Abstract

Recent reports have indicated that serologic testing for hepatitis C virus (HCV) in patients with chronic renal failure may be inadequate to detect infections in this patient population. We prospectively tested 258 patients with end-stage renal disease who were referred for evaluation for renal transplantation for anti-HCV using a second-generation enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and a second-generation qualitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). We confirmed all positive EIAs with a third-generation recombinant immunoblot assay and genotyped RT-PCR-positive specimens. We found that 22 patients (8.5%) had serological evidence of HCV infection. Nineteen (86%) of the antibody-positive patients were viremic (HCV RNA positive). All but 1 of the patients was infected with HCV genotype 1. None of the 233 HCV antibody-negative patients were shown to be viremic by RT-PCR. No additional HCV cases were detected by screening all patients for HCV RNA by RT-PCR. However, RT-PCR is a valuable adjunct to serology in antibody-positive patients to distinguish resolved from active infections.

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