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Versatile performance edges of HBsAg Next assay in diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring of HBV infection.

Authors :
Steve, Runal John
Prakash, Arul
Ponnuvel, Suresh
Dickson, Calvin John
Nandan, Karthick
Singh, Bakthalal
Sam, Gift Ajay
Goel, Ashish
Zachariah, Uday George
Eapen, Chundamannil Eapen
Kannangai, Rajesh
Abraham, Priya
Fletcher, Gnanadurai John
Source :
Journal of Clinical Virology. Mar2023, Vol. 160, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• HBsAgNx assay significantly enhances the stringency of HBsAg detection in ascertaining HBsAg loss during treatment or in spontaneous clearance to assess the functional cure. • The performance of this assay is superior in various phases of HBV infection including samples that exhibited prozone effect without compromising the clinical specificity. • It is amenable to cost-effective in-house neutralization to confirm low HBsAg levels. • Overall this assay can improve HBsAg detection in challenging spectrum of HBV infection and further refine the assessment of endpoints in functional cure. Background: HBsAg Next assay (HBsAgNx) claims improved detection of HBsAg. The aim was to investigate its performance in ascertaining HBsAg loss, ability to detect HBsAg in various phases of HBV infection, specificity and its amenability to in-house neutralization. Methods: Analytical sensitivity was investigated using NIBSC standard (3rd WHO-IS). For clinical performance, out of 91,962 samples tested for HBsAg (Qual-II), 512 samples consisting of 170 cases with evidence of HBsAg loss during treatment (n = 116) and without treatment (n = 54), acute-hepatitis B (n = 90) and acute exacerbation of chronic-hepatitis B (n = 41), acute-hepatitis A (n = 24) and acute-hepatitis E (n = 9) positive, HIV-1 positive (n = 20), non-HBV, HAV and HEV related acute-hepatitis (n = 81) and HBsAg prozone (n = 14) as well as in-house neutralization (n = 63) were included. Results: The calculated limit of detection (LOD) was 0.004 IU/mL. Of the 170 patients with apparent HBsAg loss, 18/116 (15.5%) among treated and 15/54 (27.7%) with spontaneous clearance were positive in HBsAgNx (p < 0.0001). Additionally, it detected HBsAg in 12/95 (12.6%) and 6/34 (17.6%) patients who were HBV DNA negative in treatment experienced and spontaneous clearance groups respectively (p < 0.001). The specificity of HBsAgNx was comparable to HBsAg Qual-II. The signal-intensity of HBsAgNx was significantly higher than HBsAg Qual-II across various phases of HBV infection and prozone samples. Conclusion: HBsAgNx significantly enhanced the accuracy of HBsAg detection without compromising the specificity in ascertaining HBsAg loss. The performance was superior in various phases of HBV infection including samples that exhibited prozone effect. Furthermore, it is amenable to cost-effective in-house neutralization to confirm low HBsAg levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13866532
Volume :
160
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161905578
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2023.105378