1. Reflex testing for anti-HDV in HBsAg-positive patients offers high diagnostic yield in a large Central European tertiary care center
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Johannes Bernhard, Michael Schwarz, Lorenz Balcar, Benedikt Hofer, Nina Dominik, Robert Strassl, Stephan Aberle, Petra Munda, Mattias Mandorfer, Michael Trauner, Thomas Reiberger, and Mathias Jachs
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Hepatitis delta ,Epidemiology ,Antivirals ,Hepatology ,Virology ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Current guidelines recommend reflex testing for hepatitis D virus (HDV) coinfection in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-positive patients over risk-factor based screening. We aimed to evaluate the feasibility and diagnostic yield of reflex anti-HDV testing at a Central European tertiary care center. We retrospectively included 560 consecutive patients who had a recorded (first) positive HBsAg test result at the Vienna General Hospital between 2018 and 2022. While reflex anti-HDV testing had been implemented in our hepatitis outpatient clinic (n = 153, ‘reflex testing cohort’), HDV screening needed to be manually ordered in the remaining patients (n = 407, ‘standard testing cohort’). Overall, 98.0% and 65.1% of patients in the reflex and standard testing cohort were screened for anti-HDV, respectively, and the overall seroprevalence of anti-HDV among screened patients was 6.7% (n = 28, reflex testing cohort: 9.3%, standard testing cohort: 5.3%). Risk factors for HDV were present in 49.1% of all included and in 89.3% of anti-HDV positive patients, respectively. Anti-HDV positive patients showed higher ALT (54 [33–83] vs. 29 [19–49] U/L; p = 0.005) and a higher proportion of low-to-undetectable HBV-DNA (61.5% vs. 33.2%; p
- Published
- 2024
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