Reactivation of occult hepatitis B virus infection following cytotoxic lymphoma therapy in an anti‐HBc negative patient

Screening hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) and HBV core antibody (anti‐HBc) is recommended prior to cytotoxic or immunosuppressive therapy. This case describes an anti‐HBc negative, DNA positive occult HBV infection in a 71‐year‐old Caucasian male following rituximab‐based treatment f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medical virology 2013-04, Vol.85 (4), p.597-601
Hauptverfasser: Feeney, Susan A., McCaughey, Conall, Watt, Alison P., Agnaf, Moulod R. El, McDougall, Neil, Wend, Ulrike C., Gerlich, Wolfram H., Coyle, Peter V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Screening hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) and HBV core antibody (anti‐HBc) is recommended prior to cytotoxic or immunosuppressive therapy. This case describes an anti‐HBc negative, DNA positive occult HBV infection in a 71‐year‐old Caucasian male following rituximab‐based treatment for follicular lymphoma. Pre‐screening serology indicated negative HBsAg and anti‐HBc. However, following sequential treatment cycles the patient developed weak HBsAg with a low HBV DNA load (1 × 106 IU/ml) and he was subsequently treated with Tenofovir. Currently the patient remains anti‐HBc negative, and is anti‐HBe negative, anti‐HBs negative, HBeAg positive. No clinical or biochemical evidence of hepatitis has occurred. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis identified the HBV genosubtype as D4, most probably acquired some years ago during a stay in Papua New Guinea, in spite of prior hepatitis B vaccination. Four amino acid substitutions were detected within the HBsAg loop yet none in the core protein. This case questions the dependability of anti‐HBc testing and highlights the role of HBV DNA testing prior to and throughout cytotoxic or immunosuppressive regimes. As this case exemplifies, vaccination protects against clinical infection but may not exclude seronegative occult infection with the possibility of reactivation. J. Med. Virol. 85:597–601, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
ISSN:0146-6615
1096-9071
DOI:10.1002/jmv.23513