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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2002, p. 4603-4606, Vol. 40, No. 12
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.12.4603-4606.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Center for Vaccinology, Ghent University and Hospital, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
Received 20 May 2002/ Returned for modification 29 July 2002/ Accepted 13 September 2002
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A diagnostic procedure allowing discrimination between an infected and noninfected subject within minutes, using just a few droplets of blood, would facilitate and add to the success of a proactive approach towards HBV disease management. An assay that enables the simultaneous detection of HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) and HBV e antigen (HBeAg) would allow a distinction to be made between subjects who might benefit from antiviral treatment (HBsAg+ and HBeAg+), those who are less prone to respond to antiviral therapy (HBsAg+ and HBeAg-), and those in need of vaccination (HBsAg- and HBeAg-). The cost, logistic complexity, and loss of compliance associated with additional laboratory testing will determine whether HBsAg- HBeAg- subjects should be tested for antibodies specific to HBV, prior to vaccination.
In this study, we report the evaluation of a rapid diagnostic test for the simultaneous detection of HBsAg and HBeAg. This investigation has been conducted with a view to possibly implementing the test within a proactive approach to the management of hepatitis B. Although assessment of this test has been performed in a clinical microbiology laboratory, its prospective use under field conditions has been a major consideration.
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A total of 942 samples were examined for the presence of HBsAg and HBeAg. All sera derived from 403 patients with biopsy-proven chronic HBV infection tested positive for HBsAg (using AxSym HBsAg V2; Abbott Laboratories) and HBV DNA (using HBV Amplicor; Roche Molecular Diagnostics). HBeAg was detected in 303 of these 403 serum samples by using AxSym HBe 2.0 (Abbott Laboratories). HBsAg- and HBeAg-free sera (as determined using the AxSym HBsAg and HBe tests) were acquired from 295 healthy volunteers who had participated in a clinical vaccine evaluation trial. Whole blood samples that were negative for HBsAg and anti-HBV core antigen (HBc; as determined using Enzygnost HBsAg and Enzygnost anti-HBc monoclonal; Dade Behring, Marburg, Germany) were obtained as anticoagulated EDTA specimens from 244 healthy, voluntary blood donors through the Blood Transfusion Centre of the Belgian Red Cross (Ghent Branch).
Hemolytic and icteric serum samples, as well as those positive for serologic markers of Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, human immunodeficiency virus, and hepatitis C virus infection, were acquired from the Laboratory for Clinical Pathology of the Ghent University Hospital. Sera positive for rheumatoid factor were provided by the Department of Rheumatology, Ghent University Hospital.
The hepatitis B sAg/eAg test was used during this study to detect HBsAg and HBeAg in whole blood, serum, or plasma, according to the manufacturer's guidelines. The only deviation from the recommended protocol was introduced to avoid a volume bias: when using serum as the test sample, 60 µl was used instead of the 100-µl volume recommended for whole blood. Whole blood samples were applied in the prescribed 100-µl volume. The assays were performed as follows: (i) the assay card was opened and positioned on a flat area; (ii) using a precision pipette, 100 µl of anticoagulated whole blood or 60 µl of serum was added to the top of the pink and white pad on the assay card; (iii) it took about 30 s to 1 min for the sample to move from the white into the pink area and wet it; (iv) the adhesive liner was then removed and discarded; (v) subsequently, the assay card was closed and the timing was started; (vi) 10 min later, the result was read through the viewing window.
Reference methods. Microparticle enzyme immunoassays for HBsAg and HBeAg were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions with the AxSym HBsAg V2 and AxSym HBe 2.0 systems, respectively. The accuracy and stability of these tests were continuously monitored by the internal quality assessment program of this study.
Reference materials. The international standard for HBsAg (subtype ad, code 80/549; National Institute for Biological Standards and Control [NIBSC]) was purchased from the NIBSC (Hertfordshire, United Kingdom). The HBeAg reference antigen (HBe-Referenzantigen 82) was purchased from the Paul-Ehrlich Institute (PEI), Bundesamt für Sera und Impfstoffe, Langen, Germany.
Evaluation methodology. The methods used to evaluate the analytical and diagnostic properties of the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test were mainly based on the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards EP12-P guidelines (5). In brief, the analytical sensitivity was determined by performing a series of 20 repeat tests. The lowest concentration that scored positive in 19 of 20 repeats (95%) was deemed the limit of analytical sensitivity. The linear dilutions were prepared from an in-house standard that was calibrated against the international reference material. Clinical sensitivity, clinical specificity, the predictive value of a positive (PPV) or negative (NPV) test result, and efficiency were assessed by comparing the results obtained using the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test with the true clinical diagnosis for HBsAg status and the AxSym HBe 2.0 (Abbott Laboratories) result for HBeAg. Robustness and cross-reactivity were assessed by analyzing samples containing known interfering substances or that were seropositive for one or more virologic markers. All these samples were analyzed using both the hepatitis B sAg/eAg and AxSym HBe 2.0 systems. To evaluate the stability of the test signal, six assays (three negative and three positive) were analyzed and visually scored from 5 min to 3 h past the recommended 10-min evaluation time.
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![]() View larger version (32K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Percentage of HBsAg-positive subjects detected using the hepatitis sAg/eAg test versus the HBsAg standard provided by NIBSC.
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FIG. 2. Percentage of HBeAg-positive subjects detected using the hepatitis sAg/eAg test versus the PEI HBeAg standard.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Diagnostic performance of the hepatitis B sAg/eAg system for HBsAga
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Diagnostic performance of the hepatitis B sAg/eAg system for HBeAga
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Robustness and cross-reactivity. A series of samples which had been proven to be negative for HBV markers using the AxSym system were examined for possible interference by hemolysis (n = 5), bilirubin (n = 5), rheumatoid factor (n = 4), Epstein-Barr virus immunoglobulin G (IgG) (n = 9), cytomegalovirus IgG (n = 12), human immunodeficiency virus antibodies (n = 4), and hepatitis C virus antibodies (n = 5). No interference was observed.
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Within the total cohort evaluated (n = 942), the PPV for HBsAg using the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test was 99.50%, while the NPV was 99.81% and the overall efficiency of the test was 99.68%. The distribution of HBV-positive and HBV-negative subjects in our study population (403 HBV positives, 539 HBV negatives) is not a reflection of the real-life situation, in which the prevalence of HBV is not 42.78%. If the test were applied in a setting where the prevalence of chronic HBV infection was 5%, the PPV would be 93.42% and the NPV would be 99.99%.
The analytical sensitivity observed for HBeAg was 2 PEI U/ml. In the qualitative evaluation, the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test was used on samples of known HBeAg status, as determined using the AxSym HBe 2.0 system. This produced a clinical sensitivity of 96.37% (292 of 303 samples) and an overall clinical specificity of 99.37% (98.99%, or 391 of 395 with serum samples; 100.00%, or 244 of 244 with whole blood). Within the total cohort evaluated (n = 942), the PPV for HBeAg using the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test was 98.65%, the NPV was 98.30%, and the overall efficiency of the test was 98.41%. If the test was used in a setting where the prevalence of HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B patients was 5%, the PPV would be 88.95% and the NPV would be 99.81%.
These results indicate that the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test is extremely well suited to detecting HBV carriers, even in populations in areas with intermediate endemicity. Its user-friendly design and its stability mean that a correct performance is highly likely, even under conditions where facilities and resources may be limited. This test has the potential to identify subjects who require vaccination and HBV-infected subjects who may benefit most from antiviral treatment (HBsAg+, HBeAg+). Thus, the hepatitis B sAg/eAg test is a useful and appropriate instrument in the proactive management of HBV disease.
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