Hemophiliacs who have been exposed to unheated and/or dry heated pooled clotting factor concentrates are at high risk of chronic hepatitis C. Although the mechanism and site of hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication are not yet known, HCV is thought to replicate through a complementary negative RNA strand, as has been shown for flaviviruses. The detection of negative RNA strands has therefore been regarded as a marker of replication. We investigated the prevalence of HCV-RNA and of negative HCV-RNA strands in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and plasma of hemophiliacs. Forty-three of 47 patients studied (91%) had anti-HCV antibodies and in 36 patients HCV-RNA was detectable in PBMC. In one group of 20 patients negative HCV-RNA strands were present in PBMC and 10 of these patients also had negative HCV-RNA strands in plasma. In another group of nine patients HCV-RNA was detected in PBMC, although cDNA synthesis was carried out in the absence of primers. Only in two of these nine patients negative and positive HCV-RNA strands were demonstrated specifically in PBMC using a modified reverse transcription step. If the presence of negative HCV-RNA strands can be considered as marker of viral replication, the findings indicate that HCV can replicate in PBMC. Furthermore, in certain patients it is impossible to use the currently available technique to detect selectively positive or negative HCV-RNA strands.
Many types of skin disorders concomitantly occur with hepatitis C virus infection. These skin lesions may be induced or worsened during antiviral therapy with interferon-alpha (IFN). To our knowledge, hyperpigmentation of the skin--and especially of the tongue--has not been reported so far. We describe two dark-skinned patients who developed hyperpigmented skin and tongue lesions during combination therapy with IFN and ribavirin. Immunohistochemical analysis of tongue biopsies confirmed the suspicion of melanin deposits in these areas of hyperpigmentation. We hypothesize that during interferon therapy, melanocytes may produce more melanin pigment in the presence of alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone and sufficient amounts of tyrosine, leading to melanin deposits and clinical hyperpigmentation.
Parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) is a major factor in the pathophysiology of hypercalcaemia of malignancy. Recent evidence suggests that PTHrP may play an important role in the growth and differentiation of neoplastic as well as non-neoplastic cells. PTHrP was originally detected in normal fetal, but not adult, liver. We have used immunocytochemistry to show that reactive human bile ductules expressing a neuroendocrine phenotype contain immunoreactive PTHrP. These observations raised the possibility that PTHrP immunoreactivity may be useful in the differential diagnosis of primary liver tumours and metastases of adenocarcinoma. A total of 24 primary liver tumours and 22 metastases of adenocarcinoma were studied. All cholangiocarcinomas showed immunopositivity for PTHrP and chromogranin A, while all hepatocellular carcinomas were negative for PTHrP and showed only focal and weak positivity for chromogranin A. Mixed types of primary liver tumour contained PTHrP immunoreactivity only in the areas of cholangiocellular differentiation. Moreover, all metastatic adenocarcinomas were negative for PTHrP and chromogranin A except for two out of five metastatic breast adenocarcinomas. These two patients had bone metastases and hypercalcaemia and thus did not yield differential diagnostic problems with cholangiocarcinoma. None of the patients with cholangiocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma had hypercalcaemia. We conclude that PTHrP is a useful marker for primary cholangiocarcinoma, especially in the differential diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma and metastatic adenocarcinoma.
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