Detection of hepatitis B virus DNA in liver and serum: a direct appraisal of the chronic carrier state - PubMed (original) (raw)

Detection of hepatitis B virus DNA in liver and serum: a direct appraisal of the chronic carrier state

C Brechot et al. Lancet. 1981.

Abstract

The detection of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA in the liver and the serum permits direct study of the interaction between the virus and the liver cell. 40 HBV chronic carriers were studied by the blot technique of Southern to detect HBV DNA, and the results were compared with the serological status and histological status of the patients. It was possible to define two different chronic carrier states. The first is characterised by free viral DNA in the liver, with viral DNA and hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAG) in the serum; integrated HBV DNA is also present, at least in some patients. The second carrier state is characterised by the presence of only integrated HBV DNA sequences in the liver: viral DNA and HBeAg are not present in the serum. In one HBeAg-negative patient, however, free HBV DNA was detected in the liver and HBV DNA was present in the serum. The hybridisation technique appears to be a very sensitive test which could reflect viral multiplication better than HBeAg radioimmunoassay. Since a needle biopsy sample provides sufficient tissue for the Southern blot technique, it should be useful in understanding chronic hepatitis, the selection of patients for antiviral therapy, and the estimation of its efficiency.

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