Identification of different degrees of hepatitis B virus (HBV)
replication by serological (HBV-DNAp, HBcAg and HBV-DNA) and histological (HBcAg)
methods.
Quiroga JA, Bartolomé J, Porres JC, Mora I, Gútiez J, Hernández Guío C,
Carreño V.
The incidence of HBV-DNA polymerase, HBV-DNA and serum and liver HBcAg in 104
chronic HBsAg carriers was studied. HBV-DNA was the most frequently detected
marker, followed by HBcAg and HBV-DNAp. According to their individual or
combined presence, four different serological patterns of viral replication were
discerned: 53 patients had all these markers, 30 had HBV-DNA but lacked HBV-DNAp
(15 with and 15 without HBcAg) and 21 had no such markers detectable. The
simultaneous positivity for all of those markers was observed only in HBeAg-positive
patients. HBV-DNA alone or along with HBcAg was found in a similar incidence
irrespective of the HBe system. Liver HBcAg was found in all but four patients
with and in four without HBV-DNA. Viral DNA concentration was significantly (p
less than 0.001) higher when HBV-DNAp tested positive. Indeed, HBeAg rather than
anti-HBe patients had higher (p less than 0.005) levels of HBV-DNA. In HBeAg-positive
patients, the nuclear HBcAg staining was significantly (p less than 0.05) higher
when HBV-DNAp tested positive. In DNA polymerase-negative patients, but positive
for HBV-DNA, those with or without HBcAg had a similar percentage of core
antigen staining. The same distribution was seen in anti-HBe, HBV-DNA-positive
patients. However, the mean percentage of hepatocytes displaying cytoplasmic
HBcAg did not differ significantly among patients with HBV-DNA, irrespective of
the HBe system and the HBV-DNAp status. Such patients had significantly (p less
than 0.001) higher ALT levels than those without viral DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED
AT 250 WORDS)