| 2008 JASN IMPACT FACTOR 7.505 | HOME AUTHOR INFO EDITORIAL BOARD SUBSCRIBE FEEDBACK ALERTS HELP | |||
| CURRENT ISSUE | ARCHIVES | JASN Express | ONLINE SUBMISSION | |
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, Vol 7, 2409-2413, Copyright © 1996 by American Society of Nephrology
REGULAR ARTICLES |
DS Lee, RR Lesniewski, YC Sung, WK Min, SG Park, KH Lee and HS Kim
Department of Clinical Pathology, Korea Cancer Center Hospital, Seoul.
A routine screening test used in the diagnosis of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the anti-HCV antibody (anti-HCV) test containing core, NS3, NS4, and NS5 antigens of HCV. When HCV infection occurs in immunocompromised hosts, antibody formation against core, NS3, or NS4 antigens may be weak in the presence of HCV viremia and cannot be detected by routine anti-HCV tests. This study proposed that in immunocompromised hosts such as patients with chronic renal failure (whose capacity to form antibodies is diminished), antibody formation against the E2 region would be preserved, because the E2/NS1 region of HCV is strongly immunogenic. The aim of this study is to evaluate the significance of anti-E2 in the diagnosis of HCV infection among patients on maintenance hemodialysis who are anti-HCV-negative, using a conventional third-generation enzyme immunoassay (EIA) kit. The E2/NS1 gene of HCV encoding the amino acid sequence 388-664 was molecularly cloned into a vector containing an SV 40 promotor and was expressed in Chinese Hamster ovary cells. Using this E2 protein, the anti-E2 test was performed by EIA on 100 patients on maintenance hemodialysis, and on 50 patients with chronic hepatitis C who were anti-HCV-positive, to evaluate the antigenecity of the E2 protein. Of the 100 hemodialysis patients, 15 (15.0%) tested anti-HCV-positive using a third generation anti-HCV ELISA kit. Of the 85 patients who tested negative for anti- HCV, nine (10.6%) were anti-E2-positive and six (66.7%) of these anti- E2 positive patients showed HCV RNA viremia by HCV reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Fourty-two (84.0%) of 50 patients with chronic hepatitis C were anti-E2-positive. As a control group, we tested for anti-E2 among 30 blood donors who were anti-HCV- negative, and also among 85 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who were anti-HCV-negative, but in both groups, none (0%) was anti-E2- positive. In conclusion, these data suggest that the E2 protein of HCV should be included in a diagnostic anti-HCV kit for the detection of HCV infection in immunocompromised patients.
|
HOME
CURRENT ISSUE
ARCHIVES
JASN Express
ONLINE SUBMISSION
AUTHOR INFO
EDITORIAL BOARD SUBSCRIBE FEEDBACK ALERTS HELP |
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society of Nephrology. Online ISSN: 1533-3450 Print ISSN: 1046-6673