The dynamics of a delay model of hepatitis B virus infection with logistic hepatocyte growth
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Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287
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Department of Biology, Scottsdale Community College, Scottsdale, AZ 85256
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Department of Math & Statistics, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287 - 1804
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Received:
01 May 2008
Accepted:
29 June 2018
Published:
01 March 2009
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MSC :
Primary: 34K20, 92C50; Secondary: 92D25.
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Chronic HBV affects 350 million people and can lead to death through cirrhosis-induced
liver failure or hepatocellular carcinoma. We analyze the dynamics of a model considering
logistic hepatocyte growth and a standard incidence function governing viral infection.
This model also considers an explicit time delay in virus production. With this model
formulation all model parameters can be estimated from biological data; we also simulate
a course of lamivudine therapy and find that the model gives good agreement with clinical
data. Previous models considering constant hepatocyte growth have permitted only two
dynamical possibilities: convergence to a virus free or a chronic steady state. Our
model admits a third possibility of sustained oscillations. We show that when the
basic reproductive number is greater than 1 there exists a biologically meaningful
chronic steady state, and the stability of this steady state is dependent upon both
the rate of hepatocyte regeneration and the virulence of the disease. When the
chronic steady state is unstable, simulations show the existence of an attracting
periodic orbit. Minimum hepatocyte populations are very small in the periodic
orbit, and such a state likely represents acute liver failure. Therefore, the
often sudden onset of liver failure in chronic HBV patients can be explained as
a switch in stability caused by the gradual evolution of parameters representing
the disease state.
Citation: Steffen Eikenberry, Sarah Hews, John D. Nagy, Yang Kuang. The dynamics of a delay model of hepatitis B virus infection with logistic hepatocyte growth[J]. Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering, 2009, 6(2): 283-299. doi: 10.3934/mbe.2009.6.283
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Abstract
Chronic HBV affects 350 million people and can lead to death through cirrhosis-induced
liver failure or hepatocellular carcinoma. We analyze the dynamics of a model considering
logistic hepatocyte growth and a standard incidence function governing viral infection.
This model also considers an explicit time delay in virus production. With this model
formulation all model parameters can be estimated from biological data; we also simulate
a course of lamivudine therapy and find that the model gives good agreement with clinical
data. Previous models considering constant hepatocyte growth have permitted only two
dynamical possibilities: convergence to a virus free or a chronic steady state. Our
model admits a third possibility of sustained oscillations. We show that when the
basic reproductive number is greater than 1 there exists a biologically meaningful
chronic steady state, and the stability of this steady state is dependent upon both
the rate of hepatocyte regeneration and the virulence of the disease. When the
chronic steady state is unstable, simulations show the existence of an attracting
periodic orbit. Minimum hepatocyte populations are very small in the periodic
orbit, and such a state likely represents acute liver failure. Therefore, the
often sudden onset of liver failure in chronic HBV patients can be explained as
a switch in stability caused by the gradual evolution of parameters representing
the disease state.
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