Literature DB >> 1382842

Association between hepatitis C virus and hepatocellular carcinoma using assays based on structural and nonstructural hepatitis C virus peptides.

X Zavitsanos1, A Hatzakis, E Kaklamani, A Tzonou, N Toupadaki, C Broeksma, J Chrispeels, H Troonen, S Hadziyannis, C C Hsieh.   

Abstract

Stored sera from 181 Greek patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), 35 patients with metastatic liver cancer, and 416 hospital controls with diagnoses other than malignant neoplasm or liver disease were examined with first and second generation hepatitis C virus (HCV) enzyme immunoassays as well as with five HCV supplemental assays based on structural and nonstructural HCV peptides. Second generation HCV enzyme immunoassays were more sensitive than first generation assays. However, both assays had suboptimal specificity using the standard reactivity criterion (absorbance of sample to cutoff greater than or equal to 1.0). Specificity was improved by centrifugation and by using a sample's optical density to cutoff ratio greater than or equal to 3.0 or supplemental assays; in this instance the prevalence of antibodies to HCV was 13.3% (24 of 181), 0 (0 of 35), and 1.4% (6 of 416) in HCC, metastatic liver cancer, and hospital controls, respectively. A similar estimation of prevalence of antibody to HCV in HCC (12.5% or 4 of 32) was obtained when the recombinant immunoblot assay, second generation, was used to screen a random sample of HCC patients. The relative risk linking HCV to HCC was estimated as 10.4 (95% confidence interval, 4.2-26.0; P less than 0.0001). These data suggest that the prevalence of antibodies to HCV in HCC using stored sera has been previously overestimated even though the evidence of a causal association of HCV with HCC persists.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1382842

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  4 in total

Review 1.  Hepatitis C: progress and problems.

Authors:  J A Cuthbert
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  1994-10       Impact factor: 26.132

2.  Primary liver cancer incidence-rates related to hepatitis-C virus infection: a correlational study in Osaka, Japan.

Authors:  H Tanaka; T Hiyama; Y Okubo; A Kitada; I Fujimoto
Journal:  Cancer Causes Control       Date:  1994-01       Impact factor: 2.506

3.  The changing epidemiology of hepatocellular carcinoma in Greece.

Authors:  George E Markakis; Andreas Koulouris; Maria Tampaki; Evangelos Cholongitas; Melanie Deutsch; George V Papatheodoridis; John Koskinas
Journal:  Ann Gastroenterol       Date:  2021-12-06

4.  Cumulative risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in hepatitis C virus carriers: statistical estimations from cross-sectional data.

Authors:  H Tanaka; T Hiyama; H Tsukuma; I Fujimoto; H Yamano; Y Okubo; A Kitada
Journal:  Jpn J Cancer Res       Date:  1994-05
  4 in total

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