Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection.

Standard

Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection. / Tillmann, H L; Heringlake, S; Trautwein, C; Meissner, D; Nashan, Björn; Schlitt, H J; Kratochvil, J; Hunt, J; Qiu, X; Lou, S C; Pichlmayr, R; Manns, M P.

In: HEPATOLOGY, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2, 1998, p. 379-384.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tillmann, HL, Heringlake, S, Trautwein, C, Meissner, D, Nashan, B, Schlitt, HJ, Kratochvil, J, Hunt, J, Qiu, X, Lou, SC, Pichlmayr, R & Manns, MP 1998, 'Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection.', HEPATOLOGY, vol. 28, no. 2, 2, pp. 379-384. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9696000?dopt=Citation>

APA

Tillmann, H. L., Heringlake, S., Trautwein, C., Meissner, D., Nashan, B., Schlitt, H. J., Kratochvil, J., Hunt, J., Qiu, X., Lou, S. C., Pichlmayr, R., & Manns, M. P. (1998). Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection. HEPATOLOGY, 28(2), 379-384. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9696000?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Tillmann HL, Heringlake S, Trautwein C, Meissner D, Nashan B, Schlitt HJ et al. Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection. HEPATOLOGY. 1998;28(2):379-384. 2.

Bibtex

@article{82ce4ff819a04e4fbff0fe620d9ab89c,
title = "Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection.",
abstract = "GB virus C (GBV-C) is a newly discovered RNA virus related to the Flaviviridae family. Although GBV-C is not yet associated with any cause of liver disease, a humoral immune response against the GBV-C envelope 2 (E2) protein has been observed. Therefore, we studied the prevalence and clinical relevance of GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 antibodies in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). In addition, we tested whether the prevalence of anti-E2 antibodies may protect against GBV-C infection. Of the 182 liver recipients included in this study, 117 of these were evaluated for GBV-C recurrence or de novo infection. GBV-C RNA was detected in sera or plasma using single-tube, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and anti-E2 antibody was detected by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Cumulative patient and graft survival was tested by using Kaplan-Meier analysis. The independence of prognostic values was assessed by using Cox regression analysis. Before OLT, GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 were detected in 4.0% to 28.6% and 10.0% to 68.8%, respectively, of patients suffering from different forms of chronic liver diseases. GBV-C reinfection after OLT was determined in 85.7%. Of the patients without evidence of exposure to GBV-C before OLT, 30 of 65 (46.2%) became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. None of the 38 patients who were anti-E2 antibody positive before OLT became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. Neither patient nor graft survival was significantly affected by the presence of either GBV-C RNA or anti-E2 antibody before OLT. Our data indicate that 1) GBV-C RNA positive patients have a high risk of reinfection after OLT, and 2) the presence of anti-E2 antibodies before OLT is associated with an absence of GBV-C infection after OLT, which may indicate a protective role of anti-E2 antibodies.",
author = "Tillmann, {H L} and S Heringlake and C Trautwein and D Meissner and Bj{\"o}rn Nashan and Schlitt, {H J} and J Kratochvil and J Hunt and X Qiu and Lou, {S C} and R Pichlmayr and Manns, {M P}",
year = "1998",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "28",
pages = "379--384",
journal = "HEPATOLOGY",
issn = "0270-9139",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Antibodies against the GB virus C envelope 2 protein before liver transplantation protect against GB virus C de novo infection.

AU - Tillmann, H L

AU - Heringlake, S

AU - Trautwein, C

AU - Meissner, D

AU - Nashan, Björn

AU - Schlitt, H J

AU - Kratochvil, J

AU - Hunt, J

AU - Qiu, X

AU - Lou, S C

AU - Pichlmayr, R

AU - Manns, M P

PY - 1998

Y1 - 1998

N2 - GB virus C (GBV-C) is a newly discovered RNA virus related to the Flaviviridae family. Although GBV-C is not yet associated with any cause of liver disease, a humoral immune response against the GBV-C envelope 2 (E2) protein has been observed. Therefore, we studied the prevalence and clinical relevance of GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 antibodies in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). In addition, we tested whether the prevalence of anti-E2 antibodies may protect against GBV-C infection. Of the 182 liver recipients included in this study, 117 of these were evaluated for GBV-C recurrence or de novo infection. GBV-C RNA was detected in sera or plasma using single-tube, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and anti-E2 antibody was detected by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Cumulative patient and graft survival was tested by using Kaplan-Meier analysis. The independence of prognostic values was assessed by using Cox regression analysis. Before OLT, GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 were detected in 4.0% to 28.6% and 10.0% to 68.8%, respectively, of patients suffering from different forms of chronic liver diseases. GBV-C reinfection after OLT was determined in 85.7%. Of the patients without evidence of exposure to GBV-C before OLT, 30 of 65 (46.2%) became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. None of the 38 patients who were anti-E2 antibody positive before OLT became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. Neither patient nor graft survival was significantly affected by the presence of either GBV-C RNA or anti-E2 antibody before OLT. Our data indicate that 1) GBV-C RNA positive patients have a high risk of reinfection after OLT, and 2) the presence of anti-E2 antibodies before OLT is associated with an absence of GBV-C infection after OLT, which may indicate a protective role of anti-E2 antibodies.

AB - GB virus C (GBV-C) is a newly discovered RNA virus related to the Flaviviridae family. Although GBV-C is not yet associated with any cause of liver disease, a humoral immune response against the GBV-C envelope 2 (E2) protein has been observed. Therefore, we studied the prevalence and clinical relevance of GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 antibodies in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). In addition, we tested whether the prevalence of anti-E2 antibodies may protect against GBV-C infection. Of the 182 liver recipients included in this study, 117 of these were evaluated for GBV-C recurrence or de novo infection. GBV-C RNA was detected in sera or plasma using single-tube, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and anti-E2 antibody was detected by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Cumulative patient and graft survival was tested by using Kaplan-Meier analysis. The independence of prognostic values was assessed by using Cox regression analysis. Before OLT, GBV-C RNA and anti-E2 were detected in 4.0% to 28.6% and 10.0% to 68.8%, respectively, of patients suffering from different forms of chronic liver diseases. GBV-C reinfection after OLT was determined in 85.7%. Of the patients without evidence of exposure to GBV-C before OLT, 30 of 65 (46.2%) became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. None of the 38 patients who were anti-E2 antibody positive before OLT became GBV-C RNA positive after OLT. Neither patient nor graft survival was significantly affected by the presence of either GBV-C RNA or anti-E2 antibody before OLT. Our data indicate that 1) GBV-C RNA positive patients have a high risk of reinfection after OLT, and 2) the presence of anti-E2 antibodies before OLT is associated with an absence of GBV-C infection after OLT, which may indicate a protective role of anti-E2 antibodies.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 28

SP - 379

EP - 384

JO - HEPATOLOGY

JF - HEPATOLOGY

SN - 0270-9139

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -