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1.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: In our area most of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected patients are intravenous drug users; HIV and hepatitis C virus infections often coexist in these patients. Due to the repercussions of both infections, we designed a trial to evaluate the efficacy, response-related factors and tolerance during an eight-month regime of recombinant interferon alpha-2b on hepatitis C virus infection. METHODOLOGY: We included 79 patients in an open, prospective and multicentric trial with zidovudine and interferon alpha-2b. Response to interferon treatment was evaluated by biochemical and histopathological criteria. RESULTS: A complete response (alanine aminotransferase normalization) was obtained in 57.4% of patients. The significant response-related factors were: degree of histopathological activity, CD4+ cell number and initial leukocyte number. CONCLUSIONS: Recombinant interferon therapy seems to be effective for chronic hepatitis C in HIV infected patients; the best response was in those with active chronic hepatitis and CD4+ cell counts > or = 200/mm3. General tolerance was variable, although side effects were not different from those seen in non-HIV patients. The most common side effect was flu-like syndrome (constitutional manifestations), with no interference on treatment continuity; however, hematological toxicity prevents the indiscriminate use of interferon.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: We studied the prevalence of viral hepatitis B, C and D markers in chronic hepatopathies from Cluj. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Sera of 297 patients with chronic hepatopathies (236 adults and 61 children) have been tested for viral hepatitis markers: HBsAg, anti-HBc, anti-HBs, HBeAg, anti-HBe, anti-HDV, anti-HCV, by automated ELISA. RESULTS: HBV infection markers in 32% (adults) and 4.9% (children), and HDV infection markers in 11.8% (adults) and 26.3% (children). Double (HBV and HCV) and triple infection (HBV, HDV and HCV) were observed in 28.4% (adults), 4.9% (children), and 3.4% (adults), 0% (children), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Hepatitis virus infection markers, especially HBV and HCV play an important role in the determinism of chronic hepatopathies from Cluj area, both in children and adults.  相似文献   

3.
The main problem of children with HBeAg positive hepatitis B and associated hepatitis D is progression to liver cirrhosis with decompensation of liver function and need for liver replacement therapy within 15-20 years after infection. To determine whether interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) therapy has a positive effect on HBV replication and inflammatory activity, we evaluated clinical and serological data of 8 children treated with IFN-alpha and 6 historic control patients without treatment. 4 of the nontreated patients seroconverted from HBeAg to anti-HBe between 7 to 17 years after initial diagnosis and showed decreased inflammatory activity in the liver. In the treatment group, the rate of seroconversion to anti-HBe (3 early, 2 late seroconverters) corresponded well to former trial results obtained in patients exclusively infected by HBV. Serum aminotransferase levels decreased or normalized in seroconverted children. In chronic HBV infection with associated hepatitis D (HDV) infection--compared to the spontaneous course of the disease--IFN-alpha therapy reduced inflammatory activity by earlier seroconversion to anti-HBe in responding patients. Moreover, viral replication and infectivity of hepatitis B was markedly reduced, but no effect on replication of HDV could be documented. Although long-term effects cannot be exactly estimated, at present IFN-alpha remains the only available treatment for HBeAg and anti-HDV positive children and seems to be of benefit for responding patients.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of chronic hepatitis B and C aims to achieve viral eradication. Decreasing the number of carriers subsequently reduces the transmission of the viruses. For an individual patient, therapy is aimed at preventing cirrhosis, liver failure and hepatocarcinoma. Among potential therapies, interferon alfa offers the best results. In one study involving the treatment of children from a region of intermediate endemicity, interferon alfa accelerated the clearance of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication. In long-term follow-up, the study did not show a significant difference between patients who were treated and those who were not in the rate of disappearance of serum HBV-DNA, normalization of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels or seroconversion to antibodies to hepatitis B e antigen. The most important factors in predicting a rapid decrease in HBV replication were AI T levels more than twice normal, low levels of serum HBV-DNA (less than 100 pg/mL) and inflammatory activity on liver biopsy (chronic active hepatitis). A select group of children with HBV infection has thus been shown to benefit from interferon alfa therapy. Treatment should be administered in a dosage of 6 MU/m2 three times each week for 6 months. Chronic active hepatitis, develops in approximately 30% of children with a chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Cirrhosis due to HCV appears to be a very rare complication among children. Results of interferon alfa treatment for children with HCV are scarce. A pilot study of 12 children treated with interferon alfa in a dosage of 3 MU/m2 three times each week for 6 months showed that ALT levels normalized in approximately 90% of the patients after 15 months of follow-up. All of the patients had a decrease in the histological activity of the disease. Factors predictive of a favourable response in adults were: low levels of gamma-glutamyl transferase, young age, female sex, short duration of disease, absence of cirrhosis and low histological activity of the disease. Controlled randomized studies are needed to determine the indications for interferon alfa therapy in children infected with HCV. Available data suggest that children may have a better response than adults.  相似文献   

5.
Patients with dual infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) and delta virus (HDV) responded poorly to interferon (IFN) therapy. Little is known about the effect of IFN therapy in patients with HBV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) dual infection. The patients in two randomized controlled trials with chronic HBV infection were retrospectively assayed for HCV markers. The HBV responses to IFN therapy in patients with and without HCV markers were compared. An open trial was conducted in 4 patients who had lost their serum HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) but had continuing HCV viremia and hepatitis. Of the 15 patients seropositive for HCV marker(s), only 1 (6.7%) responded with seroclearance of HBV DNA and HBV e antigen, as compared with 46 (28%) of 164 HCV-negative patients (p = 0.058). Icteric hepatitis developed in 1 patient on emergence of serum HCV RNA in association with seroclearance of HBV DNA. In contrast, good response was demonstrated in 3 of the 4 patients who had lost serum HBsAg before therapy. The results suggest that IFN therapy is not only of limited value in patients with dual infection with HBV and HCV but also has a potential risk of severe hepatitis if the clearance of one virus removes its suppressive effect on and facilitates the emergence of the other. However, patients with continuing HCV hepatitis after termination of the chronic HBsAg carrier state responded well to IFN therapy.  相似文献   

6.
The possibility of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in HBsAg-negative patients has been shown. However, an "inapparent" coinfection by HBV in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive patients generally is not taken into account in clinical practice. Mechanisms responsible for resistance to interferon (IFN) have not been completely clarified. The aim of this study was to investigate whether an "inapparent" coinfection by HBV in anti-HCV-positive chronic liver disease patients may influence IFN response. Fourteen anti-HCV positive, HBsAg-negative but serum HBV DNA-positive patients by PCR and 111 anti-HCV-positive, HBsAg-negative and HBV DNA (PCR)-negative patients with chronic hepatitis were treated with 3 MU of recombinant alpha-2a IFN 3 times weekly for 12 months. Serum HBV DNA and HCV RNA were determined before treatment, after 6-12 months and in coincidence with ALT flare-up by PCR. HBV PCR was performed using primers specific for the S region of the HBV genome and HCV PCR with primers localised in the 5'NC region of HCV genome. IgM anti-HBc was tested using IMx Core-M Abbott assay. By the end of treatment, ALT values had become normal in 4/14 HBV DNA-positive patients (28%), but all "responders" (4/4) relapsed between 2 and 5 months after therapy. All but one patient were HCV RNA-positive before treatment, 6 were also both HBV DNA and HCV RNA-positive during ALT flare-ups. In 5 patients, only HBV DNA and in 3 patients, only HCV RNA was detected when transaminase values increased. All patients remained HBsAg-negative and anti-HCV-positive. IgM anti-HBc was detected both before treatment and during ALT elevation in 3 patients and only during ALT relapse in 3 others. Of the 111 anti-HCV positive, HBsAg-negative and HBV DNA (PCR)-negative patients with chronic hepatitis, a biochemical response to IFN treatment was observed in 54% of the cases. Relapse of ALT values was observed in 47% of the cases during a follow-up of 1 year after treatment. "Inapparent" HBV/HCV coinfection may be implicated in cases of resistance to IFN treatment. In addition, HBV replication may persist in patients in whom HCV replication was inhibited by IFN treatment. The pathogenic role of HBV in liver disease was confirmed by detection of IgM anti-HBc in some cases; the appearance of these antibodies only after IFN treatment suggests that IFN may exert a selective role in favour of HBV. Further studies will show the effect of different treatment schedules. HBV DNA and/or IgM anti-HBc detection with very sensitive methods may be important both as a prognostic factor and as a tool for better understanding interviral relationships and mechanisms involved in multiple hepatitis virus infections.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND AND AIM: This retrospective study examined the prevalence of co-infections with hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) and the frequency of chronic hepatitis in HIV-infected patients with respect to both the different risk groups and the serological results. PATIENTS AND METHODS: All Zurich participants of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study were evaluated who had available results of hepatitis B and C serology and ALT. RESULTS: Of the total 279 patients, 52% belonged to the intravenous drug user, 34% to the homosexual, and 11% to the heterosexual risk category. Serologically, previously acquired infection with HBV alone could be demonstrated in 92 (33%), HCV alone in 9 (3%), and both HBV and HCV in 130 (47%) patients. Only 3% of patients with sexually acquired HIV infection had anti-HCV antibodies, whereas co-infection with HBV and HCV was present in 87% of intravenous drug users. Among the 222 patients with previous HBV contact, 25 (11%) had positive HBsAg and 91 (41%) had "anti-HBc alone", both assumed to represent active HBV infection. 66 (24%) of 279 patients had chronic hepatitis with ALT elevation lasting > or = 6 months. Chronic hepatitis was present in 46% of those with active HBV and HCV co-infection, in 36% of those with HCV infection alone and in 18% of those with active HBV infection alone (P < 0.001). Of the 66 cases of chronic hepatitis, 58 were associated with HCV infection, and only 2 cases had no serological signs of active HBV or HCV infection. CONCLUSION: In patients with sexually acquired HIV infection, HBV had frequently been co-transmitted. In contrast, almost all of those infected by means of intravenous drug use had a co-infection with both HBV and HCV. The latter seems to play the strongest role in the development of chronic hepatitis with persistent ALT elevation. A chronic ALT elevation was almost always associated with serologically active HBV or HCV infection.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) in hospitalised children, as specific marker for hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Our study group consists of 517 children, 68 of them diagnosed with chronic hepatitis. For HBsAg determination we used an ELISA test (Labsystems); for some children we also tested by ELISA the following markers: the antibodies and anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies. From 517 children 24.28% were HBSAg positive and 75% of children with chronic hepatitis were positive for the same marker. Almost 100% of chronic active hepatitis (CAH) patients was positive for HBSAg. CONCLUSIONS: 1. The prevalence of HBsAg was much higher as compared with the healthy population prevalence; it is a clear prove that HBV infection has an important role in chronic hepatitis appearance. 2. For all HBsAg positive patients, it is necessary to determine other markers like HBeAg-anti-HBe antibodies system as well as markers for other viral hepatitis (HDV, HCV). 3. The anti-HBV infection vaccine will reduce significantly the prevalence of HBV and HDV infections; 4. Biological molecular technique, like PCR will be necessary in our country, in the future, even the price is so high, to monitoring the IFN treatment for chronic infection as unique solution for these patients.  相似文献   

9.
In order to determine the differences in histological grade of activity and the stage of fibrosis in patients with chronic liver diseases due to multiple hepatitis virus infection and single infection of HBV and HCV we assessed the 68 liver biopsies samples according to Knodell and Scheuer scoring systems. Retrospectively, 216 liver biopsies reports from consecutive patients with chronic viral hepatitis were analysed. Histological activity index (HAI) in HBV/HCV coinfection was higher than in a single HCV infection; it did not differ in groups of HBV/HBC and HBV. The difference was due to the interface hepatitis; lobular activity and portal inflammation were the same. In HDV superinfection HAI was high due to both portal-periportal and lobular hepatitis. HAI depended mainly upon the presence of HBV replication; in patients with chronic hepatitis C with HBV-DNA HAI was also higher than in single HCV group. No difference in HAI between triple and dual hepatitis virus infection was found. In patients with HBV/HCV coinfection and especially with HDV superinfection the advanced stages occurred more than often than in patients with single infections.  相似文献   

10.
We evaluated the impact of concomitant infection with Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and Hepatitis C virus (HCV) on the clinical course after renal transplantation (Tx). In 335 patients (pts) transplanted between 1991 and 1993 we found 30 (9%) recipients who were positive for Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) (ELISA, Organon) and anti-HCV antibodies (immunoblot assay Lia Tek) preTx. Chronic liver disease (CLD) (two-fold or greater increase in serum ALT and AST levels for at least six months) developed in 40.7% coinfected pts as compared to 24.4% and 25.7% pts infected only with HCV or HBV, respectively. Maintenance immunosuppression consisted of P + Aza + CsA, mean follow-up time was 28 +/- 15 months. The mean time of the onset of CLD was 3.0 months (range: 1-18 months) after Tx. Percutaneous liver biopsy performed in 5 CLD pts revealed chronic active hepatitis (CAH) in 4 and chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH) in 1 pt. Four pts who had CAH and were positive for HCV RNA (RT PCR) in serum and for HBcAg in liver tissue, received interferon-alpha therapy for 6 months. Clinical improvement of liver function was observed in all of them, but none cleared HBsAg or HCV RNA. One pt lost his graft due to acute rejection. Concomitant infection with HBV and HCV is associated with the high risk of development of CLD early after Tx. We recommend that pretransplant evaluation of both anti-HCV and HBsAg positive pts should include liver biopsy to exclude potential recipients with CAH.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to assess the seroprevalence of HBV, HCV and HDV virus markers in multi-transfused patients from Cluj-Napoca. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Stored serum samples of 105 multi-transfused patients (25 children, 19 adults and 61 chronically hemodialyzed patients) have been tested for HBsAg, anti-HBs, total anti-HBc, anti-HCV, total anti-HDV by automated ELISA (Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur kits). RESULTS: HVC infection has been observed in 4/25 (16%) children, 14/19 (74%) multi-transfused adults and 48/61 (79%) haemodialysis patients. 8/25 (32%) children, 17/19 (89%) adults and 47/61 (77%) haemodialysis patients had HBV infection markers. Anti-HDV have not been found in HBV infected multi-transfused children and adults, respectively. Only 2/47 (4.25%) HBV infected haemodialysis patients had HDV infection markers. The prevalence of double infection (HCV and HBV) was high (4%, 84.2% and 67.2% in children, adults and haemodialysis patients). The prevalence of viral hepatitis markers correlated to the amount of transfused blood, and in haemodialysis patients also correlated to the duration on dialysis. CONCLUSIONS: In multi-transfused patients from Cluj area, the prevalence of viral hepatitis markers is high. The double infection (HCV and HBV) is frequent, especially in adults. The prevalence of HDV infection markers in HBV infected patients is low, in contrast with previously reported results.  相似文献   

12.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV) and hepatitis delta virus (HDV) are associated with clinically significant chronic infection that may lead to the development of cirrhosis or even hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Intervention at the earliest possible stage is needed to prevent such untoward sequelae. Currently, interferon (IFN) is the only approved and widely used agent for the treatment of these infections, including in HBV patients with precore mutant hepatitis or decompensated cirrhosis, but its efficacy is far from satisfactory. Corticosteroid priming has been shown to increase the efficacy of IFN therapy in HBV patients with low abnormal serum transaminase levels, but only a few responders will clear serum hepatitis Bs antigen (HBsAg). Ongoing randomized controlled trials of thymosin alpha 1, lamivudine and famcyclovir have demonstrated encouraging preliminary results. Therapeutic vaccines, such as polypeptides with human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-specific hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) epitopes, are under phase II/III clinical trial. For HDV infection, the use of IFN in the early phase of acute superinfection tends to prevent chronic progression. For HCV infection, IFN used at higher doses for a longer period of time is associated with a higher sustained response, but overall it is still not satisfactory. The combined use of ribavirin or corticosteroid priming may improve the effect of IFN therapy by enhancing the durability of the response. Interferon in the acute phase of HCV infection may also prevent chronic progression. There is evidence to suggest that IFN therapy, when associated with response, tends to reduce the risk of cirrhosis or HCC and prolongs survival. There is no doubt that satisfactory treatment of chronic viral infection will require more effective agents and demand optimal treatment strategies, many of which are yet to be found.  相似文献   

13.
Chronic viral diseases of the liver are associated with changes in immune reactions mediated by T and B lymphocytes and dependent in severity on etiological factor (virus of hepatitis B, delta, C, their combination), the disease stage (hepatitis, cirrhosis), the process activity, kind of immune correction. HBsAg, viral hepatitis B marker, was detected in 21.2% of 1400 cases with chronic active hepatitis and liver cirrhosis. 32% of HbsAg-seropositive patients had antibodies to delta-antigen. Antibodies to HBsAg, HCV were found in 27.7 and 14.9% of the above patients. Chronic viral diseases of the liver with persistence of HBV, HDV and HCV markers are characterized by a complex of immune disorders, including a moderate rise in peripheral blood of IgM, IgG, IgA, IgE, Ig kappa, lambda, immune complexes, cryoglobulins, autoantibodies to subcellular structures as well as changes in regulatory (suppressor, helper) and effector (lymphokine-producing) functions of T lymphocytes, inhibition of phagocytosing capacity. The above shifts in immune status, clinical and biochemical activity of the disease are more pronounced in chronic active hepatitis with HCV markers compared to BHV. Of maximal intensity they were in combined viral infection HBV+HDV or HBV+HCV.  相似文献   

14.
The risk of severe hepatic damage in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is well known; more effective treatments for this infection are needed. Lamivudine is being studied in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed HBV infected patients. We report a patient suffering from chronic replicative HBV infection after allogeneic BMT, who responded to lamivudine therapy. A 24-year-old woman with CML received an allogeneic BMT from her HLA-identical sister in June 1992. Before transplant, her HBV status demonstrated viral contact without active infection (HBsAb+, HBcAb+ IgG, HBeAb+). Four months after BMT mild chronic liver GVHD appeared, requiring immunosuppressive treatment. Antibodies to HBV completely disappeared post-transplant. Acute icteric hepatitis occurred 2 years later, with HBsAg+, high level of HBV-DNA, HBeAg+ and HBcAb IgM+. Lamivudine 100 mg/day rapidly reduced transaminase levels and effected HBV-DNA disappearance within 2 months. The treatment was well tolerated; no hematological side-effects occurred. This preliminary observation warrants further investigation of lamivudine treatment in bone marrow transplanted patients with active HBV infection.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: The cytokine pattern secreted by T cells at the site of viral replication may influence the final outcome of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. The aim of this study was to assess whether a cytokine imbalance oriented toward T helper (Th) 1 or Th2-type responses may play a role in chronic hepatitis B or C. METHODS: Production of interferon (IFN)-gamma, interleukin (IL)-4, and IL-5 by wide series of T-cell clones derived from the liver of 6 patients with chronic hepatitis B (291 clones) and 9 patients with chronic hepatitis C (260 clones) was studied. T-cell clones were generated by limiting dilution from freshly isolated mononuclear cells derived from liver tissue to give a reliable representation of the intrahepatic inflammatory infiltrates. RESULTS: The majority of liver-infiltrating T cells in chronic hepatitis C were Th1 cells able to secrete IFN-gamma but unable to secrete IL-4 or IL-5, whereas in hepatitis B, most CD4+ and CD8+ liver T cells were ThO-like cells able to produce not only IFN-gamma but also IL-4 and IL-5. CONCLUSIONS: The different cytokine profiles of T cells within the liver in chronic HBV and HCV infections illustrate a different behavior of the local immune response in these two infections that may have pathogenetic implications.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: There is substantial evidence demonstrating the aggravating effect of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection on the progression of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. There is however, little data on the affect of certain factors which could affect liver pathology findings in patients with concomitant HIV infection such as the duration of HIV infection or T-cell subpopulation counts. We examined pathology findings in patients with concomitant HIV and HCV infections to determine the impact of immunodepression. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed liver pathology data collected in patients with concomitant HIV and HCV infections grouping patients according to severity of the liver pathology: group 1 = cirrhosis or active hepatitis; group 2 = minimally active hepatitis or histologically normal liver. Transparietal liver biopsies were obtained for the work-up of viral hepatitis or because of long-term unexplained fever or suspected lymphoma. Epidemiological and biological data were obtained from medical files. The duration of the liver disease was estimated from the date of exposure to risk of immunodepression as determined by the peripheral CD4+ and CD8+ counts. All pathology specimens were read by two pathologists who established the Knodell score for each patient. RESULTS: Fifty patients were included: 23 were classed in group 1 and 28 in group 2. The Knodell score was significantly different between the two groups, 11 +/- 4 and 4 +/- 3 respectively (p < 0.0001). Disease duration was similar for the two groups: mean 8 years. Mean CD4+ count was significantly higher in group 1: 312/mm3 versus 110/mm3 for group 2 (p = 0.0057); as was the mean CD8+ count (758/mm3 versus 360/mm3, p = 0.0013). For the entire study population, there was a significantly negative correlation (p < 0.05) between the Knodell score and the CD4+ count (r = 0.31) and for the CD8+ count (r = 0.41). CONCLUSION: HCV-related liver pathology in patients co-infected with HIV depends on the level of immunodepression. CD8+ counts are better correlated with pathology findings than with CD4+ counts.  相似文献   

17.
The clinical importance of hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome variability has been reported recently. One example is the occurrence of hepatitis B virus pre-core mutants, which arise during spontaneous or interferon-induced seroconversion from HBeAg to anti-HBe and are thought to be selected by immune pressure. A survey of HBV pre-core mutants and viral genotypes in 35 HBeAg negative patients during interferon therapy was carried out to understand viral pathogenesis in this form of chronic hepatitis B. Seventeen patients responded to interferon therapy as assessed by the sustained normalization of serum ALT levels and the significant decrease of viremia levels. The response rate to interferon was independent of both initial serum viral DNA level and interferon doses. During interferon therapy, a significant decrease of M0 (wild-type pre-core sequence at pos. 1887-1908), M1 (TGG to TAG at pos. 1896) or M2 (TGG to TAG at pos. 1896, and GGC to GAC at pos. 1899) positive viral genomes was found in 48%, 42%, and 33% of patients, respectively. A higher response rate to interferon therapy was observed in patients infected with HBV genotype A (70%) or M0 positive strains (75%) as compared to patients infected with genotype D/E (40%) or M1/M2 positive strains (44%). The data support the hypothesis that pre-core defective HBV represent viral mutants with an increased capacity to resist exogenous alpha interferon. These findings emphasize that characterization of HBV genome variability prior to interferon therapy may help to predict antiviral response in HBeAg negative patients.  相似文献   

18.
In chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection seroconversion from hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) to hepatitis B e antibody (HBeAb) may be followed either by remission of the disease with low-level viraemia, or by continuing inflammation with high-level viraemia. In both situations the virus may acquire a mutation in the precore sequence which prevents it from encoding HBeAg. We now show that the number of amino acid substitutions in the HBV core is low in viral sequences from patients with HBeAg positive chronic liver disease and HBeAg negative HBeAb positive patients in remission, but the frequency of substitutions is high in HBeAg, negative HBeAb positive patients with active liver disease. Furthermore we show that these substitutions cluster in the promiscuous CD4+ T-helper-cell epitope and in HBV core/e antibody binding determinants, but are not found in regions recognized by major histocompatability complex (MHC) restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Sequential viral sequences from patients before and after HBeAg/HbeAb seroconversion shows that core mutations arise either at the same time or after the precore stop mutation which prevents the virus from encoding HBeAg. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that after clearance of HBeAg, mutations in regions of the virus recognized by CD4+ helper T cells and B cells allow persistence of the HBe negative virus in HBeAb positive patients with viraemia and active hepatitis.  相似文献   

19.
In order to evaluate the interference of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) in hepatitis B viral particle (HBsAg, HBcAg) expression in the liver of chronic HDV patients, 39 and 81 liver biopsies of HBsAg carriers seropositive for anti-HDV and anti-HDV negative controls, respectively, were studied. HBcAg was positive in 16.7% of the HBeAg-positive patients with HDAg in the liver and in 91,4% of controls. In contrast, in HBeAg- and anti-HDV negative patients the intrahepatic expression of HBcAg was detected in 32.6%. In anti-HDV negative patients the HBcAg liver expression correlated significantly with the HBeAg in serum (p < 0.00001). The distribution of HBcAg was exclusively cytoplasmatic in 30% of HDV-infected patients but mixed nuclear and cytoplasmic in 38.3% of the controls. The nuclear expression of HBcAg was decreased in chronic HDV infection. HBsAg was positive in 70.3% of patients who were anti-HDV positive and in 82.3% of controls. The membranous expression of HBsAg was detected less frequently in HDV-infected patients (p < 0.05) than in controls, while associated with HBeAg in serum of HBV carriers without HDV superinfection (p < 0.00001). The prevalence and the HBsAg cytoplasmic expression was not different for the chronic HDV infection or controls. Our results show: 1) decreased intrahepatic expression of HBcAg and membranous HBsAg in HBV carriers superinfected with HDV, suggesting decreased HBV replication in the liver of these patients. 2) the changing of HBcAg and HBsAg expression in the liver of HDV-infected patients, suggest not so much a decrease but rather a modulation in HBV replication.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Most earlier reports on the spectrum of liver diseases in HIV-infected individuals originated from the West. OBJECTIVE: To study the spectrum of liver diseases in HIV-infected individuals. METHODS: Seventy four consecutive HIV-positive patients (57 men; age range 23-75 years, mean 34) were studied prospectively with clinical evaluation, liver function tests, ultrasonography, radioisotope liver scan, markers of hepatitis B (HBV) and C (HCV) viruses, and liver histology whenever necessary. RESULTS: Thirty four patients (45%) were chronic alcoholics. Mean (SD) absolute lymphocyte count was 2521 (1271)/mm3; count < 2000/ mm3 was present in 20 patients. Serum bilirubin, transaminases and alkaline phosphatase levels were elevated in 13%, 13% and 24% of patients, respectively. Ultrasonography detected an abscess in two patients (tuberculous-1, amebic-1). Evidence of exposure to HBV was present in 81% (HBsAg-12, hepatitis B core and/or surface antibody-48); anti-HCV antibody was positive in 29.7%. Five patients with liver tuberculosis (granuloma-4, abscess-1) had AFB either in liver tissue or lymph nodes. CONCLUSION: Chronic alcoholism, HBV and HCV infection, hepatic tuberculosis, and evidence of other liver disease were common in patients with HIV infection.  相似文献   

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