1. GBV-C/HGV infection in hepatitis C virus-infected deferred Swedish blood donors
- Author
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Gudrun Lindh, Ola Weiland, Annika Lindholm, Gunnar Norkrans, U Foberg, Anders Widell, Per Björkman, Steven Shev, and Aril Frydén
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Hepatitis, Viral, Human ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,Blood Donors ,Viremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus ,Serology ,Flaviviridae ,Virology ,medicine ,Humans ,Sweden ,Hepatitis ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,digestive system diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,business ,Nested polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Sera from 62 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected Swedish blood donors were tested by a nested polymerase chain reaction using primers targeting the 5'-noncoding region of the GB virus-C/hepatitis G (GBV-C/HGV) genome and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay that detects antibodies to the envelope protein E2 of GBV-C/HGV (anti-E2). Fourteen (22%) and 21 (34%) of the 62 blood donors were found to be GBV-C/HGV RNA and anti-E2 positive, respectively. None of the blood donors was positive for both GBV-C/HGV RNA and anti-E2. Thus, 35 of 62 (56%) HCV-infected donors had been exposed to GBV-C/HGV infection. At sequencing of the 14 GBV-C/HGV isolates, 12 were identified as subtype 2a and 2 as subtype 2b. One of 7 (14%) donors with mild liver disease such as steatosis and nonspecific reactive hepatitis had been exposed to GBV-C/HGV vs. 34 of 55 (62%) with chronic hepatitis with or without cirrhosis (P = 0.04). All other differences in histology were small between HCV and dual HCV GBV-C/HGV-infected donors. In conclusion, more than half of HCV-infected Swedish blood donors in this study were positive for either GBV-C/HGV RNA or anti-E2. GBV-C/HGV viremia and seropositivity were mutually exclusive.
- Published
- 1998
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