Artigo Revisado por pares

Immunoglobulin and hepatitis B surface antigen‐specific circulating immune complexes in chronic hepatitis with hepatitis delta virus infection

1990; Wiley; Volume: 30; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/jmv.1890300106

ISSN

1096-9071

Autores

Jung‐Fa Tsai, Harold S. Margolis, Howard A. Fields, Omana V. Nainan, Wen Yu Chang, Juei‐Hsiung Tsai,

Tópico(s)

Blood groups and transfusion

Resumo

Abstract IgM, IgG, and HBsAg containing circulating immune complexes (CIC) were determined, by conglutinin (K) and C1q assays, for assessing the role of CIC in hepatitis delta virus (HDV) infection in 54 HBsAg‐negative controls and 85 HBsAg‐positive patients with chronic hepatitis. The prevalence of HDV markers (HDV antigen and anti‐HD) was 24.70% (21/85). CIC were a common feature of HDV infection with 95.24% of patients having at least one abnormal test resutlt. The prevalence of elevated IgM‐K, IgG‐K, IgM‐C1q, and IgG‐C1q CIC were 85.71, 85.71, 57.14, and 85.71%, respectively. The prevalence of IgM class CIC were statistically higher in patients with HDV infection than in those without ( P = .001 for the K assay and P = .023 for the C1q assay). There was no difference in the prevalence of IgG class CIC. Patients with HDV infection also have significantly higher median levels of IgM K‐CIC ( P = .002), IgG K‐CIC ( P = .049), and IgG C1q‐CIC ( P = .008). In patients with HDV infection, there was positive correlation between IgM C1q‐CIC and transminase levels ( r = .519, P = .016 for AST; r = .500, P = .021 for ALT). There was no difference in the prevalence of HBsAg containing CIC between patients with HDV infection (76.19%) and those without (74.60%). In conclusion, IgM class CIC are the major CIC and correlate with disease activity in HDV infection. CIC may play a role in the pathogenesis of HDV infection.

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