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HBeAg-Negative/Anti-HBe-Positive Chronic Hepatitis B: A 40-Year-Old History. Viruses 2022; 14:v14081691. [PMID: 36016312 PMCID: PMC9416321 DOI: 10.3390/v14081691] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/12/2022] [Revised: 07/28/2022] [Accepted: 07/28/2022] [Indexed: 12/03/2022] Open
Abstract
Hepatitis B “e” antigen (HBeAg) negative chronic hepatitis B (CHB), 40 years since discovery in the Mediterranean area, has become the most prevalent form of HBV-induced liver disease worldwide and a major health care burden caused by HBV infection. A great deal of knowledge accumulated over the last decades provides consistent evidence on the bimodal dynamics of the expression of structural and non-structural forms of the viral core proteins which associate with different virologic and clinic–pathologic outcomes of HBV infection. In absence of serum HBeAg, the presence and persistence of HBV replication causes and maintains virus-related liver injury. Thus, in clinical practice it is mandatory to screen HBV carriers with HBeAg-negative infection for the early diagnosis of HBeAg-negative CHB since antiviral therapy can cure HBV-induced liver disease when started at early stages.
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Abstract
Hepatitis B is a serious disease that is endemic in many parts of the world. A significant proportion of patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) are infected with a variant form of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) which decreases or abolishes the production of hepatitis B e-antigen (HBeAg). The purpose of this literature review is to describe the epidemiology of HBeAg-negative CHB (e-CHB) worldwide. A literature search was conducted to identify studies pertaining to e-CHB and underlying variants (precore and core promoter). Fifty studies were included in our analysis. The median prevalence of e-CHB among patients with chronic HBV infection was 33% in the Mediterranean, 15% in Asia Pacific, and 14% in the USA and Northern Europe. The pre core stop codon variant was detected in a median of 60% (range 0-100%) of HBeAg-negative patients overall, 92% in the Mediterranean, 50% in Asia Pacific and 24% in the USA and Northern Europe. There were very few data on the prevalence of core promoter variants outside Asia where the median prevalence among HBeAg-negative patients was 77%. This literature review revealed that e-CHB is more common than previously suspected and that it is present worldwide with marked variations in the prevalence of associated HBV variants across different geographical regions. Additional research using population based samples of adequate size based on a consensus definition of e-CHB and using standardized HBV DNA assays is needed to better estimate the true prevalence of e-CHB and its associated HBV variants.
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Abstract
Two groups of patients with HBV DNA-positive chronic active hepatitis B, from 20 French hospitals, separated according to HBe status, were prospectively subjected to a comparative analysis of various epidemiological, clinical, biochemical, serologic and histologic features. There were 61 patients with anti-HBe and 215 patients with HBeAg. At diagnosis, 25 variables were compared between the two groups. Some of the patients were followed up for 1 year. Anti-HBe chronic hepatitis B occurred with a prevalence of 22.1%. In the anti-HBe-chronic hepatitis B group, the patients were older, and more often of Southern European origin; the source of infection was more frequently unknown, hepatitis B markers were more frequently observed within the family, and the estimated duration of liver disease was longer. Serum HBV DNA levels were lower in the anti-HBe-positive group. No difference was observed in ALT levels at diagnosis and during follow up in the patients studied. Cirrhosis was more frequent in the anti-HBe-positive group. There was no difference in histological activity score between the two groups. These results suggest that anti-HBe-positive, chronic active hepatitis B is not rare in France, and that the higher occurrence of cirrhosis in this group may be related to a longer duration of the disease.
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Analysis of hepatitis B virus DNA, liver disease and influence of antibody to hepatitis C virus in anti-HBe chronic carriers. LIVER 1991; 11:352-7. [PMID: 1664015 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0676.1991.tb00542.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/28/2022]
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus DNA (HBV-DNA) in serum was studied in 67 anti-HBe patients using dot-blot hybridization, a modified technique and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). All patients had abnormal aminotransferase (ALT) levels. Serum HBV-DNA was detected in 14/67 cases by dot-blot and in 39/67 (DNA probe) and 45/67 (RNA probe) using the modified technique. The RNA probe was more sensitive than the DNA probe when they were compared, using serial dilutions of HBV-DNA of known concentration (0.1 pg vs 1 pg, respectively). HBV-DNA was found by PCR in 57/67 patients. Ten patients were negative to serum HBV-DNA. The ALT level was significantly higher in patients with serum HBV-DNA by dot-blot as compared to those who had serum HBV-DNA by the modified technique and PCR. With respect to the presence of anti-HCV, 6/67 had anti-HCV confirmed by RIBA test. These 6 patients had serum HBV-DNA. The route of acquisition of HBV infection in anti-HCV positive patients was by parenteral exposure in 67% of the cases and 15% in HCV negative (p less than 0.05). All patients were negative to nonorganic specific autoantibodies. In summary, most of the anti-HBe patients (85%) had viral replication. HCV superinfection plays a minor role in the activity of liver disease.
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Abstract
The biological and clinical significances of pre-S antigens and HBV replication were investigated. Some 125 sera, 28 from HBeAg and 97 from anti-HBe-positive HBsAg, carriers were studied. The aim was to verify whether pre-S antigens could be expressed in serum in complete absence of viremia. Pre-S proteins, determined by an enzyme immunoassay, were found in sera regardless of the presence of HBV DNA, as detected by spot-hybridization. The sera without detectable HBV DNA were investigated further by PCR using specific primers for the S and C regions of HBV. PCR analysis of samples revealed that 4 out of 5 HBeAg and 33 out of 41 (80.5%) anti-HBe positive sera contained HBV-amplified sequences of S and C regions. Pre-S antigen values correlated well with the amounts of HBV DNA in serum detected by PCR in anti-HBe-positive subjects with high titers of pre-S antigens (10(4)-10(6)). In addition, PCR highlighted the presence of HBV DNA sequences in 8 out of 17 (47.1%) pre-S-negative HBsAg-positive sera.
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Abstract
To investigate the infectivity of hepatitis B virus (HBV) from mothers to their newborn offspring, HBV-DNA in plasma and peripheral mononuclear cells from 28 antihepatitis Be positive, hepatitis B surface antigen positive carrier mothers was examined by a highly sensitive polymerase chain reaction/Southern hybridisation technique. HBV specific DNA was detected in three maternal mononuclear cell samples, but was absent in plasma. Two of four infants born to the three mothers with HBV-DNA positive mononuclear cells developed acute or fulminant hepatitis within three months after birth. Two infants were effectively prevented from infection with HBV by combined hepatitis B immunoglobulin/HBV vaccine administration. The 25 infants born to the HBV-DNA negative mothers were free of HBV infection within the next seven months to 3.5 years. These results suggest that latent infection with HBV in maternal mononuclear cells is responsible for perinatal HBV infection.
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Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA was detected with amplification by the polymerase chain reaction method. Cloned HBV DNA equivalent to one virus genome (3 x 10(-6) pg) was detectable by ethidium bromide staining after 50 cycles of polymerase chain reaction. By applying this method, presence of HBV DNA was studied in 23 hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive and 11 HBsAg-negative sera from patients with chronic liver disease. Hepatitis B virus DNA was positive in 8 of 8 hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-positive, in 2 of 2 HBeAg- and anti-HBe-negative, and in 12 of 13 anti-HBe-positive sera. Hepatitis B virus DNA was undetectable in all HBsAg-negative sera even with amplification. To confirm specificity, the amplified product was directly sequenced. Sequences around 122nd and 160th codon of HBs gene, which determines subtypes d/y and w/r, respectively, were analyzed. The results were compatible with recent reports regarding the relation between HBV subtypes and HBV DNA sequence at those codons. Hepatitis B virus DNA could be detected at the level of one virion by gene amplification method, and its sequence could be determined by direct sequencing in a few days.
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Chronic active hepatitis with hepatitis B virus DNA and antibody against e antigen in the serum. Disturbed synthesis and secretion of e antigen from hepatocytes due to a point mutation in the precore region. Gastroenterology 1990; 99:1113-9. [PMID: 2394332 DOI: 10.1016/0016-5085(90)90632-b] [Citation(s) in RCA: 117] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
Some patients with type B chronic active hepatitis have a high titer of hepatitis B virus DNA despite antibody against e antigen in the serum. Clones of hepatitis B virus were propagated from the sera of seven patients with this disease, and the precore region was sequenced. Essentially all clones (128/131 or 98%) showed a point mutation from guanine to adenine at nucleotide 83, converting codon 28 for tryptophan (TGG) to a stop codon (TAG); the second guanine-to-adenine point mutation at nucleotide 86 was identified in only 29 clones from two patients. In patients followed up since they had hepatitis B e antigen, a shift from guanine to adenine was observed at nucleotide 83 along with the seroconversion to the antibody to e antigen. The precore-region product is required for the synthesis and secretion of e antigen from hepatocytes. A point mutation from guanine to adenine at nucleotide 83 observed in the seven patients, therefore, would be responsible for disturbed secretion of e antigen.
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Hepatitis B virus replication in patients with chronic liver diseases. GASTROENTEROLOGIA JAPONICA 1990; 25:258-64. [PMID: 2347477 DOI: 10.1007/bf02776826] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
One hundred and seventy five subjects with chronic liver diseases which included patients with chronic active hepatitis (90), liver cirrhosis (31) and asymptomatic hepatitis B carriers (54), were included in the study. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) specific DNA-polymerase activity and HBe-markers were tested as markers of HBV-multiplication. In HBsAg positive samples, DNA-P activity was positive in 44.4% of the HBV carriers, 52.9% of the patients with chronic active hepatitis and 81.8% of the patients with liver cirrhosis. The corresponding figures for the presence of HBeAg in these groups were 18.5, 26.5 and 45.5% respectively. Virus multiplication was also observed in 41.1 and 44.4% patients with chronic active hepatitis and liver cirrhosis respectively, in the absence of HBsAg. The results of the present study show that hepatitis B virus is the most important etiological factor of chronic liver diseases in India. Most of our patients of chronic liver diseases seems to have contacted HBV infection as young adults and the mode of transmission is likely to be horizontal rather than vertical. The virus replicating markers correlate well with the severity of the liver injury and decreased with the age. DNA-P activity is a more sensitive marker of viral multiplication than HBeAg. Viral multiplication was also found to occur in the absence of the usual HBV markers. Continued viral multiplication in patients with chronic active hepatitis and liver cirrhosis is implicated in continued liver injury and progressive liver disease.
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Intrahepatic expression of HBcAg and delta antigen in anti-HBe positive HBsAg carriers with acute exacerbation or chronic active liver disease. J Med Virol 1990; 30:181-6. [PMID: 2341834 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.1890300307] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
Intrahepatic expression of HBcAg and hepatitis delta antigen (HDAg) was studied in 43 patients with acute exacerbation AE and 37 with chronic active liver disease CALD, in order to evaluate the role of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) superinfection in development of AE or CALD in anti-HBe positive HBsAg carriers in Taiwan, and the results were compared with 37 patients with only minor hepatitic activity. Only 8.1% of patients with minor hepatitic activity were HBcAg positive, and none were HDAg positive. In contrast, 41.8% and 32.6% of patients with AE were positive for HBcAg and HDAg, respectively, and the other 25.6% were negative for both. The clinical features of AE showed no difference in relation to HBcAg and HDAg activity in the liver except that patients without HBcAg and HDAg were predominantly older adults. These patients might be supposed to have non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANB) virus superinfection, as many reports have shown a predominance of older patients in acute NANB hepatitis. Of the patients with CALD, 40.5% were HBcAg positive, 27.0% were HDAg positive, and 32.5% were positive for neither. Histological features of CALD were identified in 83.3% and 100% of patients with HBcAg and HDAg activity, respectively, but only in 26.1% of those without HBcAg and HDAg. The etiology of CALD in the latter group remains unclear. Furthermore, some of the anti-delta seropositive patients with AE or CALD expressed HBcAg rather than HDAg in the liver.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Investigation of HBV infection status in anti-HBe Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis by in situ hybridization assay. JOURNAL OF TONGJI MEDICAL UNIVERSITY = TONG JI YI KE DA XUE XUE BAO 1989; 9:199-203. [PMID: 2630647 DOI: 10.1007/bf02909083] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/01/2023]
Abstract
To investigate HBV infection in anti-HBe positive Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis, demonstration of intrahepatocellular HBV-DNA was performed by in situ hybridization technique, coupled with detection of intrahepatic HBcAg and HBsAg. Based on the presence or absence of HBV-DNA, HBcAg and HBsAg of 15 cases, three subgroups were identified: 1) 4 cases with HBV active replication characterized by intrahepatic HBV-DNA, HBcAg and HBsAg copositive; 2) 8 cases with HBV incomplete replication or antigen expression defined as positivity of both intrahepatic HBV-DNA and HBsAg; 3) 3 cases with HBV inactive replication described as absence of intrahepatic HBV-DNA, HBcAg and HBsAg. All findings strongly suggest that different HBV infection status could be distinguished among Chinese patients with seroconversion from HBeAg to anti-HBe positivity: a small number of cases had stopped replication; but part of the cases was still undergoing HBV active replication; on the other hand, HBV infection status in half of the remaining cases seemed to stay in an intermediate phase from active virus replication to inactive replication.
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Clearance of hepatitis B virus DNA and pre-S surface antigens in patients with markers of acute viral replication. J Med Virol 1989; 28:169-75. [PMID: 2754427 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.1890280312] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/02/2023]
Abstract
To clarify the relationship between the pre-S antigens and other serological markers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication, we followed up 27 patients: 21 presented with symptoms of acute hepatitis (two progressed to chronicity) and six suffered from chronic hepatitis. Pre-S1, pre-S2, HBV DNA, IgM antihepatitis core antigen (HBc), hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), and anti-HBe were detected in about 200 sera serially collected at different times for at least 6-12 months from the onset of clinical observation. In the early symptomatic phase of acute hepatitis, the pre-S1 and pre-S2 antigens were present in 95% of the cases and correlated well with high levels of alanine-transferase (ALT) and IgM anti-HBc, while HBV DNA was present in the sera of only six (28.6%) patients (P less than 0.0001). This was the first marker to disappear (1 month after the initial stage). All of the HBV DNA-positive patients were also HBeAg positive, whereas no HBeAg-negative subjects were found with serum HBV DNA. In the six chronic patients, pre-S antigens were always present independently of the HBeAg/anti-HBe status; HBV DNA was detected in three of them, even if transiently, and in two of these it reappeared together with pre-S2 epitope. The follow-up data suggest that, in acute hepatitis, the clearance of pre-S antigens can be considered as a prognostic index of clinical resolution and that, in chronic hepatitis, the persistence of pre-S antigens seems to indicate progression of the disease. In particular, pre-S2, in patients in whom it is intermittent, can be considered as an index of reactivation.
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Hepatitis B-DNA replication and histological patterns in liver biopsy specimens of chronic HBsAg positive patients with and without hepatitis delta virus superinfection. J Clin Pathol 1989; 42:689-93. [PMID: 2760230 PMCID: PMC1142015 DOI: 10.1136/jcp.42.7.689] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/02/2023]
Abstract
The role of active hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in chronic HBsAg positive hepatitis with and without hepatitis delta virus (HDV) superinfection was analysed in percutaneous liver biopsy specimens from 50 patients. Each specimen was divided into two--one part for histological evaluation and for the detection of HBcAg and delta antigen; the other part was tested for HBV-DNA using Southern blotting. Ten cases were of chronic lobular hepatitis, 10 of chronic persistent hepatitis, and 30 of chronic active hepatitis. Ten cases were delta antigen positive and showed high grade lobular activity but no evidence of HBV-DNA episomal forms or HBcAg reactivity. Twenty one cases showed HBV-DNA replicative intermediate forms; 19 had high grade lobular activity, which occurred in five cases without evidence of free viral DNA. Of the 21 biopsy specimens with HBV-DNA episomal forms, 14 were positive for HBcAg; only one of the 19 cases without detectable viral DNA was positive for such antigen. These data indicate that the presence of HBV or HDV active infection correlates with the histological finding of prominent lobular necrosis. Moreover, intrahepatic HBV-DNA seems to be a more sensitive marker than the presence of viral antigens for indicating HBV replication.
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Abstract
Twenty-eight patients with chronic active hepatitis without cirrhosis who were positive for hepatitis B surface antigen and antibody to hepatitis B e antigen were followed for 1 to 15 years (mean 6.6 years) and underwent follow-up biopsy. At presentation, 12 of the 28 patients (43%) had hepatitis B virus DNA in serum, 10 (36%) had serologic evidence of hepatitis delta virus infection and 6 (21%) had no serologic markers of either hepatitis B virus replication or hepatitis delta virus infection. During follow-up, 15 (54%) patients developed active cirrhosis, including eight patients with hepatitis delta virus infection and five with hepatitis B virus DNA in serum. In seven (47%) of the 15 patients, cirrhosis developed within the first 2 years; all seven patients had bridging necrosis in the first liver biopsy, and five of these were infected with hepatitis delta virus. The remaining 13 (46%) patients did not develop cirrhosis during follow-up and showed either unchanged features of chronic active hepatitis (seven cases) or histologic improvement to chronic persistent hepatitis (five cases) or to normal liver (one case). In conclusion, the prognosis of anti-HBe-positive patients with chronic hepatitis B is poor, as 54% of the cases developed cirrhosis during a mean histologic follow-up period of 4.5 years, mainly in association with hepatitis delta virus infection or continuing hepatitis B virus replication.
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Hepatitis B virus DNA in serum. Applied molecular biology in the evaluation of hepatitis B infection. LIVER 1988; 8:257-80. [PMID: 3059122 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0676.1988.tb01004.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/03/2023]
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Interrupted replication of hepatitis B virus in liver tissue of HBsAg carriers with hepatocellular carcinoma. Virology 1988; 166:103-12. [PMID: 2842938 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(88)90151-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 55] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/02/2023]
Abstract
To search for events underlying reduction of peripheral viremia and integration of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA into the liver cell genome in long-term virus carriers with hepatocellular carcinoma, paired samples of liver and tumor tissue were analyzed by molecular hybridization and immunological methods. Most tumor tissues contained integrated viral DNA; in none was extrachromosomal HBV DNA detected. Integrated HBV DNS was also found in peritumor liver tissue in the majority of patients. However, liver of patients either with or without peripheral viremia also contained free HBV DNA and replicative intermediates. In three nonviremic patients with replicative HBV DNA in liver, viral core antigen expression was markedly reduced or absent, whereas viral envelope protein (surface antigen) expression was normal. In one case, replicative intermediates in liver were sensitive to DNase I digestion, indicating that viral DNA was not encapsidated in normal viral core particles. These results suggest that decreased or defective core antigen production can lead to reduced viremia associated with blocked virus assembly/secretion and accumulation of unencapsidated HBV DNA replicative intermediates in the liver cell. Accumulation of such HBV DNA molecular forms in the liver may lead to an increased propensity for HBV DNA to integrate into the host genome, which has been found with high frequency in hepatic neoplasms from patients infected with hepatitis B virus.
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Abstract
The presence and distribution of hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) was studied in the liver of 227 chronic carriers of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) to investigate its relationship with serum HBV-DNA, the status of hepatitis B 'e' antigen/antibody (HBeAg/anti-HBe) and the underlying liver disease. HBcAg was detected in 144 of the 227 (63%) liver specimens and HBV-DNA in 132 (58%) of the corresponding sera. Serum HBV-DNA showed a constant link with intrahepatic HBcAg. Out of 96 HBeAg-positive patients, 91 (95%) had HBcAg in the liver and 85 (89%) had HBV-DNA in serum. Overall there was a significant link between HBeAg and HBV-DNA in serum, but there was no correlation in 58 out of 227 (26%) cases. In HBeAg/HBV-DNA-positive carriers, HBcAg expression was predominantly nuclear. It was nuclear and cytoplasmic in patients with the highest levels of viremia. Eleven out of 13 (85%) HBV-DNA-positive patients who had only cytoplasmic HBcAg were HBcAg-negative and had low levels of HBV-DNA. Nine of 13 (69%) patients with exclusively cytoplasmic HBcAg had severe chronic liver disease. Neither the presence of HBV-DNA and HBeAg in serum nor the nuclear localization of HBcAg were associated with the severity of liver damage. In the group of HBV-DNA-positive patients (132), the presence of liver disease was significantly connected with the absence of HBeAg in serum (P less than 0.05; C.L. 3-35).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Abstract
Prior to hepatitis B vaccination, 36,000 persons of the medical staff were tested for HBs antigen, HBc antibodies, and HBs antibodies. 210 sera were found positive for HBs antigen and HBc antibodies. Of these sera, 171 were available for testing for hepatitis B virus DNA as a marker of infectivity by spot hybridization. DNA was detected in only 15. One hundred and thirty-nine had HBe antibodies but no detectable HBe antigen, and only two of these were hepatitis B virus DNA positive. 12 had neither HBe antigen nor HBe antibodies and none had hepatitis B virus DNA. Hepatitis B virus DNA was, however, detected in 13 of 20 HBe antigen-positive but HBe antibody-negative sera. Our study confirms epidemiological observations that medical staff hardly plays any role as a source of HBV infection for patients.
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Assessment of hepatitis B virus DNA levels in chronic HBsAg carriers with or without hepatitis delta virus superinfection. J Hepatol 1988; 6:208-13. [PMID: 3411100 DOI: 10.1016/s0168-8278(88)80033-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
In order to document the incidence of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) replication markers and their relationship to HBV replication, 91 HBsAg chronic carriers were studied. Of these, 51 were anti-HD-positive (19 HBeAg-positive and 32 anti-HBe-positive). Liver HDAg was found in 75% of anti-HD-positive patients. Of the 19 patients who had anti-HD and HBeAg, 13 were HBV-DNA-positive. None of the anti-HBe patients were HBV-DNA-positive. No differences with respect to HBV-DNA concentration were observed between anti-HD-positive and -negative patients. Liver HDAg was detected with similar frequency in patients who were HBeAg- and HBV-DNA-positive (63.6%) and in those who were anti-HBe-positive (78.5%), with no statistically significant difference. HBcAg and HDAg were simultaneously detected in 36% of the anti-HD cases. Patients with anti-HD and HBV-DNA had the highest levels of transaminases (SGPT). Our results suggest that in certain patients HDV and HBV replication coexists without mutual inhibition.
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Abstract
Treatment of serum precipitates with sodium thiocyanate in patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication results in liberation of circulating hepatitis core antigen (HBcAg) which can be demonstrated radioimmunologically. Follow-up investigations were performed in 80 patients with acute hepatitis B. Sera were examined for HBcAg. HBV DNA and conventional HBV markers. At the time of admission to hospital 34 of 80 (42%) patients were HBeAg positive. Twenty-six (76%) of the 34 HBcAg positive patients were HBV DNA positive, and circulating HBcAg was detectable in 25 of 34 (73%) HBcAg positive cases. In patients with uncomplicated courses of acute hepatitis B the serological HBcAg assay and HBV DNA became negative 1 to 8 weeks before elimination of HBeAg and up to 12 weeks earlier than the sera became negative for HBsAg. Five patients (6%) showed transition to chronic hepatitis B with persistence of HBsAg, HBeAg, HBV DNA and HBcAg in serum. One patient with acute hepatitis B and development of chronic hepatitis suffered from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and showed delayed formation of anti-HBc. In this case uncomplexed HBcAg was demonstrable during the acute phase of hepatitis B. With the appearance of anti-HBc HBcAg circulated in a complexed form. The data indicate that serological determinations of HBcAg and HBV DNA can serve as prognostic markers in the early phase of acute hepatitis B. The demonstration of uncomplexed HBcAg in serum of a patient with inadequate formation of anti-HBc supports the hypothesis that circulating HBcAg is usually complexed by specific antibodies.
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Interferon treatment of chronic hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers. A description of the activation profiles of natural killer cells obtained with different schedules of administration in three subsets of carriers. LA RICERCA IN CLINICA E IN LABORATORIO 1987; 17:331-41. [PMID: 3438668 DOI: 10.1007/bf02886916] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
By monitoring immunobiological parameters known to be influenced by interferon (IFN), the natural killer (NK) cell activity of 10 low replication (anti-HBe) virus B-DNA (HBV-DNA) hepatitis patients receiving rIFN alpha-A, of 5 anti-HBe/delta positive hepatitis patients treated with rIFN alpha-2, and of 6 high replication (HBeAg) HBV-DNA hepatitis patients on lymphoblastoid IFN was followed-up during therapy. Overall, strong and significant (p less than 0.01) shift to increase segregated with the low replication subset; the delta positive subset was non-significantly increased (0.30 greater than p greater than 0.2); the high replication subset was depressed in a nearly significant (0.10 greater than p greater than 0.05) manner. Kinetic studies showed the activation of the first subset to follow an early steep rise and a subsequent plateau as fitted with a quadratic curve (p = 0.02); an early rise and a depression at 2 months delineated a complex cubic model (p = 0.06) in the high replication subset. The profound NK depression was clinically witnessed by a sharp rise of the aminotransferases and following drop of viremia. The study shows that i. discrete patterns of NK response as amenable to mathematical models may associate to differential patterns of virus B replication in patients responding to IFN; ii. point(s) on the NK curve may acquire clinical meaning as they coincide with a consensual or opposite shift of a clinical index.
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Abstract
Interleukin-2, a product of helper T cells, is essentially involved in the regulation of cell-mediated immunity. Two monocyte-derived factors, interleukin-1 and prostaglandin E2, influence interleukin-2 synthesis with opposite actions. To analyse immunoregulatory function in HBsAg-positive chronic active hepatitis, T cell subsets in peripheral blood and the levels of interleukin-2, interleukin-1 and prostaglandin E2 in supernatants from lectin- or lipopolysaccharide-activated peripheral mononuclear cell cultures were determined in 16 healthy controls and 33 patients with chronic active hepatitis B. Interleukin-2 activity was comparable to the controls in patients without delta infection who had seroconverted to anti-HBe (group 1), but it was significantly reduced in both HBeAg-positive subjects (group 2) (P less than 0.05 vs. controls and group 1) and those cases with positive delta markers (group 3) (P less than 0.01 and less than 0.05 vs. controls and group 1, respectively). In group 3, interleukin-2 was similarly diminished in both anti-HTLV-III-positive and -negative cases as well as in HBeAg- and anti-HBe-positive subjects. Notwithstanding the changes in interleukin-2 activity, no significant differences in the number of T4 cells, or in the levels of either interleukin-1 or prostaglandin E2, were found among the various groups of subjects studied. However, in those groups with reduced interleukin-2 activity an increased number of T8 cells was observed. It is suggested that the low levels of interleukin-2 found in the replicative phase of chronic active hepatitis B and in delta superinfection reflect a disturbed immunoregulation that may contribute to persistent viral replication in these two conditions.
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Cryptic hepatitis B virus replication during prednisone therapy in type B chronic active hepatitis. LA RICERCA IN CLINICA E IN LABORATORIO 1987; 17:221-7. [PMID: 3671995 DOI: 10.1007/bf02912535] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) replicating in patients with serum hepatitis B surface antigen and antibody to hepatitis B e antigen (cryptic HBV replication) can be detected by a spot hybridization technique for serum HBV-DNA and by immunoperoxidase staining of hepatitis B core antigen in the liver. These methods allowed us to study the effects of chronic (13 to 82, mean 30 months) administration of low doses (10 or 15 mg/day) of prednisone to 17 patients with chronic active hepatitis and cryptic HBV replication. Liver biopsies performed before treatment demonstrated that 1 to 50% (mean 12%) of the liver cells were infected. After therapy, infected cells had disappeared in 5 (29%), were considerably reduced in 9 (53%) and remained unchanged in 3 (18%) patients. The mean percentage of infected cells in the liver biopsies performed at the end of the follow-up was 3.2 +/- 5.5% (p less than 0.005). Serum HBV-DNA was present in 12 of 13 and in 5 of 12 patients investigated before treatment and at the end of the study, respectively. Five patients harboring HBV in the liver developed cirrhosis during treatment. Our data indicate that, despite steroid therapy, HBV replication either ceased or was decreased in two thirds of the patients, while in no case it flared-up. The rise of cirrhosis was not prevented by this type of therapy.
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Identification of different degrees of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication by serological (HBV-DNAp, HBcAg and HBV-DNA) and histological (HBcAg) methods. LIVER 1987; 7:169-75. [PMID: 3613885 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0676.1987.tb00338.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
The incidence of HBV-DNA polymerase, HBV-DNA and serum and liver HBcAg in 104 chronic HBsAg carriers was studied. HBV-DNA was the most frequently detected marker, followed by HBcAg and HBV-DNAp. According to their individual or combined presence, four different serological patterns of viral replication were discerned: 53 patients had all these markers, 30 had HBV-DNA but lacked HBV-DNAp (15 with and 15 without HBcAg) and 21 had no such markers detectable. The simultaneous positivity for all of those markers was observed only in HBeAg-positive patients. HBV-DNA alone or along with HBcAg was found in a similar incidence irrespective of the HBe system. Liver HBcAg was found in all but four patients with and in four without HBV-DNA. Viral DNA concentration was significantly (p less than 0.001) higher when HBV-DNAp tested positive. Indeed, HBeAg rather than anti-HBe patients had higher (p less than 0.005) levels of HBV-DNA. In HBeAg-positive patients, the nuclear HBcAg staining was significantly (p less than 0.05) higher when HBV-DNAp tested positive. In DNA polymerase-negative patients, but positive for HBV-DNA, those with or without HBcAg had a similar percentage of core antigen staining. The same distribution was seen in anti-HBe, HBV-DNA-positive patients. However, the mean percentage of hepatocytes displaying cytoplasmic HBcAg did not differ significantly among patients with HBV-DNA, irrespective of the HBe system and the HBV-DNAp status. Such patients had significantly (p less than 0.001) higher ALT levels than those without viral DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Detection of HBV infectivity by spot hybridization in HBeAg-negative chronic carriers: HBV DNA in sera from asymptomatic and symptomatic subjects. J Med Virol 1987; 21:15-23. [PMID: 3794671 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.1890210104] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/07/2023]
Abstract
DNA of hepatitis B virus (HBV DNA) in sera from HBeAg-positive carriers is now the most important and reliable marker of infectivity, but its significance in the progression of chronic hepatitis in anti-HBe carrier status is still under discussion. In this study, viral DNA was tested by a simplified spot hybridization method in sera of 206 HBeAg-negative Italian subjects. In a group of 153 HBsAg carriers, we found that 15.6% of anti-HBe-positive and 10.5% of anti-HBe-negative samples contained viral DNA. No HBV DNA was revealed in 38 HBsAg-negative nor in 15 anti-HBs-positive subjects with different serological markers of HBV. Viral DNA in sera of HBeAg-negative patients with severe chronic liver disease was correlated with increased alaninetransferase activity and IgM anti-HBc. Thus the presence of HBV DNA in these sera not only predicts which subjects are potentially infectious but also indicates chronic progression of hepatitis. Finally, viral DNA extracted from Dane particles of nine anti-HBe-positive sera was characterized by the Southern blot technique. The hybridization pattern shows bands indicating the presence of replicative intermediates.
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Chronic hepatitis B. Impact of hepatitis D virus superinfection and the hepatitis B e-system on histological outcome, and correlation of the hepatitis B e-system to HBV-DNA in serum. SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES. SUPPLEMENTUM 1986; 50:1-45. [PMID: 3468608 DOI: 10.3109/inf.1986.18.suppl-50.01] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
Chronic evolution after acute hepatitis B virus infection. During a 13 months period 1977-1978 a total of 129 cases of acute viral hepatitis type B occurred among patients who were admitted with hepatitis to Roslagstull, Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. Less than 1% progressed to chronicity. Prevalence of Delta superinfection was studied among 60 patients with chronic hepatitis B. Nineteen (32%) were anti-delta positive. The majority of the positive patients were either non-European immigrants or addicts, both 9/19 (47%). Infections with the delta agent was found to have occurred in Stockholm already in the early 1970s. Rate of HBeAg clearance during chronic HBV was studied among 36 HBeAg positive patients. Seroconversion to anti-HBe was noted in 17 patients (47%), whereas HBeAg persisted in 19 during a mean follow-up period of 53 months. The spontaneous annual HBeAg seroconversion rate was 11%. HBeAg clearance occurred as frequently among homosexual men as among patients in other categories. However, 12/14 homosexual men were HBeAg positive after 2 years follow-up, compared with 1/13 drug addicts. Thus, homosexual men seemed to require a longer time for HBeAg seroconversion than i.v. drug addicts. HBV-DNA in serum, a strong indicator of viral particles and infectivity was analysed among patients with HBeAg seroconversion, initial HBeAg negativity and/or delta superinfection. HBV-DNA was found in 75-80% of our HBeAg positive patients. A correlation between chronic liver disease and presence of HBV-DNA in serum was also found. Thus, HBV DNA was found in 63% of patients with CAH or CAH/CI as compared with only 39% of patients with CPH. Delta infected patients had HBV-DNA more often than those without hepatitis D infection. Seven delta infected, anti-HBe positive, patients were still HBV-DNA positive five to eight years later. Therefore delta infected anti-HBe positive patients can be infectious for prolonged periods. Histological outcome. 63% (12/19) anti-delta positive patients were classified as CAH with or without cirrhosis as against 39% (16/41) of the anti-delta negative patients. Eleven of 15 homosexual men (73%) had histological findings classified as CAH or CAH/CI. None of them were superinfected with HDV. Thus homosexual men developed severe hepatic lesions without being delta infected. In contrast 78% (7/9) i.v. drug addicts with CAH were delta infected. A numerical scoring system was applied and compared with conventional morphological classification of liver histology to assess the histological outcome of 42 patients with repetitive liver biopsies.
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Long-term follow-up of 60 patients with chronic hepatitis B. II. Hepatitis B virus DNA in serum correlated to the hepatitis Be-system and presence of delta superinfection. LIVER 1986; 6:292-6. [PMID: 3784784 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0676.1986.tb00294.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/07/2023]
Abstract
Forty-six patients with liver biopsy-documented chronic hepatitis B were followed for a mean period of 44 months. A total of 200 serum samples from these patients was analyzed for the presence of hepatitis B virus DNA (HBV-DNA). The results were correlated to the HBeAg/anti-HBe status and to the presence of anti-delta as a marker for delta superinfection. In the initial serum samples HBV-DNA was detected in the vast majority of the patients independent of the HBeAg/anti-HBe results and whether the patients were superinfected by delta agent or not. During the complete follow-up period, HBV-DNA was detected in 88% of those patients who were positive for HBeAg, irrespective of the presence or absence of a simultaneous delta infection. When anti-HBe positive, 79% of the patients with anti-delta had detectable HBV-DNA in their sera, while only 43% of those negative for anti-delta were positive for HBV-DNA. The results indicate a high prevalence of virus release into the blood of patients with chronic hepatitis B, especially among patients positive for HBeAg and among those anti-HBe positive patients who have a delta superinfection.
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Assay of hepatitis B virus genome titers in sera of infected subjects. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 1986; 5:330-5. [PMID: 3743555 DOI: 10.1007/bf02017791] [Citation(s) in RCA: 36] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/07/2023]
Abstract
A method for quantitative standardization of the DNA hybridization assay for hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA protein complex in serum is described. This method was used to determine the titer of HBV DNA in various groups of subjects with HB surface antigen (HBsAg) in order to ascertain its accuracy as an index of infectivity. The method's detection limit was 10(5) genome equivalents or 0.3 pg DNA per ml. Titers of 5 X 10(7) to 5 X 10(8) genome equivalents per ml were found to be typical for persistent massive viremia, which occurred more frequently in symptomatic (30 of 48) than in asymptomatic (24 of 72) carriers positive for HBe antigen (HBeAg). Moderate viremia (10(5)-5 X 10(7)) was usually found in patients eliminating the virus from the blood. Patients with resolving acute hepatitis B were frequently positive at the onset (18 of 26) with moderate titers, but became negative within several weeks. In 11 patients who developed chronic hepatitis B, titers increased until typical massive viremia was evident. Whereas healthy HBsAg carriers with anti-HBe always had negative genome titers (144 of 144), symptomatic carriers with anti-HBe often had moderate genome titers (9 of 30). It is recommended that genome titers be monitored in HBeAg-positive and in symptomatic anti-HBe positive virus carriers in order to distinguish between virus carriers with high (greater than 5 X 10(7)), moderate (10(5) -5 X 10(7)) and low (less than 10(5)) infectivity.
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Abstract
We compared the clinical and serologic features of 118 hepatitis B surface antigen carriers with hepatitis B e antibody (anti-HBe) followed up for 3-10 yr (mean 6.1 yr), separated according to the presence or absence of hepatitis B virus-deoxyribonucleic acid (HBV-DNA) in serum. The test was performed by molecular hybridization. There were 28 carriers with and 90 without viral DNA. Carriers with serum anti-HBe/HBV-DNA had major liver disease; cirrhosis developed during the follow-up period in 9 of the patients. All had the hepatitis B "core" antigen in the liver, localized prevalently in the cytoplasm of the hepatocytes. Among carriers of anti-HBe alone, 73 had persistently normal tests of liver function and 17 had abnormal levels of alanine transaminase and usually minor forms of liver damage at histology. In a group of 24 carriers of hepatitis B e antigen who spontaneously seroconverted to anti-HBe, hepatitis and a prevalent nuclear distribution of intrahepatic hepatitis B core antigen were found in temporal correlation with the presence of hepatitis B e antigen in serum. The replication of the hepatitis B virion terminated and liver disease remitted after seroconversion to anti-HBe. A positive HBV-DNA test in anti-HBe carriers is associated with a severe and evolutive liver disease and may provide an indication for treatment with drugs inhibiting the synthesis of HBV-DNA.
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Abstract
Serum samples from 608 residents of Saudi Arabia were examined for the presence of hepatitis B, delta and HTLV-III virus markers. The HBsAg carrier rate was 17% and the prevalence of all hepatitis B virus markers was 55%. Males between 16 and 25 years had a significantly higher prevalence of all HBV markers (69%; 95% confidence limits: 49%-82%) compared to females in the same age group (34%; 95% confidence limits: 25%-45%). The prevalence of HBsAg was significantly higher among males aged 25-35 years (24%; 95% confidence limits: 19%-40%) compared to females in the same age group (9%; 95% confidence limits: 4%-18%). In addition, the HBsAg carrier rate for all males (23%) was significantly higher compared to females (11%) (p less than 0.001). HBeAg was found in 12% of 89 HBsAg-positive individuals, 48% were anti-HBe positive and 40% were negative for both markers. Hepatitis B virus DNA was found in 11 of 41 individuals tested. Five of these were HBeAg positive and four were anti-HBe positive. Anti-delta was found in three of 36 HBsAg positive serum samples (8%). Of 485 individuals tested for anti-HTLV-III, none were positive.
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Clinical, virologic and histologic outcome following seroconversion from HBeAg to anti-HBe in chronic hepatitis type B. Hepatology 1986; 6:167-72. [PMID: 3957228 DOI: 10.1002/hep.1840060203] [Citation(s) in RCA: 213] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
Seventy consecutive HBsAg- and HBeAg-positive patients with biopsy-proven chronic hepatitis were followed prospectively with serial determinations of SGPT levels and hepatitis B virus serum markers including HBsAg, HBeAg, anti-HBe and hepatitis B virus DNA. During a period of 1 to 11 years (mean +/- S.D.: 5.0 +/- 2.3 years), 28 patients remained persistently HBeAg positive, most with continuing biochemical and histologic activity, while 41 cases seroconverted to anti-HBe. One patient became HBeAg and anti-HBe negative. After seroconversion, 87.8% of the cases showed sustained normalization of SGPT, and clearance of hepatitis B virus DNA from serum and histologic improvement was documented in 79% of the cases who had a control liver biopsy, while 15.8% developed cirrhosis. In two patients (4.9%), the disease remained active despite seroconversion, and both cases had evidence of continuing hepatitis B virus replication. Finally, reactivation of liver damage and of hepatitis B virus replication was observed in three additional patients (7.3%) who had transiently normalized SGPT after seroconversion. All 70 patients were analyzed for hepatitis delta virus markers, and only two persistently HBeAg-positive cases were found positive for antibody to hepatitis delta virus in serum, one also having hepatitis delta antigen in the liver. These findings indicate that, in chronic hepatitis type B, termination of virus replication is associated in most patients with biochemical and histologic regression of inflammatory activity. After anti-HBe seroconversion has occurred, virus replication and liver disease may persist or reactivate in a small proportion of patients thus giving origin to the well-recognized group of anti-HBe positive, hepatitis B virus DNA-positive chronic hepatitis type B.
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Relationship between HBcAg in serum and liver and HBV replication in patients with HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease. J Med Virol 1985; 17:145-52. [PMID: 4056756 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.1890170207] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
The expression of hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) in serum and in hepatocytes was evaluated in relation to HBV replication. Fifty chronic HBsAg carriers with histological evidence of liver disease were studied, including 24 HBeAg-positive patients, 2 HBeAg/anti-HBe-negative patients, and 24 anti-HBe-positive cases, two of them with evidence of delta agent infection. Serum HBV-DNA was evaluated in all patients and related to HBcAg examined at the same time in frozen liver biopsies by immunofluorescence and to HBcAg detected in the corresponding serum by a recently developed radioimmunoassay. HBV-DNA was present in serum in 20 (83%) HBeAg-positive patients, all positive for serum HBeAg, whereas liver core antigen was detected in 14 (73%) of 19 cases. Among HBeAg-negative patients, 50% showed the presence of circulating DNA viral sequences, and HBcAg was identified in five of 26 (19%) cases in serum and in six of 24 (25%) in the liver respectively. In 15 patients, liver fragments permitted examination in parallel by immunofluorescence for HBcAg and molecular hybridization for viral DNA in liver cells. A DNA pattern characteristic of viral replication was found in cases with evidence of active virion production, independently from HBeAg and anti-HBe, and in these patients HBcAg was present both in serum and in hepatocytes. In two cases with free HBV-DNA, without evidence of replicative activity, core antigen was not detected in the liver, but in one patient HBcAg was found in the serum. A similar finding was also noted in another patient, in whom the hybridization pattern was consistent with integration of viral genome into high-molecular-weight cellular DNA. Whether serum HBcAg detected in these patients without HBV-DNA in serum reflects the presence of defective viral particles or of core antigen released as a viral protein remains to be determined.
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Hepatitis B virus DNA, HBeAg and delta infection during the course from acute to chronic hepatitis B virus infection. Hepatology 1985; 5:778-82. [PMID: 4029890 DOI: 10.1002/hep.1840050512] [Citation(s) in RCA: 32] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
The presence of hepatitis B virus DNA in serum was determined in 57 unselected patients during the course from acute to chronic hepatitis B infection. Forty-six (81%) patients were hepatitis B virus DNA-positive in the first available serum sample. Generally, hepatitis B virus DNA was cleared before or at the same time as HBeAg, but in two patients (4%), hepatitis B virus DNA could be demonstrated after HBeAg clearance. One of the latter patients had hepatitis B virus DNA in the presence of anti-HBe. Both patients became hepatitis B virus DNA-negative. Seven of the hepatitis B virus DNA-positive patients received long-term treatment with prednisone, and three of them continued to be hepatitis B virus DNA positive for more than 10 years. Among the untreated patients hepatitis B virus DNA could be detected for up to 7 years, and 10 patients were hepatitis B virus DNA-positive for three years or more. Twenty-four patients (42%) showed serological signs of delta agent infection. Hepatitis B virus DNA clearance was observed in a significantly higher proportion (87%) of delta-infected patients as compared to patients with no delta infection (45%) (p less than 0.05). In addition patients with delta infection had a significantly increased hepatitis B virus DNA clearance rate as compared to patients without delta markers in their serum (p less than 0.01). In one (8%) delta-infected patient, hepatitis B virus DNA clearance was followed by a fall in transaminases into the normal range as opposed to results in 86% of patients with pure hepatitis B (p less than 0.002).
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Liver disease activity and hepatitis B virus replication in chronic delta antigen-positive hepatitis B virus carriers. Hepatology 1985; 5:544-7. [PMID: 4018727 DOI: 10.1002/hep.1840050404] [Citation(s) in RCA: 64] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
Delta antigen is currently thought to reflect superinfection of the liver with a defective RNA virus (delta agent), requiring helper function from hepatitis B virus for its replication. To assess the influence of delta agent on hepatitis B virus replication in patients persistently infected with both viruses and showing chronic liver disease, we measured serum and liver hepatitis B virus DNA in HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease patients who were either positive or negative for delta antigen in the liver. Hepatitis B virus DNA was assayed in the serum of 21 patients with delta antigen-positive/HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease and in 21 patients with delta antigen-negative/HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease matched for HBeAg/anti-HBe status and underlying liver histology. HBcAg and delta antigen in liver was determined by immunofluorescence or immunoperoxidase staining. In delta antigen-positive/HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease, serum hepatitis B virus DNA was detected transiently in 4 of 21 cases (19%) and was present in these patients at low levels (trace to 2+). In contrast, 9 of 21 (43%) delta antigen-negative/HBsAg-positive chronic liver disease patients were serum hepatitis B virus DNA positive, and five of these had high serum hepatitis B virus DNA levels (3+ to 4+). Serum HBsAg and anti-HBc titers were significantly lower in delta antigen-positive cases and correlated with reduced amount of HBcAg in the liver.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Abstract
A biotin-labeled DNA probe specific for hepatitis B virus (HBV) nucleotide sequences was hybridized in situ to liver tissue of 20 patients; 16 were chronic carriers of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and 4 had no markers of HBV infection. HBV-DNA was also analyzed in the serum and the liver of these patients by spot and Southern blot hybridization, respectively. Liver specimens from six carriers were positive for HBV-DNA both by in situ and Southern blot hybridization; ten carriers were negative by in situ hybridization, and two of these were positive by Southern blot technique. The staining was granular, mainly cytoplasmic, limited to liver specimens containing replicative forms of HBV-DNA, and associated with detection of HBcAg in hepatocytes by immunofluorescence. The sensitivity of this technique was not sufficient to detect few copies of integrated HBV-DNA. The hybridization procedure was specific, as results were constantly negative in liver specimens of patients without markers of HBV infection, and no reaction was observed using DNA probes lacking HBV-DNA sequences. Detection of HBV-DNA by in situ hybridization, using a biotinylated probe, is a rapid, reproducible, and specific histochemical method. Currently available biotinylated probes are advantageous when absolute sensitivity is not the limiting factor, and they also facilitate studies of the cellular and subcellular distribution of HBV nucleic acids.
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