High Prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) RNA in Dialysis Patients: Failure of Commercially Available Antibody Tests to Identify a Significant Number of Patients with HCV Infection

Jens Bukh(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), P. Wantzin, Kim Krogsgaard, F Knudsen, Robert H. Purcell, R.H. Miller, the Copenhagen Dialysis HCV Study Group
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
December 1, 1993
Cited by 169

Abstract

Results of serologic tests were correlated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) viremia, determined by a cDNA polymerase chain reaction assay to detect HCV RNA, in 340 Danish dialysis patients; of these, 28 (8.2%) were positive for antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV) with second-generation ELI-SAs. HCV RNA was found in sera from 27 of these 28 anti-HCV-positive patients. However, 8 dialysis patients had detectable levels of HCV RNA but were anti-HCV-negative with second-generation ELISAs. Among the 35 HCV-infected dialysis patients 16 were positive, 7 indeterminate, and 12 negative with the second-generation RIBA. More than 60% of patients with evidence of ongoing liver disease had HCV infection. Thus, current commercially available antibody tests did not accurately reflect the HCV status in dialysis patients. A relatively high prevalence (> 10%) of HCV RNA, closely associated with liver disease, was found among dialysis patients in a low-prevalence area of the world.


Related Papers