Publication | Closed Access
Full or Partial Seroreversion in Patients Infected by Hepatitis C Virus
81
Citations
23
References
1997
Year
Hepatitis C VirusImmunologyHepatitis BPathologyViral PersistenceViral HepatitisSerologic TestingPatients InfectedPartial SeroreversionVirologyChronic Viral InfectionHivHepatologyHepatitis CPathogenesisAntiviral TherapyHepatitisSpontaneous ClearanceMedicine
Cases of partial seroreversion have been reported in hemodialyzed or immunodepressed patients, but spontaneous clearance of viremia associated with a disappearance of specific antibodies or clearance while receiving therapy has not been precisely documented in immunocompetent hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected persons. A longitudinal study of markers of HCV infection in a cohort of 178 multitransfused patients followed over an 8-year period was done to establish well-documented cases of partial or full seroreversion. Thirty (16.8%) of 178 patients were HCV-infected; among them, 5 had partial or full seroreversion. Seroreversion to an anti-HCV-negative state is characterized by a quantitative decrease in antibody. A seroreversion may be observed in three circumstances: spontaneously, induced by therapy, and in conjunction with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Long-term follow-up of seroreverters will establish whether they have definitively eradicated HCV from their systems.
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