ABSTRACT
Serial serum specimens from 149 patients with clinically diagnosed hepatitis were tested for five hepatitis B serological markers: hepatitis B surface antigen and its antibody (anti-HBs); hepatitis B e-antigen and its antibody (anti-HBe); and antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc). The times of appearance, disappearance, and persistence of these markers were used to differentiate various serological profiles obtained from the study. Four distinctive profiles were found to be associated with acute hepatitis B followed by recovery, and three with chronic hepatitis. These serologic profiles were assessed as diagnostic and prognostic guides for clinical management of the disease.
Subject(s)
Hepatitis B/immunology , Hepatitis B/classification , Hepatitis B Antibodies/analysis , Hepatitis B Surface Antigens/analysis , Hepatitis B e Antigens/analysis , Humans , Time FactorsABSTRACT
The performance of a solid phase radioimmunoassay (ABBOTT-HBe) for the detection of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and its antibody anti-HBe was evaluated in clinical studies. The reagents and procedure were found to be reproducible by seven investigators, and lab-to-lab variations were minimal. In HBsAg positive sera, ABBOTT-HBe detected HBeAg or anti-HBe in 90% of the specimens compared to 50% tested by immunodiffusion. During the early acute stage of viral infection, serum HBeAg coincided with the rise and decline of HBsAg and seroconversion to anti-HBe occurred most often prior to loss of HBsAg. Patients with clinical evidence of chronic liver disease showed persistence of HBsAg and HBeAg. Vertical transmission studies of hepatitis B virus infection from mother to newborns, showed that mothers whose sera were positive for both HBsAg and HBeAg resulted in a greater incidence of transmission of hepatitis B virus to their offspring than mothers whose sera were HBsAg positive but HBeAg negative.