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HBV‐RNA Co‐amplification May Influence HBV DNA Viral Load Determination

Authors :
Benjamin Maasoumy
Anna Maria Geretti
André Frontzek
Harrison Austin
Gudrun Aretzweiler
Monica Garcia‐Álvarez
Susanne Leuchter
Christian O. Simon
Ed G. Marins
Jesse A. Canchola
Markus Cornberg
Rafael Delgado
Heiner Wedemeyer
Source :
Hepatology Communications, Vol 4, Iss 7, Pp 983-997 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Health/LWW, 2020.

Abstract

Despite effective hepatitis B virus (HBV)‐DNA suppression, HBV RNA can circulate in patients receiving nucleoside/nucleotide analogues (NAs). Current assays quantify HBV DNA by either real‐time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which uses DNA polymerase, or transcription‐mediated amplification, which uses reverse‐transcriptase (RT) and RNA polymerase. We assessed the effect of RT capability on HBV‐DNA quantification in samples from three cohorts, including patients with quantified HBV RNA. We compared the HBV‐DNA levels by real‐time PCR (cobas HBV, Roche 6800/8800; Xpert HBV, Cepheid), transcription‐mediated amplification (Aptima HBV, Hologic), and real‐time PCR with added RT capability (cobas HBV+RT). In the first cohort (n = 45) followed over 192 weeks of NA therapy, on‐treatment HBV‐DNA levels were higher with cobas HBV+RT than cobas HBV (mean difference: 0.14 log10 IU/mL). In a second cohort (n = 50) followed over 96 weeks of NA therapy, HBV‐DNA viral load was significantly higher with the cobas HBV+RT and Aptima HBV compared with the cobas HBV test at all time points after initiation of NA therapy (mean difference: 0.65‐1.16 log10 IU/mL). A clinically significant difference was not detected between the assays at baseline. In a third cohort (n = 53), after a median of 2.2 years of NA therapy, we detected HBV RNA (median 5.6 log10 copies/mL) in 23 patients (43.4%). Median HBV‐DNA levels by Aptima HBV were 2.4 versus less than 1 log10 IU/mL in samples with HBV RNA and without HBV RNA, respectively (P = 0.0006). In treated patients with HBV RNA, Aptima HBV measured higher HBV‐DNA levels than Xpert HBV and cobas HBV. Conclusion: Tests including an RT step may overestimate HBV DNA, particularly in samples with low viral loads as a result of NA therapy. This overestimation is likely due to amplification of HBV RNA and may have an impact on clinical decisions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2471254X
Volume :
4
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Hepatology Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.94ab05d461cd4952b18d22b5a588fdad
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hep4.1520