Abstract
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of liver and tumour tissue obtained at necropsy from 44 southern African Blacks with hepatocellular carcinoma were stained for hepatitis-B virus surface antigen by immunofluorescence, immunoperoxidase and orcein techniques. The antigen was present in the serum of 68% of the patients. Staining for tissue antigen was positive in 45% of the patients. Non-tumorous hepatocytes alone stained positively in 22.5% of patients, tumour cells alone in 12.5% and both in 10%. Antigen was present in relatively few tumour cells and the amounts detected were small; it was more readily detectable in moderately differentiated than in poorly differentiated malignant cells. Identical results were obtained with immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase staining, but the orcein stain failed to demonstrate the antigen in tumour cells. Cirrhosis was present in the non-tumorous liver in 70% of the patients. Antigen was detected in cirrhotic tissue in 43% of the patients with cirrhosis, and in non-tumorous liver tissue in 8% of those without cirrhosis, but this difference was not significant. The antigen frequency in tumour tissue was the same in patients with and without cirrhosis. No correlation was found between the presence of liver-cell dysplasia and the presence or absence of either the antigen or cirrhosis in the non-tumorous liver tissue. Ground-glass hepatocytes were seen in non-tumorous liver tissue of 5 patients, but not in tumour tissue. While 54% of the patients with antigenaemia had demonstrable tissue antigen, 10% of patients with tissue antigen had no detectable antigenaemia.
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