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</script>Hepatitis C virus (HCV) status cannot be reliably predicted in anti-HCV positive/HCV-RNA negative individuals who may either have recovered spontaneously or have a false-positive test due to antibody cross-reaction. Investigating T lymphocyte responses in individuals with different HCV status may help understand the cellular immune mechanisms underlying spontaneous recovery, treatment response, and chronicity.We aimed to determine whether anti-HCV positive, HCV-RNA negative individuals are truly spontaneous recoverers from acute HCV infection.We used enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISPOT) assay to compare HCV-specific lymphocyte response among anti-HCV positive/HCV-RNA negative individuals, patients with sustained virological response to interferon-γ/ribavirin treatment, and patients with chronic HCV infection.We found that 83% of anti-HCV positive/HCV-RNA negative individuals without a past medical history of acute icteric hepatitis had an HCV-specific T lymphocyte response in peripheral blood. Lymphocyte responses in these individuals were similar in magnitude to treatment responders unlike patients with chronic HCV whose virus-directed immunity was significantly suppressed.Detection of HCV-specific T lymphocyte responses using ELISPOT is a feasible method to ascertain past asymptomatic acute HCV infection.
Adult, Male, T-lymphocyte, Enzyme-Linked Immunospot Assay, Diagnostic Tests, Routine, False-Positive Serology, Hepatitis C Antibodies, Middle Aged, Hepatitis C, Young Adult, Elispot, HCV, Humans, RNA, Viral, Spontaneous Recovery, Female, Lymphocytes, Aged
Adult, Male, T-lymphocyte, Enzyme-Linked Immunospot Assay, Diagnostic Tests, Routine, False-Positive Serology, Hepatitis C Antibodies, Middle Aged, Hepatitis C, Young Adult, Elispot, HCV, Humans, RNA, Viral, Spontaneous Recovery, Female, Lymphocytes, Aged
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