Abstract
The prevalence of serum antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV) was assessed by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in 66 patients (46 male and 20 female; mean age +/- SEM, 61.5 +/- 10.1 yr) with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Nineteen (28.8%) were positive for this test. The frequency of HCV positiveness was significantly higher in the patients with IPF than in the 9,464 control subjects, whose ages were comparable with those of the patients (3.66%, p less than 0.05). Importantly, 12 of the 19 patients with IPF and positive ELISA results (63.2%) had positive results on the Chiron recombinant immunoblotting assay (RIBA), which is known to be more specific for HCV. We judged the 12 perceptible reactions as eight reactive and four indeterminate. When we examined liver function retrospectively, only two of eight patients who tested positive for the HCV had liver dysfunction, suggesting that anti-HCV positivity in IPF was not observed as a result of liver disease. These results lead us to speculate that HCV infection may play an important role in the pathogenesis of IPF, or that the sera of patients with IPF may contain some antibody against an unknown epitope and cross-react with the anti-HCV assay.
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