Abstract

To evaluate the potential implication of in vivo interferon production in the pathogenesis of different forms of acute and chronic hepatitis B virus infection, serum levels of interferon-alpha and -gamma were measured using immunoassay techniques in 20 patients with acute hepatitis B who subsequently cleared the virus (group Ia), 8 patients with acute hepatitis B who became HBsAg carriers (group Ib), 55 patients with chronic hepatitis B (group II), and 15 healthy controls. None of the controls had interferon-alpha or -gamma detectable in serum, while 15% and 100% of group Ia patients, 25% and 100% of group Ib patients, and 22% and 15% of group II patients, had raised serum levels of interferon-alpha and -gamma, respectively. Serum interferon-gamma was detected significantly more frequently in group Ia and Ib patients than in controls and in group II patients. Among patients with acute hepatitis B, serum levels of interferon-alpha and -gamma showed no significant difference between group Ia and group Ib patients. Among patients with chronic hepatitis B, interferon-alpha was detected significantly more frequently in patients with serum HBV-DNA (31.4% or 11/35) than in those without (5% or 1/20), whereas interferon-gamma was detected significantly more frequently in patients with chronic active hepatitis (28% or 7/25) than in those with chronic persistent hepatitis (3.3% or 1/30). In conclusion, in acute hepatitis B, serum levels of interferon-alpha and -gamma did not show a significant difference between patients who subsequently cleared the virus and those who became HBsAg carriers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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