Evaluation of Human T Cell Lymphotropic Virus Infection in a Cohort ofInjecting Drug Users

The diagnosis and confirmation of human T cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV) type II infection has proven difficult, since most assays depend on antigenic cross-reactivity between HTLV-I antigens and HTLV-II antibodies. Type-specific HTLV infection rates were evaluated in a cohort of 233 injecting drug...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of infectious diseases 1992-10, Vol.166 (4), p.896-899
Hauptverfasser: Palumbo, Paul E., Weiss, Stanley H., McCreedy, Bruce J., Alexander, Steve S., Denny, Thomas N., Klein, Carol W., Altman, Ronald
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The diagnosis and confirmation of human T cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV) type II infection has proven difficult, since most assays depend on antigenic cross-reactivity between HTLV-I antigens and HTLV-II antibodies. Type-specific HTLV infection rates were evaluated in a cohort of 233 injecting drug users screened with an HTLV EIA. Ofthe 52 EIA-reactive specimens, 48 were indeterminate or negative by standard Western blot. Type-specific HTLV results determined by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were 0, HTLV-I; 92%, HTLV-II; 6%, type indeterminate; and 2%, negative. Among 42 EIA-reactive, HTLV-II-PCR-positive individuals tested by a p21 env, Western blot, all were positive and 74% had antibodies to the tax protein. This study found a high rate (22.3%) of HTLV reactivity, with HTLV-II usually the sole responsible agent; shortcomings in standard HTLV-I-based diagnostics but usefulness of peR and p21 env, Western blots for typing and confirmation of HTLV reactivity; and a high prevalence (74%) of anti-tax antibody among HTLV-II-seropositive subjects, suggesting increased potential for infectivity.
ISSN:0022-1899
1537-6613
DOI:10.1093/infdis/166.4.896