Detection of hepatitis C viral RNA in sporadic acute non-A, non-B hepatitis by polymerase chain reaction: Its usefulness for the early diagnosis of seronegative infection

1993 
To determine the prevalence of hepatitis C viral infection in patients with sporadic non-A, non-B (NANB) acute hepatitis, hepatitis C viral RNA was studied in the plasma of 15 patients by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assay. Plasma samples were sequentially obtained from 15 patients, and polymerase chain reaction was performed with two nested pairs of primers deduced from the 5′-non-coding region of hepatitis C viral sequences. Anti-C100 and anti-GOR antibodies were also measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay system. Plasma hepatitis C viral RNA was detected transiently in 7 of 15 patients (47%) at an early phase of the clinical course, while anti-C100 antibodies were detectable in only 2 (29%) of hepatitis C viral RNA-positive patients, and in 1 (13%) of the negative patients. Of 7 patients that were positive for plasma hepatitis C viral RNA, 4 (57%) had relapsing or protracted courses. In contrast, in all patients with undetectable hepatitis C viral RNA, hepatitis C viral RNA recovered and remained normal for at least 1 year. Thus, hepatitis C viral infection represents almost half the patients with acute sporadic NANB hepatitis, and detection of hepatitis C viral RNA in an early clinical phase is superior to anti-C100 measurement for diagnosing acute sporadic hepatitis C viral infection.
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