analog-naïve mothers, TDF suppressed HBV replication without serious adverse events. All five children were free from congenital disorders, growth impairment, and HBV infection. TDF showed safety and efficacy for pregnant woman with chronic hepatitis B and might have helped prevent mother-to-child transmission.
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