The incidence of clinical NANBH among HCWs in this study is approximately three times higher than that of non-HCWs. HCWs are at significant risk for exposure to and acquisition of HCV.
The incidence of clinical NANBH among HCWs in this study is approximately three times higher than that of non-HCWs. HCWs are at significant risk for exposure to and acquisition of HCV.
An enzyme immunoassay (EIA) which utilizes a solid phase coated with a recombinant antigen (c100-3) derived from the hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome was evaluated for efficacy in the detection of antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV). The sensitivity of the antibody test was demonstrated by the detection of anti-HCV in a well-characterized panel of human specimens known to contain the infectious agent of non-A, non-B hepatitis. The specificity of the anti-HCV test was evaluated by testing 6,118 serum specimens from volunteer blood donors considered to be at low risk for exposure to HCV. The specificity of the anti-HCV EIA was demonstrated to be 99.56%, since 6,069 of 6,096 specimens from this low-risk group were nonreactive. A total of 49 (0.80%) of the 6,118 specimens were repeatedly reactive in the test, and 22 (46.81%) of the 47 specimens available for additional testing were confirmed as positive for antibodies to HCV c100-3. Among commercial plasma donors, 390 (10.49%) of 3,718 specimens were repeatedly reactive in the EIA. A total of 375 (97.40%) of the 385 specimens available for further testing were confirmed as positive. These limited data indicate that the prevalence of antibodies to HCV is 0.36% (22 confirmed positives among 6,118 specimens) among volunteer blood donors and 10.08% (375 confirmed positives among 3,718 specimens) among commercial plasma donors. The importance of confirmatory testing is discussed.
Recently, identification and molecular cloning of a host cellular gene designated GOR from chimpanzees experimentally infected with non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) agent was reported. It was further demonstrated that there is a close association between the immune response to an antigenic peptide of GOR (GOR2) and NANBH. In order to define the specificity of the immune response, in the present study we have identified an additional epitope in the GOR gene sequence, upstream from GOR2, and studied its correlation with the immune response to hepatitis C virus (HCV) in NANBH patients. An enzyme-linked immunoassay (EIA) was developed which utilizes synthetic peptides designated spGOR346 and spGOR2 as the serological target for the detection of anti-GOR antibodies in patient serum samples from various hepatic and non-hepatic disease categories. GOR peptides identified 80-90% of the NANBH samples that were positive for HCV C100-3 and about 70% of the NANBH samples that were positive by Abbott prototype second-generation HCV antibody assay. Among a normal donor population(s), only 2-3% of the samples were positive for antibodies to GOR sequences, whereas from the patient categories unrelated to viral hepatitis as well as various nonhepatic diseases, the immune response to both GOR peptides was closely associated with the presence of antibodies to HCV. The data indicate that antibodies to GOR is a marker associated with NANBH.
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