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369823

Prevalence of occult hepatitis C virus in patients with HCV-antibody positivity and serum HCV RNA negativity

Article

Last updated: 21 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Introduction and aim
Chronic hepatitis C infection is a global problem with an increasing burden on healthcare, particularly in Egypt. Even with the advent of highly sensitive techniques, a subset of patients with positive hepatitis C virus antibody (HCV-Ab) and negative HCV-viremia remain challenging to treat. Therefore, we tried to determine the prevalence of occult HCV infection (OCI) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of patients presenting with a positive serologic test for anti-HCV-Ab and negative serum HCV-RNA-PCR (spontaneously cleared patients) and followed up those patients.
Patients and methods
Between March 2010 and March 2015, a prospective study was designed to include all consecutive patients with HCV-Ab positivity and HCV-RNA negativity who attended the Assiut Unit for treatment of viral hepatitis - the National Committee for Control of Viral Hepatitis. A total of 25 patients were recruited. Spontaneous clearance of serum HCV infection was approved on the basis of HCV-Ab positivity using two third-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay tests and serum HCV RNA negativity on three consecutive occasions, each 6 months apart. Follow-up serum HCV RNA levels were evaluated for patients with OCI every 6 months. The RNA extraction step was performed by a protocol modified from that of the QIAamp viral RNA kits. Blood samples for separation of PBMCs were collected from all patients. PBMCs were obtained using Ficoll-Hypaque density gradient of EDTA anticoagulated blood according to the manufacturer's instructions (Lymphoflot). Detection of HCV viral load was performed with the kit supplied by Applied Biosystem (HCV RT-PCR Kit lot No.).
Results
A total of 25 patients (21 men, mean age 36.2 ± 9.1) cleared HCV spontaneously (HCV-Ab positive and serum HCV RNA negative). Genomic HCV RNA was detected in PBMCs of three (12%) of 25 patients. These three patients with OCI were followed up for 18 months by measuring their serum HCV RNA using highly sensitive real-time PCR every 6 months. Only one patient became overt HCV with a low level of viremia.
Conclusion
OCI was detected in a considerable prevalence in patients who cleared HCV spontaneously, that entails corporations of HCV-viral assay in PBMCs into the diagnostic algorithm.

DOI

10.4103/2357-0121.192539

Keywords

HCV spontaneous clearance, OCI, PBMCs

Authors

First Name

Hani

Last Name

Aboalam

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Hebat-Allah

Last Name

Rashed

MiddleName

G.

Affiliation

-

Email

hebagr@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Mekky

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

-

Email

doc_mekky0000@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Hanan

Last Name

Nafeh

MiddleName

M.

Affiliation

-

Email

hmnafeh@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Osman

Last Name

Osman

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

-

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

1

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

49463

Issue Date

2016-05-01

Publish Date

2016-05-01

Page Start

12

Page End

16

Print ISSN

2357-0121

Online ISSN

2357-013X

Link

https://jcmrp.journals.ekb.eg/article_369823.html

Detail API

https://jcmrp.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=369823

Order

369,823

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of Current Medical Research and Practice

Publication Link

https://jcmrp.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Prevalence of occult hepatitis C virus in patients with HCV-antibody positivity and serum HCV RNA negativity

Details

Type

Article

Created At

20 Dec 2024