Occult hepatitis B virus after acute self-limited infection persisting for30 years without sequence variation

Citation
J. Blackberg et K. Kidd-ljunggren, Occult hepatitis B virus after acute self-limited infection persisting for30 years without sequence variation, J HEPATOL, 33(6), 2000, pp. 992-997
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Gastroenerology and Hepatology","da verificare
Journal title
JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
ISSN journal
01688278 → ACNP
Volume
33
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
992 - 997
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-8278(200012)33:6<992:OHBVAA>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Background/Aims: After acute self-limited hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection , serological loss of viral antigens and appearance of anti-HBs is generall y believed to signify viral clearance. Latent and occult HBV infection appe aring decades after self-limited hepatitis B has not been reported, nor has the evolutionary rate of HBV DNA over the same observation period. Methods: DNA from serum and leukocytes from 16 patients with acute self-lim ited hepatitis B 30 years earlier was tested by polymerase chain reaction a nd positive samples were sequenced. Liver tissue from four patients was als o tested. Additionally, another 10 HBV strains isolated from acute HBV case s in 1969-72 were compared to 11 strains isolated from acute cases in 1998- 99 in the same community. Results: HBV DNA was detected in liver from two patients, but not in serum or leukocytes, The HBV strains detected in liver showed complete homology, in the sequences analyzed, to the strains originally infecting these patien ts. Ten strains from 1998-99 were identical in pre-S and core promoter/prec ore regions to strains from the same community isolated 30 years earlier. Conclusions: HBV can persist as an occult infection three decades after acu te, apparently self-limited hepatitis B, and both the mutation and evolutio nary rates of HBV DNA are low.