Abstract

Eight of 13 Swedish patients (62%), studied prospectively, who developed posttransfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis (PT-NANBH) had earlier been found to seroconvert for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) c100-3 in the first-generation anti-HCV enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay 1-18 (mean, 8) weeks after onset of hepatitis. By using a second-generation test utilizing antigens encoded by the core NS3 and NS4 region of HCV, a further four patients non-reactive to c100-3 (NS4) were found to seroconvert. Thus 12 of 13 (92%) Swedish patients with PT-NANBH were shown to have HCV infection. In addition, the serologic reactivity for several individual synthetic peptides and/or recombinant HCV proteins was studied in seven anti-HCV c100-3 seroconverts studied long-term after onset of acute PT-HCV infection. No special patterns were found that could differentiate patients who recovered from those who developed chronic HCV infection. It was concluded that the addition of new recombinant antigens derived from the core and NS3 region to c100-3 (NS4) both improved the sensitivity of the anti-HCV test and shortened the window phase to seroconversion.

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