Persistent viremia after clinical or subclinical hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is believed to occur in patients with chronic hepatitis C, but little is known about the duration of HCV replication in patients with acute hepatitis who have recovered or the relation of HCV viremia with the kinetics of antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV). We tested HCV-RNA and anti-HCV in serial serum samples from 41 patients with posttransfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis, followed for an average of 6 years after transfusion. Serum HCV-RNA was measured by nested polymerase chain reaction, which used primers from the 5' untranslated region of the HCV genome. Anti-HCV were tested with first- and second-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA 1 and ELISA 2), and with a second-generation recombinant immunoblot assay. Of the 41 patients, 10 recovered and 31 progressed to chronic liver disease. HCV-RNA was detected in serum before or simultaneously with the onset of hepatitis in all cases, and lasted between 2 and 6 weeks in 5 of the 10 patients who recovered, whereas it persisted for the entire follow-up period in every case with chronic hepatitis and in the remaining 5 patients with self-limiting hepatitis. Anti-HCV were detected with ELISA 2 in the first serum sample, with raised serum transaminases in 57% of patients, but in only 6% with ELISA 1. In the sample obtained 1 month after the onset of hepatitis, anti-HCV were detected with ELISA 2 in 94% of patients, but in 34% with the ELISA 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Our results indicate that HCV infection probably plays an important etiologic role in cryptogenic liver disease and, in some patients, in chronic hepatitis B. Determining whether anti-HCV are present appears to be useful for differentiating viral from autoimmune chronic liver diseases.
In patients with early RA, smoking was associated with earlier disease onset and the SE. Smoking was an independent factor of radiographic progression.
Recurrent HCV infection after liver transplantation is universal and sustained clearance of HCV-RNA rarely occurs. The aim of this study was to characterize cell-mediated immunity and cytokine production in HCV-infected patients after liver transplant. The study included 6 pretransplantation patients (PT) and 15 liver transplanted patients, including 5 with spontaneous HCV-RNA clearance (SC group), 5 with sustained virological response after antiviral treatment (SVR group), and 5 no response (NR group). The control group included 5 HCV-RNA negative, anti-HCV negative healthy individuals. This study examines proliferative T-cell response and cytokine production (gamma-interferon and IL-10) after HCV specific and phytohemagglutinin (PHA) stimulation in cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from each group. Multispecific proliferative responses to HCV antigens (mean Stimulation Index; SI) were higher in the SVR group (mean SI 7.4 +/- 2) and SC group, as compared with the NR group (P <.05, vs SVR) and PT group (P <.05, vs SVR and SC). After PHA stimulation, gamma-interferon levels were similar to controls (4330 +/- 640 pg/ml) in the SC (4474 +/- 300 pg/mL) and SVR groups (3647 +/- 300 pg/mL), but were significantly lower than controls in the PT (401 +/- 331 pg/mL; P <.02) and NR groups (546 +/- 360 pg/mL; P <.01). IL-10 production after PHA stimulation was similar in SC, SVR, and controls (647 +/- 279 pg/mL, 674 +/- 310 pg/mL and 841 +/- 294 pg/mL, respectively), but was lower in PT patients (232 +/- 94 pg/mL). The NR group showed high basal IL-10 production with little increase after stimulation. In conclusion, liver post-transplantation patients with spontaneous clearance of HCV-RNA and those with sustained viral response after therapy showed an immune response despite immunosuppression that might have contributed to their favorable outcome.
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