An Assay for Circulating Antibodies to a Major Etiologic Virus of Human Non-A, Non-B Hepatitis

George Kuo, Q L Choo, Harrison Alter(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Gary Gitnick(National Institutes of Health Clinical Center), Allan G. Redeker(Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center), R H Purcell(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Tatsuo Miyamura(National Institute of Health), Jules L. Dienstag(Massachusetts General Hospital), M J Alter(National Institutes of Health Clinical Center), Cladd E. Stevens(New York Blood Center), Gary E. Tegtmeier(Kansas City Kansas Community College), Ferruccio Bonino(Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria San Giovanni Battista), Massimo Colombo(University of Milan), W.-S. Lee, C. Kuo, Karin Berger, Jeffrey R. Shuster, Lacy R. Overby, Daniel W. Bradley(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Michael Houghton
Science
April 21, 1989
Cited by 3,377

Abstract

A specific assay has been developed for a blood-borne non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) virus in which a polypeptide synthesized in recombinant yeast clones of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is used to capture circulating viral antibodies. HCV antibodies were detected in six of seven human sera that were shown previously to transmit NANBH to chimpanzees. Assays of ten blood transfusions in the United States that resulted in chronic NANBH revealed that there was at least one positive blood donor in nine of these cases and that all ten recipients seroconverted during their illnesses. About 80 percent of chronic, post-transfusion NANBH (PT-NANBH) patients from Italy and Japan had circulating HCV antibody; a much lower frequency (15 percent) was observed in acute, resolving infections. In addition, 58 percent of NANBH patients from the United States with no identifiable source of parenteral exposure to the virus were also positive for HCV antibody. These data indicate that HCV is a major cause of NANBH throughout the world.


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