Overview of HBV associated HBV-HCV coinfection

HBV-HCV coinfection HBV-HCV coinfection is HCV-HBV viral interactions in patients. The progression of liver disease to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma is generally faster in patients who are coinfected, and HCV is usually more predominant. Immunosuppression of the host or eradication of hepatitis C can change this paradigm, causing hepatitis B reactivation.


ID Literature Title Group
1 12358268 Core promoter mutations 3 years after anti-hepatitis B e seroconversion in patients with chronic hepatitis B or hepatitis B and C infection and cancer remission.
Mutation
2 20549958 [Genotype distribution of chronic hepatitis B and hepatitis C patients and investigation of the resistance patterns in hepatitis B cases].
Mutation
3 22061616 Precore/core promoter mutations and hepatitis B virus genotype in hepatitis B and C dually infected patients treated with interferon-based therapy.
Mutation
4 23805180 Occult and Overt HBV Co-Infections Independently Predict Postoperative Prognosis in HCV-Associated Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
Mutation
5 31542053 Hepatitis B virus reactivation sustained by a hepatitis B virus surface antigen immune-escape mutant isolate in a patient who was hepatitis B core antibody positive during treatment with sofosbuvir and velpatasvir for hepatitis C virus infection: a case report.
Mutation
Contents
Description
Group Note
  • Mutation Tag: literature about this virus mutation and click the eye icon to see detail mutation information in literature
  • VIS-cistrome Tag: literature associated this virus integration and click the eye icon to see detail information of 3 cistrome factors (histone modification, transcription factor binding site and chromatin accessibility)