These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Clinical utility of HCV core antigen detection and quantification in the diagnosis and management of patients with chronic hepatitis C receiving an all-oral, interferon-free regimen. Author: Chevaliez S, Feld J, Cheng K, Wedemeyer H, Sarrazin C, Maasoumy B, Herman C, Hackett J, Cohen D, Dawson G, Pawlotsky JM, Cloherty G. Journal: Antivir Ther; 2018; 23(3):211-217. PubMed ID: 27115431. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The introduction of highly potent direct-acting combination therapies for HCV have negated the role of response-guided therapy and reduced the role of treatment monitoring. However, there remains a need to identify patients who are actively infected with HCV and discriminate those who have achieved sustained virological response (SVR) from those who fail to achieve SVR. METHODS: A total of 1,678 plasma samples from the 631 subjects enrolled in AbbVie's SAPPHIRE I trial (NCT01716585) were tested in a blinded fashion with Abbott HCV core antigen (cAg) assay and results were compared with Roche High-Pure system/COBAS® TaqMan HCV RNA 2.0 assay. RESULTS: Using 10 fmol/l as the clinical cutoff for cAg, the HCV RNA and cAg tests were in 100% agreement for true negative samples and 99.6% agreement for truly positive samples. One discordant (screening) sample was identified. This sample was target not detected by HCV RNA method but positive by anti-HCV and highly positive by ARCHITECT core antigen (7,912 fmol/l). Seventeen samples had cAg levels in the 'grey zone' >3 but <10 fmol/l at initial testing and were re-tested per package insert. All of these samples gave a result of <3 fmol/l upon retest. These results were in alignment with target not detected HCV RNA result. One sample had a cAg >3 but <10 fmol/l when tested on three consecutive occasions (5.8, 5.5 and 4.4) but had a target not detected RNA result. CONCLUSIONS: In this study cAg, with a 10 fmol/l cutoff, accurately identified 99.6% of patients with active viraemia and discriminated all subjects who achieved SVR from those who failed therapy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]