POSTTRANSFUSIONAL ANTI-HCV-NEGATIVE NON-A-HEPATITIS NON-B-HEPATITIS .2. SEROLOGICAL AND POLYMERASE CHAIN-REACTION ANALYSIS FOR HEPATITIS-C AND HEPATITIS-B VIRUSES
V. Thiers et al., POSTTRANSFUSIONAL ANTI-HCV-NEGATIVE NON-A-HEPATITIS NON-B-HEPATITIS .2. SEROLOGICAL AND POLYMERASE CHAIN-REACTION ANALYSIS FOR HEPATITIS-C AND HEPATITIS-B VIRUSES, Journal of hepatology, 18(1), 1993, pp. 34-39
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major etilogical agent of post-transfusio
nal and sporadic acute and chronic hepatitis in various geographical a
reas. However, anti-HCV seroconversion was uncommon in a recent study
of patients with post-transfusional hepatitis in Paris, France (N. Asa
r et al., companion paper). The aim of the present study was to detect
viral markers, in particular HCV RNA and hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA,
in these patients. A combination of second-generation assays for anti
-HCV antibodies and the polymerase chain reaction were used to identif
y HCV RNA and HBV DNA sequences in serum samples collected before and
after transfusion from patients who developed non-A, non-B hepatitis.
Eighteen cases of acute, post-transfusional, non-A, non-B hepatitis we
re identified in the prospective clinical survey. Only three of these
18 subjects developed anti-HCV antibodies in second-generation tests.
HCV RNA was identified in the serum of these three subjects but in non
e of the others. Two patients who were anti-HCV-negative had polymeras
e chain reaction evidence of HBV DNA. Known viral markers were not ide
ntified in 13 of the 18 patients with acute post-transfusional non-A,
non-B hepatitis. These results raise the issue of HCV strains or 'non-
A, non-B, non-C' viruses not identified by current HCV and HBV markers
and implicated in post-transfusional hepatitis in France.