학술논문

Clinical usefulness of a novel high-sensitivity hepatitis B core-related antigen assay to determine the initiation of treatment for HBV reactivation
Original Article-Liver, Pancreas, and Biliary Tract
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Gastroenterology. July 2022, Vol. 57 Issue 7, p486, 9 p.
Subject
Diagnosis
Comparative analysis
Hospitals -- Comparative analysis
Antigens -- Comparative analysis
Medical research -- Comparative analysis
Hepatitis B -- Diagnosis
Medical schools -- Comparative analysis
Medicine, Experimental -- Comparative analysis
Medical colleges -- Comparative analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0944-1174
Abstract
Author(s): Takanori Suzuki [sup.1], Takako Inoue [sup.1], Kentaro Matsuura [sup.1], Shigeru Kusumoto [sup.1], Shinya Hagiwara [sup.1], Shintaro Ogawa [sup.1], Shintaro Yagi [sup.2], Atsushi Kaneko [sup.3], Kei Fujiwara [sup.1], Takehisa Watanabe [...]
Backgrounds A fully automated, novel, high-sensitivity hepatitis B core-related antigen assay (iTACT-HBcrAg) has been developing. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of measuring HBcrAg, using that assay, to diagnose HBV reactivation in a multi-center setting, compared with ultra-high-sensitivity HBsAg (iTACT-HBsAg) and HBV DNA assays. Methods Forty-four patients with HBV reactivation from 2008 to 2020 were enrolled in four hospitals. Serial serum specimens from the patients were assessed retrospectively for their HBcrAg levels by iTACT-HBcrAg (lower limit of detection; 2.0 log U/mL) and HBsAg levels by iTACT-HBsAg (lower limit of detection; 0.0005 IU/mL); these were compared to the HBV DNA levels. HBV reactivation was defined as detection of serum HBV DNA, including unquantifiable detection. Results At HBV reactivation and/or thereafter, HBV DNA levels were quantified ([greater than or equal to] 1.3 log IU/mL) in the sera of 27 patients, and were below the level of quantification (< 1.3 log IU/mL) in the sera of 17 patients. Of the 27 patients with HBV reactivation and whose serum HBV DNA was quantified, the sera of 26 and 24 patients (96.3% and 88.9%) were positive by iTACT-HBcrAg and iTACT-HBsAg, respectively. HBcrAg was detectable by iTACT-HBcrAg before HBV DNA was quantifiable in 15 of the 27 patients. Of the 11 patients with HBV reactivation and undetectable HBcrAg by iTACT-HBcrAg at HBV reactivation and/or thereafter, 10 had unquantifiable HBV DNA and none developed HBV reactivation-related hepatitis. Conclusions The iTACT-HBcrAg assay is useful for monitoring HBV reactivation to determine the initiation of treatment with nucleos(t)ide analogues.