학술논문

Occult HBV infection in HIV‐infected adults and evaluation of pooled NAT for HBV
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Viral Hepatitis. 25(6)
Subject
Digestive Diseases
Hepatitis
Clinical Research
HIV/AIDS
Hepatitis - B
Infectious Diseases
Liver Disease
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
DNA
Viral
Female
HIV Infections
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis B virus
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis D
Humans
India
Male
Molecular Diagnostic Techniques
Sensitivity and Specificity
Specimen Handling
HBV
HIV
occult HBV
pooled NAT and resource-limited settings
HIV
Microbiology
Clinical Sciences
Medical Microbiology
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Language
Abstract
The study aimed to determine the prevalence of occult hepatitis B virus infection among HIV-infected persons and to evaluate the use of a pooling strategy to detect occult HBV infection in the setting of HIV infection. Five hundred and two HIV-positive individuals were tested for HBV, occult HBV and hepatitis C and D with serologic and nucleic acid testing (NAT). We also evaluated a pooled NAT strategy for screening occult HBV infection among the HIV-positive individuals. The prevalence of HBV infection among HIV-positive individuals was 32 (6.4%), and occult HBV prevalence was 10%. The pooling HBV NAT had a sensitivity of 66.7% and specificity of 100%, compared to HBV DNA NAT of individual samples. In conclusion, this study found a high prevalence of occult HBV infection among our HIV-infected population. We also demonstrated that pooled HBV NAT is highly specific, moderately sensitive and cost-effective. As conventional HBV viral load assays are expensive in resource-limited settings such as India, pooled HBV DNA NAT might be a good way for detecting occult HBV infection and will reduce HBV-associated complications.