The study involved 237 patients with chronic HCV genotype 1 infection (75 with cirrhosis) and 342 healthy controls. The CXCL1 rs4074 polymorphism was determined by a LightSNiP assay on the LightCycler system. CXCL1 serum levels and induction in response to HCV proteins were studied by ELISA.
Distributions of CXCL1 genotypes (GG/GA/AA) matched the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in all subgroups (HCV-associated cirrhosis: 29.3%/54.7%/16.0%; non-cirrhotic HCV infection: 45.1%/44.4%/10.5%, healthy controls: 46.2%/40.9%/12.9%). HCV-infected cirrhotic patients had a significantly greater CXCL1 rs4074 A allele frequency (43.3%) than patients without cirrhosis (32.7%, OR = 1.573, p = 0.03) and healthy controls (33.3%, OR = 1.529, p = 0.02). In vitro carriers of the A allele produced greater amounts of CXCL1 in response to TLR2-ligands including HCV core and NS3, and HCV-infected carriers of the CXCL1 rs4074 A allele had higher CXCL1 serum levels than those with the G/G genotype. Moreover, multivariate Cox-regression analysis confirmed age and the presence of a CXCL1 rs4074 A allele as risk factors for cirrhosis.
Enhanced production of CXCL1 in response to HCV antigens in carriers of the rs4074 A allele together with its increased frequency in cirrhotic patients with hepatitis C suggest the CXCL1 rs4074 A allele as a genetic risk factor for cirrhosis progression in hepatitis C.