Literature DB >> 28543644

Detection of viral hepatitis E in clinical liver biopsies.

Sandrine Prost1, Claire L Crossan2, Harry R Dalton3, Robert A De Man4, Nassim Kamar5, Janick Selves6, Catharine Dhaliwal1, Linda Scobie2, Christopher O C Bellamy1.   

Abstract

AIMS: To determine the relative utility of in-situ testing for hepatitis E virus (HEV) RNA and paraffin-section polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to diagnose HEV infection in paraffin-embedded clinical liver biopsies, and to correlate with clinicopathological characteristics. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We evaluated in-situ and quantitative PCR (qPCR)-based approaches to identifying HEV in clinical liver biopsies from infected patients from multiple centres, correlating with clinical setting (immunocompetent, allograft or immunosuppressed native liver) and histological findings. Thirty-six biopsies from 29 patients had histological data, 27 and 23 of which had satisfactory material for in-situ RNA testing and tissue qPCR, respectively. Both approaches specifically identified HEV infection, but tissue qPCR was significantly more sensitive than RNAscope in-situ testing (P = 0.035). In immunocompetent but not immunosuppressed patients the tissue qPCR yield correlated with the severity of lobular hepatitis (rho = 0.94, P < 0.001). qPCR viral yield was comparably high in allografts and immunosuppressed native livers and significantly greater than with native liver infection. Immunosuppressed patients showed reduced severity of hepatitis and cholestatic changes, compared with immunocompetent patients. Indeed, HEV-infected liver allografts could show minimal hepatitis for many months. In individual cases each technique was useful when serum was not available to identify chronic infection retrospectively (in biopsies taken 4-31 months before diagnosis), to identify persistent/residual infection when contemporary serum PCR was negative and to identify cleared infection.
CONCLUSIONS: qPCR is more effective than in-situ RNA testing to identify HEV infection in paraffin-embedded liver biopsies and has diagnostic utility in selected settings.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990PCRzzm321990; Patients; allograft; biopsy; hepatitis E; liver

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28543644     DOI: 10.1111/his.13266

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Histopathology        ISSN: 0309-0167            Impact factor:   5.087


  3 in total

1.  Chronic Hepatitis E is associated with cholangitis.

Authors:  Andrea Beer; Heidemarie Holzmann; Sven Pischke; Patrick Behrendt; Fritz Wrba; Jerome Schlue; Uta Drebber; Barbara Neudert; Emina Halilbasic; Hans Kreipe; Ansgar Lohse; Martina Sterneck; Heiner Wedemeyer; Michael Manns; Hans P Dienes
Journal:  Liver Int       Date:  2019-06-17       Impact factor: 5.828

2.  Efficacy and safety of spleen aminopeptide oral lyophilized powder in ameliorating liver injury in infants and children with human cytomegalovirus infection: a single-center study in China.

Authors:  Yanling Wu; Xueting Dong; Runqiu Wu; Xinguo Zheng; Yu Jin; Hui Yang
Journal:  Transl Pediatr       Date:  2021-01

3.  Eliminating viral hepatitis in children after liver transplants: How to reach the goal by 2030.

Authors:  Palittiya Sintusek; Kessarin Thanapirom; Piyawat Komolmit; Yong Poovorawan
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 5.742

  3 in total

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