Co-reporter:Giovanni Sitia;Roberto Aiolfi;Pietro Di Lucia;Marta Mainetti;Amleto Fiocchi;Francesca Mingozzi;Antonio Esposito;Zaverio M. Ruggeri;Francis V. Chisari;Matteo Iannacone;Luca G. Guidotti;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2012 109(32) pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 2, 2012
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1209182109
Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
The pathogenesis of HBV-associated HCC involves both viral and host factors. The latter include a functionally inefficient
CD8+ T-cell response that fails to clear the infection from the liver but sustains a chronic necroinflammatory process that contributes
to the development of HCC. According to this scenario, amelioration of immune-mediated chronic liver injury may prevent HCC.
Because platelets facilitate immune-mediated liver injury by promoting the hepatic accumulation of virus-specific CD8+ T cells, we evaluated the long-term consequences of antiplatelet therapy in an HBV transgenic mouse model of chronic immune-mediated
necroinflammatory liver disease that progresses to HCC. Treatment with aspirin and clopidogrel during the chronic phase of
the disease diminished the number of intrahepatic HBV-specific CD8+ T cells and HBV-nonspecific inflammatory cells, the severity of liver fibrosis, and the development of HCC. Antiplatelet
therapy improved overall survival without causing significant side effects. In contrast, the same antiplatelet regimen had
no antitumor effect when HCC was induced nonimmunologically by chronic exposure to a hepatotoxic chemical. The unprecedented
observation that antiplatelet therapy inhibits or delays immune-mediated hepatocarcinogenesis suggests that platelets may
be key players in the pathogenesis of HBV-associated liver cancer and supports the notion that immune-mediated necroinflammatory
reactions are an important cause of hepatocellular transformation during chronic hepatitis.