Document

Prevalence and molecular analysis of occult hepatitis B virus infection isolated in a sample of cryptogenic cirrhosis patients in Iran.

Identifier
DOI 10. 5001/omj.2014.23
Publisher
Oman Medical Specialty Board.
Gregorian
2014-03
Language
English
English abstract
Objectives: The aims of this study are to investigate the prevalence of occult hepatitis B virus infection among patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis and to analyze the relationship between surface protein variability and occult hepatitis B virus infection, which may be related to the pathogenesis of occult hepatitis B virus infection in cryptogenic cirrhosis. Occult hepatitis B virus infection is a well-recognized clinical entity characterized by the detection of hepatitis B virus DNA in serum and/or liver in the absence of detectable hepatitis B virus surface antigen, with or without any serological markers of a past infection. Methods: Sera from patients with cryptogenic chronic liver disease were tested for hepatitis B virus DNA using both real-time and nested PCR. In the detected hepatitis B virus DNA samples, the surface gene was analyzed for mutations. Results: Hepatitis B virus DNA was detected in 38% of patients, all of whom had a viral load below 10,000 copies/mL. All hepatitis B virus belonged to genotype D. There were no significant associations between occult hepatitis B virus infection status and age, gender, ALT/AST levels, viral load or serologic markers of previous hepatitis B virus infection. There were 14 mutations found in 5 patients; 6 were in the major hydrophilic region, of which 4 were Y134F assigning for the "a" determinant region. All patients who acquired Y134F contained S207R (within HLA-A2-restricted CTL epitope) as a combination. Conclusion: Hepatitis B virus surface antigen variants may arise as a result of natural selection to evade the immune surveillance of the infected host, and subsequently may go undetected by conventional hepatitis B virus surface antigen screening tests. Etiological diagnosis of cryptogenic cirrhosis is significantly underestimated with current serology testing methods alone.
Member of
Citation
Anvari, Fatemeh Akhavan, Alavian, Seyed Moayyed, Norouzi, Mehdi, Mahabadi, Mostafa, & Jazayeri, Seyed Mohammad (2014). Prevalence and molecular analysis of occult hepatitis B virus infection isolated in a sample of cryptogenic cirrhosis patients in Iran.
Category
Journal articles