Genetic variants of Nuclear Factor-Kappa B were associated with different outcomes of Hepatitis C virus infection among Egyptian patients

Infez Med. 2024 Sep 1;32(3):381-391. doi: 10.53854/liim-3203-13. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Background: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major risk factor for chronic hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) is a transcription factor that functions in health and disease. Genetic variants of the NF-κB gene can affect its function and are associated with chronic inflammatory changes and malignant transformation. This case-control study is aimed to determine the possible association between NF-κB genetic variants and different outcomes of HCV infection among Egyptian patients.

Subjects and methods: 295 subjects were recruited with allocation of participants in the representative group according to results of serological and molecular tests. Patients in the case group (group A) were further divided into three subgroups; subgroup I, mild chronic HCV, subgroup II, cirrhosis, and subgroup III, HCC subgroups (59 for each subgroup), group B included participants who experienced spontaneous viral clearance (n=59). All were compared to matched healthy control subjects, Group C (n=59). All participants were genotyped for NF-κB polymorphisms, rs11820062 by TaqMan assay and rs28362491 by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP).

Results: Risk analysis indicated that subjects carrying the rs11820062 A genotype are more susceptible to HCV infection (OR: 3.1; 95%, CI= 1.4-6.9). Subjects carrying the rs28362491 insertion genotype are at more risk of progression to cirrhosis when compared to healthy-controls and patients with mild chronic HCV (OR:7.7; 95% CI=2.4-24.3 and OR:5.1, 95% CI= 1.7-15.7, respectively) and also are at more risk of developing HCC when compared to healthy controls (OR:2.6; 95% CI= 0.94-7.3).

Conclusion: Polymorphisms affecting NF-κB different genes would modulate HCV infection susceptibility and clinical disease progression among Egyptian patients.

Keywords: HCV; Nuclear factor kappa B; cirrhosis; hepatocellular carcinoma; single nucleotide polymorphism; susceptibility.