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1.
Two hepatitis B virus (HBV) carriers who had antibodies to HBV surface antigen (anti-HBs) were studied. Case 1 was a 47 year old woman positive for hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg), and case 2 was a 61 year old man positive for antibody to HBeAg (anti-HBe) and DNA-polymerase (DNA-p). Neither case had received the HBV vaccine. The nucleotide sequences of the HBV-DNA extracted from the patients' sera were determined within the pre-S2 and S genes. Seven out of nine S gene clones from case 1 and six out of nine S gene clones from case 2 had an amino acid replacement from Thr or Ile to Ser at codon 126 in the alpha-determinant of the S gene. Amino acid substitution of codon 145 of the S gene previously reported was not observed. Although two previous reports on HBV escape mutant carriers with both anti-HBs and HBeAg described some deletions in the pre-S2 gene, our cases did not show these deletions. Our analysis indicated that carriers with the HBV escape mutant did not always have pre-S2 gene deletions. We found two HBV escape mutant carriers who had amino acid substitutions at codon 126 in the S gene due to point mutation without any deletions in the pre-S2 gene.  相似文献   

2.
The diagnosis of liver diseases induced by hepatitis B virus (HBV) is supported by the detection of HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) in serum. The present study aimed to investigate the presence of HBV deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in patients with liver cirrhosis using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based on primers derived from the pre-S1 and pre-core regions. HBsAg was detected in 10 of 48 patients (21%), total anti-hepatitis B core antigen (HBc) antibodies in 54%, anti-hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) in 14.6%, anti-HBc immunoglobulin M in 8%, and anti-HBs in 26%; none had detectable HBeAg. HBV DNA was detected in 73% of the cirrhotic patients. All cirrhotic patients with HBsAg also had HBV DNA; HBV DNA was detected in 64.5% of those without HBsAg. We conclude that the clearance of HBsAg does not necessarily indicate termination of viraemia in patients with liver cirrhosis and the detection of HBV DNA using a PCR based on primers from the pre-S1 and pre-core regions should be included in the diagnosis of HBV infection.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Differentiating between an acute hepatitis B (AH-B) infection and an acute exacerbation of a chronic hepatitis B (CH-B) infection can present a problem for the clinician. The only current serological method of distinguishing between acute and symptomatic chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is the immunoglobulin M antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc) assay, which can be problematic. Therefore, in an attempt to better distinguish between acute and chronic HBV infection, sera from 26 patients with AH-B and 53 patients with CH-B were compared in a variety of experimental immunoassays. METHODS: Experimental assays have been designed to detect free antibody to hepatitis B e antigen (anti-HBe), hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)/anti-HBe immune complexes (ICs), and hepatitis B surface antigens (HBsAg)/antibody to hepatitis B surface antigen (anti-HBs) in the presence of excess antigen. An additional assay was developed to detect a novel anti-HBc specificity, designated antibody to woodchuck hepatitis virus (anti-HBcW), which cross-reacts with the core antigen of the woodchuck hepatitis virus. RESULTS: Sera from patients with CH-B showed significantly higher levels of free anti-HBe, HBeAg/anti-HBe ICs, and HBsAg/anti-HBs ICs compared with AH-B patient sera. Furthermore, patients with CH-B consistently produced high titer anti-HBcW, whereas patients with AH-B produced little or no anti-HBcW antibody. CONCLUSIONS: The serology of AH-B infection and symptomatic CH-B infection can be distinguished using a variety of experimental immunoassays in addition to the immunoglobulin M anti-HBc assay.  相似文献   

4.
Two previous case reports suggest that hepatitis B virus (HBV) core promoter variants with a high replication competence contribute to the pathogenesis of fulminant hepatitis B (FHB). We recently found in HBV genomes from patients with FHB an accumulation of mutations within the core promoter region. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the phenotype of these HBV variants. Replication competence and expression of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) of viral genomes from seven patients with FHB and one patient with fulminant recurrent hepatitis after liver transplantation were analyzed by transfection experiments in human hepatoma cells. Compared with wild-type virus, the HBV variants from the seven patients with FHB produced similar or slightly lower levels of intracellular replicative intermediates and extracellular viral particles. In contrast, the HBV genomes from the patient with fulminant recurrent hepatitis synthesized and secreted significantly more HBV DNA. All genomes tested expressed similar or even higher levels of HBeAg compared with wild-type virus, except for those from four patients with a precore stop codon mutation in the respective dominant viral populations. The level of HBsAg produced by all variant genomes was similar or reduced compared with wild-type virus. These data indicate that in some cases HBV variants with enhanced replication competence and/or a defect in HBeAg expression may contribute to the development of FHB. However, neither phenotype is an essential prerequisite; thus, an additional role of other viral or host factors in the pathogenesis of FHB is suggested.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and antibodies to hepatitis B e antigen (anti-HBe) commonly coexist, and laboratory tests are often requested to assess histological hepatitis activity. An optimum panel of tests has not been found and the usefulness of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA assays in this context has not been established. We assessed various blood tests to find which best predicted hepatitis activity. METHODS: Routine plasma biochemical liver tests and serum HBV DNA (hybridisation and PCR assays) were assessed prospectively in 123 patients positive for HBsAg and anti-HBe. We scored histological hepatitis activity (hepatitis activity index) and determined whether chronic active hepatitis (chronic hepatitis with portal and periportal lesions) was present. We analysed the relation between laboratory data and the hepatitis activity index or risk of chronic active hepatitis by multiple regression and multiple logistic regression, respectively. FINDINGS: The analyses provided models for predicting either the hepatitis activity index or the risk of chronic active hepatitis. Aspartate aminotransferase was the most important test in the two models. The contribution of HBV DNA and other assays, especially alanine-aminotransferase activity, were of no practical importance. INTERPRETATION: Because screening by aspartate-aminotransferase activity could not be improved by the addition of other assays or HBV DNA, patients positive for HBsAg and anti-HBe could be screened for chronic active hepatitis with a single assay and counselling of patients can be improved if proper reference values are used.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism underlying spontaneous clearance of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and the appearance of antibodies (anti-HBe seroconversion) in chronic hepatitis B is not known. Previous studies have demonstrated mutations within the precore/core gene before, during, and after seroconversion, suggesting that the emergence of mutations in the core gene may abrogate tolerance and that this event may act as a general principle for the initiation of the clearance of HBeAg. To investigate this hypothesis, we studied three patients with adult-acquired chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection before spontaneous seroconversion by sequential sequencing and single-stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of the entire precore/core genome. In one patient, a new viral strain appeared six months before seroconversion, but no mutations or new viral strains could be detected in the other two patients. SSCP analysis confirmed the sequencing results and revealed no evidence for the emergence of new viral subpopulations before seroconversion. These results suggest that the appearance of nucleotide changes within the precore/core region of the dominant viral strain is not a prerequisite for the induction of seroconversion in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection acquired during adulthood.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the frequency and significance of mutations in the core promoter and precore region in 103 Japanese patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. HBV DNAs from the patients' sera were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and were directly sequenced. A double mutation (T1762 A1764) in the core promoter was frequently observed in the patients regardless of HBeAg status except for asymptomatic carriers with HBeAg. Furthermore, a mutation at nucleotide 1753 from T to C or G was frequently found in anti-HBe positive patients and was often accompanied by the double mutation. The A1896 mutation was found in only about one fourth of the patients with anti-HBe. These data suggest that the patients with chronic liver diseases frequently had a double mutation regardless of HBeAg status and a mutation at nucleotide 1753 might be associated with HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B virus infection.  相似文献   

8.
Fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis is a histological variant of hepatitis B virus infection with a high rate of mortality. We describe a patient who acquired acute hepatitis B virus infection 8 months after renal transplantation. Clinical features of rapidly progressive liver failure, indicated by prolonged prothrombin time (57 seconds) and increased bilirubin (40.4 mg/dL) and ammonia (129 mumol/L) concentrations, were accompanied by an extremely high serum HBV DNA level (2.153 x 10(6) pg/mL). Liver biopsy specimen showed fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis with widespread balloon degeneration of hepatocytes, focal hepatocyte loss, bile stasis, periportal fibrosis, mild lymphocytic infiltration, and strongly positive immunohistochemical staining for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and hepatitis B core antigen. Lamivudine therapy suppressed HBV DNA to < 10 pg/mL within 4 weeks, which was followed by gradual recovery of liver function from a state of hepatic precoma. Twenty-four months after the onset of hepatitis, the patient had normal prothrombin time and bilirubin, transaminase, and albumin levels. She remained HBsAg positive and hepatitis B e antigen negative. Renal allograft function was stable, with a creatinine level of 1.52 mg/dL. HBV DNA remained suppressed after 22 months of lamivudine therapy. Our experience shows that fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis and liver failure caused by HBV infection can be successfully treated with lamivudine.  相似文献   

9.
Heterogeneity of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) core gene has been reported to be associated with the presence of active liver disease in Japanese patients with chronic HBV infection. This study evaluated the significance of HBV core gene heterogeneity in Western patients with chronic HBV infection. The hepatitis B virus precore/core gene from 45 patients (inactive:active liver disease ratio 16:29) was amplified from serum by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Gel electrophoresis was employed to detect large deletions. The PCR amplicons from 13 patients (all HBV serotype adw but with a different spectrum of liver disease) were cloned and sequenced. Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) serotypes were tested by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and hepatic expression of HBV antigens was assessed by immunohistochemistry. The HBV core gene was amplified from the serum of all 45 patients. Three patients had mixed infection with both precore mutant and wild-type HBV and all three had active liver disease. No patient had a large deletion of the HBV core gene. Hepatitis B virus core gene sequence variations were more common in the midcore region and there was no difference in the number of silent and missense substitutions between those with inactive and active liver disease. There was no correlation between the nucleotide or encoded amino acid substitutions and the clinical and biochemical parameters, including the subsequent response to interferon-alpha therapy (n = 37) or hepatic HBV antigen expression. Variation of the HBV core gene was not found to be preferentially associated with active liver disease in Western patients with chronic HBV infection. The pattern of hepatitis B core gene variation is in accord with the genomic organization of HBV.  相似文献   

10.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) mutants have recently been identified in patients with acute or fulminant as well as chronic infections. Naturally occurring mutations have been identified in all viral genes and regulatory elements. Mutations in the gene coding for the hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) may result in infection or viral persistence despite the presence of antibodies against HBsAg (anti-HBs) ("vaccine escape" or "immune escape"). Mutations in the gene encoding the pre-core/core protein (pre-core stop codon mutant) result in a loss of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and sero-conversion to antibodies to HBeAg (anti-HBe) with persistence of HBV replication (HBeAg minus mutant). Mutations in the core gene may lead among others to an immune escape due to a T cell receptor antagonism. Mutations in the polymerase gene can be associated with viral persistence or resistance to nucleoside analogues. Thus, HBV mutations may affect the natural course of infection, viral clearance and response to antiviral therapy. The exact contribution of specific mutations to diagnosis and therapy of HBV infection as well as patient management in clinical practice remain to be established.  相似文献   

11.
In order to find out rapidly the causes of the liver diseases suffered by patients with negative hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and multiple cloned antibody capture PCR techniques were established to examine serum hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA. By using both techniques along with the examination of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, the causes of chronic liver diseases with negative HBsAg were studied. It is found that nested-PCR can increase the sensitivity of single PCR more than 1,000 fold and multiple cloned antibody capture-PCR can detect concentration of HBV DNA as low as 0.1-0.01 pg/L. HBV DNA positive patients were found in 45.5%, 30.8%, 13.3% and 100% respectively of the patients suffering from liver cirhosis with negative HBsAg (group A, 22 cases), chronic hepatitis with negative HBsAg (group B, 13 cases), normal subjects with negative HBsAg and positive hepatitis B core antibody (HBcAb, group C, 30 cases) and liver cirhosis with positive HBsAg and negative HBeAg (group D, 12 cases). HBV DNA can be also found in the serum of HBsAb positive patients and subjects supposed to be healthy, 81.8% and 53.8% of the patients were infected with HBV and/or HCV in group A and group B respectively. All these results suggest that nested-PCR and multiple cloned antibody capture-PCR are rapid and highly sensitive methods for detection of serum HBV DNA. HBV infection is an important cause of chronic liver diseases in patients with negative HBsAg. The causes of most of the HBsAg-negative chronic liver diseases are related with infection of viruses. The clinical significance of serum HBsAb in naturally infected patients should be reconsidered.  相似文献   

12.
Short-term interferon treatment of serum hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative carriers with serum hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA and histological features of chronic hepatitis B has been largely unsuccessful. In a pilot study of long-term treatment, 42 such patients were randomly assigned to 6 million units of interferon alfa 2b (IFN-alpha2b) three times per week for 24 consecutive months (n = 21, 4 with cirrhosis) or to no therapy (n = 21, 3 with cirrhosis). Five patients (24%) discontinued therapy because of treatment-related adverse reactions. Serum levels of alanine transaminase (ALT) became persistently normal and HBV DNA undetectable by dot-blot assay in 8 patients receiving interferon and in 2 untreated controls (38% vs. 10%; P = .03). Hepatitis flare-ups disappeared in 17 patients during therapy compared with 6 controls (81% vs. 29%; P < .001). During a median period of 22 months after interferon was stopped, 2 treated patients (10%) lost serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and seroconverted to antibodies to hepatitis B surface antigen (anti-HBs). Serum ALT remained persistently normal and HBV DNA undetectable by dot-blot assay in 6 initial responders and 1 initial nonresponder, compared with none of the 21 untreated controls (sustained response: 33% vs. 0; P < .001). Comparative analysis of pre- and posttreatment liver biopsies showed that mean Knodell scores dropped in the treated group (10.3 to 5.3; P = .01), but not in the untreated group (9.3 to 9.8; not significant). In conclusion, a 24-month course of treatment with 6 MU IFN-alpha2b was well tolerated by most patients, led to sustained suppression of HBV in one third, and attenuated hepatitis in 81% of patients.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVES: Hepatitis B virus (HBV) with a stop mutation at precore codon 28 (TGG-->TAG, tryptophan-->stop) was investigated to clarify if such a mutant virus might play a role in hepatocarcinogenesis. METHODS: A total of 73 patients with HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma were included in this study. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed in DNA samples extracted from 73 sera to amplify a HBV-DNA segment involving the precore and proximal core regions, and sequences of PCR products were analyzed to see the presence of the mutations at precore codon 28 by a direct sequencing method. RESULTS: HBV-DNA was detectable in 64 (88%) patients by PCR. The stop mutation at precore codon 28 was identified in 50 of 58 PCR products (86%), in which direct sequencing was performed. Among patients with this mutant HBV, 21/50 (42%) patients were co-infected with wild-type HBV. The mutant virus was found in 23/28 (82%) patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and 27/30 (90%) patients without HBeAg. The mutant HBV alone was found in 10/28 (36%) patients with HBeAg and 19/30 (63%) without HBeAg. Among those patients on whom laparoscopy was performed, 22/24 (92%) with the precore codon 28 stop mutant alone had cirrhosis, compared to 12/19 (63%) co-infected by both the mutant and the wild-type (p < 0.05). The association of this mutant virus with both the presence and absence of HBeAg, and its association with cirrhosis when there is no co-infection with wild-type HBV, suggests an evolving pattern of liver pathology. CONCLUSION: The high prevalence of a stop mutation at precore codon 28 in these patients with hepatocellular carcinoma suggests that HBV with this mutation may contribute to the development of hepatocellular carcinoma.  相似文献   

14.
A mass hepatitis B vaccination program began in Taiwan in 1984. In order to determine the immune status of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection among preschool children, a total of 25 kindergartens in 20 townships and metropolitan precincts in central Taiwan were randomly selected through stratified sampling. Serum specimens of 2130 healthy preschool children aged 2-6 years old were screened for the HBV markers and liver function in 1996. HBV surface antigen (HBsAg), antibody against HBsAg (anti-HBs) and antibody against HBV core antigen (anti-HBc) were tested by reverse passive hemagglutination (RPHA), enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and radioimmunoassay (RIA) using commercial kits. HBV vaccination rate of the preschool children was 98%, and complete vaccination rate (three or four doses of HBV vaccine) was 94%. The HBsAg seropositive rate was 4.5% among incomplete vaccinees and 1.3% among complete vaccinees. The anti-HBs was detectable in 1637 of 2000 complete vaccinees (81.9%) and in 53 of 88 incomplete vaccinees (60.2%). The overall prevalence rate of anti-HBc was 2.4% (52 of 2130). The older the age, the lower the anti-HBs seropositive rate. The anti-HBs seropositive rats for complete vaccinees were 100% at 2 years old and 75% at 6 years old. There were no significant differences in HBsAg-seropositive rates and anti-HBs-seropositive rates among different residential areas or ethnic groups. There were three children who were seropositive on HBsAg, anti-HBs and anti-HBc, whether they were infected by the vaccine-induced escape mutant of HBV deserves scrutiny.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Three infants born to mothers who were hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) positive and had antibody to hepatitis Be antigen (anti-HBe), developed acute icteric hepatitis B within three months of birth. All three infants clinically recovered and developed circulating anti-HBs. Contrary to previous studies, these three cases indicate that mother-infant transmission of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) does occur in infants born to HBsAg-positive, HBe-Ag-negative carrier mothers, and these infants may develop severe acute icteric hepatitis. Therefore, immunoprophylaxis in such newborns may be indicated.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVES AND METHODS: We performed a prospective study to determine the clinical and virological significance of pre-S antigen detection in serum samples from patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection. Four hundred thirty seven consecutive serum samples from 116 patients were tested for the presence of both pre-S1 and pre-S2 antigens by radioimmunoassay using specific monoclonal antibodies. RESULTS: The pre-S1 antigen/HBs antigen ratio, gave an estimation of the number of pre-S1 epitopes expressed on the surface of circulating viral particles, and was positively correlated with the intensity of viral replication intensity (P < 0.05). Moreover, the pre-S1 antigen/HBs antigen ratio was significantly higher in patients suffering from chronic hepatitis associated with viral replication (24% +/- 13); in anti-HBe positive patients, the pre-S1 antigen/HBs antigen ratio was higher in patients replicating a HBe antigen minus variant of the hepatitis B virus and suffering from chronic hepatitis (17% +/- 9) than in asymptomatic HBs antigen carriers (5% +/- 6) (P < 0.05). The pre-S2 antigen/HBs antigen ratio was not correlated with the level of viral replication or with the patient's clinical status. CONCLUSION: This study confirms that pre-S1 antigen detection is a reliable marker of hepatitis B virus replication which can be easily performed in chronically infected patients. This assay is especially useful in identifying anti-HBe positive carriers who replicate a minus pre-core mutant and could benefit from antiviral therapy.  相似文献   

18.
The pathogenesis of hepatitis B can be subdivided into three sequentially correlated events: (a) loss of virus tolerance, (b) liver cell necrosis mediated by virus specific inflammatory response, (c) non-specific death of functionally compromised hepatocytes mediated by inflammatory cytochines released by virus specific inflammatory response. The severity of liver damage depends on the occurrence of these events as well as other factors. The HBeAg defective mutant appears to be involved in the loss of virus tolerance and therefore in the pathogenesis of acute hepatitis B. In addition it is positively selected by antiviral immunoreaction, behaves as an escape mutant, and it also contributes to the pathogenesis of chronic hepatitis B. The combination of these characteristics explains the relative prevalence of this mutant over wild-type HBV in patients with severe acute hepatitis B and in chronic HBsAg carriers during anti-HBe seroconversion and/or hepatitis B exacerbations. However, the absence of HBeAg defective mutants in some cases of severe and fulminant hepatitis B as well as its detection in asymptomatic carriers of HBsAg should not be surprising. The severity of hepatitis is influenced by many other factors: the number of virus infected cells, the competence and genetic heterogeneity of the immune system, the vigor and extent of non-specific inflammatory response and the killing of hepatocytes endangered by other diseases or infected with other hepatotropic viruses.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND/AIM: During the course of persistent hepatitis B virus infection, viral replication markedly decreases after acute exacerbation of liver inflammation accompanied by emergence of antihepatitis B e antibody (anti-HBe) and/or anti-hepatitis B surface antibody (anti-HBs). In some cases, however, persistent viral replication continues even after such exacerbation with or without HBeAg/anti-HBe seroconversion. The aim of the present study was to investigate the extent of genetic variations of HBV in this phenomenon. METHODS: Full-length HBV genomes were amplified by polymerase chain reaction from sera of three patients before and after acute exacerbation and were directly sequenced. RESULTS: In the whole genomes of 3215 nucleotides, only six nucleotide mutations for six amino acid substitutions (2 in the surface gene, 2 in the X gene, 1 in the core gene and 1 in the polymerase gene) were observed in patient 1, 15 mutations for 14 amino acid substitutions (1 in the pre-core codon 28, 4 in the surface gene, 4 in the core gene and 5 in the polymerase gene) were observed in patient 2, and 5 mutations for 6 amino acid substitutions (2 in the surface gene, 2 in the X gene, pre-core stop codon mutation and 1 in the polymerase gene) were observed in patient 3. Substitution in the a determinant of the surface gene, which encodes target epitopes for neutralizing antibodies, as well as those in the pre-core/core gene, which encodes epitopes for cytotoxic T cells, were mainly found. CONCLUSION: HBV that remained after the emergence of anti-HBe and anti-HBs are considered to possess mutations in epitopes for both humoral and cellular immunity. These mutant HBV may be involved in the pathogenesis of persistent hepatic injury after acute exacerbation.  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVES: We evaluated the clinical utility of IgM antibody to the hepatitis B (HB) core antigen (anti-HBc) and HB e antigen (HBeAg) serum levels in patients with chronic HB receiving interferon alfa. METHODS: Stored serum from 47 patients with chronic HB participating in a controlled trial of interferon alfa therapy (10 million U three times a week for 16 wk) were analyzed. All were seropositive for HB surface Ag, HBeAg, and HB virus (HBV) DNA before entry. IgM anti-HBc index values and HBeAg standard values were determined by automated microparticle enzyme immunoassay on samples drawn just before therapy and 6 months later. Ten normal subjects were tested as controls. IgM anti-HBc and HBeAg levels were compared to initial serum HBV DNA, DNA polymerase, serum aminotransferase levels, and demographic features. Serial IgM anti-HBc levels were also obtained during and after therapy in 10 responders and five nonresponders, and serial HBeAg levels were also obtained during and after therapy in four responders and four nonresponders. RESULTS: Neither IgM anti-HBc nor HBeAg levels correlated significantly with values for serum HBV DNA, DNA polymerase, aminotransferases, or demographic features. The initial mean IgM anti-HBc level among the 15 responders to therapy (loss of HBeAg and HBV DNA from serum) was no different from that in nonresponders (mean 1.15 vs 1.27, p = not significant). However, the initial mean HBeAg level was significantly lower in responders than in nonresponders (749.4 vs 1356.4, p = 0.019). Among 10 responders, IgM anti-HBc levels decreased progressively over time, so that at latest follow-up (1.5-4 yr later, mean 2.6 yr), the mean had decreased from 1.325 to 0.312 (p = < 0.001). Among five nonresponders, the mean did not change significantly over 1.5-3 yr (mean 2.2 yr) (1.26 vs 1.08, p = not significant). HBeAg values fell in parallel with HBV DNA and DNA polymerase values in four responders tested but remained elevated in four nonresponders. CONCLUSIONS: HBeAg levels, but not IgM anti-HBc levels, are useful in predicting response to interferon alfa, with responders tending to have lower pretreatment HBeAg levels than nonresponders. HBeAg levels may be used to monitor response to interferon alfa in patients with chronic HB.  相似文献   

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