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Case Reports
. 1995 Jun 3;345(8962):1406-7.
doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(95)92599-6.

Fulminant reactivation of hepatitis B due to envelope protein mutant that escaped detection by monoclonal HBsAg ELISA

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Case Reports

Fulminant reactivation of hepatitis B due to envelope protein mutant that escaped detection by monoclonal HBsAg ELISA

W F Carman et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

The detection of a fatal case of reactivation of hepatitis B, in a previously vaccinated Indonesian patient after withdrawal of chemotherapy for lymphoma, was delayed because HBsAg was negative in a widely used monoclonal-antibody-based ELISA. The serum was later found to be strongly reactive for HBsAg by the polyclonal radioimmunoassay and for HBV DNA. PCR sequencing revealed a substitution of arginine for glycine at position 145 of HBsAg in the major neutralising epitope cluster, the a determinant, as well as a 2-aminoacid insertion of asparagine and threonine between positions 122 and 123, immediately upstream of this determinant.

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  • Hepatitis B envelope protein mutants.
    McNair AN, Viaggi P, Smith HM, Tibbs CJ, Naoumov NV, Williams R. McNair AN, et al. Lancet. 1995 Jul 29;346(8970):318-9. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(95)92210-5. Lancet. 1995. PMID: 7630278 No abstract available.
  • Hepatitis B envelope protein mutants.
    Boxall EH. Boxall EH. Lancet. 1995 Jul 29;346(8970):319. Lancet. 1995. PMID: 7630279 No abstract available.

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