HCV and co-morbid alcohol use disorders: a translational investigation of antiviral therapy outcomes on CNS function

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is often associated with extrahepatic manifestations, including central nervous system (CNS) damage and neuropsychiatric impairments that can be exacerbated by alcohol abuse. More than half of patients with chronic HCV infection complain of “brain fog” (impaired cognition, fatigue). The introduction of direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies has revolutionized HCV treatment, with sustained viral response (SVR) rates of ~90%. The VA is now offering DAA therapy to all Veterans with HCV treated within VA health care systems, including those with alcohol use disorders (AUDs)—a common co-morbidity among Veterans with HCV. Despite this progress and expansion in HCV treatment efforts, there are insufficient data on brain function outcomes (e.g., outcomes that affect daily life such as cognitive abilities, fatigue, and substance abuse behavior) following DAA therapy. There are also limited data on the effects of viral clearance on inflammatory factors that putatively influence neuropsychiatric function. This Merit Review project plans to conduct a longitudinal study of adults (with and without AUDs) undergoing antiviral therapy for the treatment of HCV. Demographically- matched comparison groups of Veterans without HCV (with and without AUD) will also be evaluated to determine the relative contribution of HCV to outcomes that are affected by alcohol abuse. It is hypothesized that adults with HCV and co-morbid AUDs may be at increased risk of persistent brain dysfunction following DAA therapy. By comparing neuropsychiatric functioning, cortical activity, white matter integrity, and immune response among Veterans with and without active AUD before and after DAA therapy, results from this study are expected to determine the extent of improvement in brain function (e.g., neural connectivity and cognitive abilities) and reduction in inflammation that is achieved by successful completion of DAA therapy. Two specific aims are proposed. Aim 1 will evaluate the impact of DAA therapy on CNS function in Veterans with HCV and will test the hypotheses that following DAA therapy and obtaining an SVR, participants will show: i) improved neuropsychiatric outcomes (e.g., cognitive function, fatigue, mood), as compared to baseline (pre-DAA therapy), ii) restored functional connectivity and disintegrity within white matter tracks that had detectable deficits at baseline, and iii) normalization of immune activation profiles (e.g., decreased expression of inflammatory cytokines and restored T cell phenotypes), as compared to baseline. Aim 2 will use general linear models to assess whether change in the response (e.g., CNS functional outcomes) between post- and pre-DAA therapy differs among the four groups—either due to AUD, HCV, or the potential interaction of these factors—to determine the impact of an active AUD on neuropsychiatric, neuroimaging, and immunological outcomes. Participants will be assessed at baseline and 12 weeks pos...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9815311
Project number
5I01BX002061-06
Recipient
PORTLAND VA MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
JENNIFER M LOFTIS
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2013-10-01 → 2022-09-30