Revista de la Sociedad Venezolana de Microbiología
versão impressa ISSN 1315-2556
Resumo
CARDONA, Nathalia Elena et al. Performance of commercial kits for serologic diagnosis of viral hepatitis B and C in yanomami and piaroa populations from Amazonas State. Rev. Soc. Ven. Microbiol. [online]. 2010, vol.30, n.1, pp.72-77. ISSN 1315-2556.
Hepatitis viruses are an important morbility and mortality cause in the Amazon basin. The goal of this study was to evaluate the performance of commercial serologic kits for determination of HVB and HVC markers in indigenous populations. Presence of anti-HBc, HBags, anti-HVC and viral genomes was determined in sera from piaroa and yanomami individuals. Over 50% of the samples reactive with one of the commercial kits were not positive when using other kits. The serologic marker which showed the highest concordance among the commercial kits was anti-HBc, possibly because it is an inhibition assay. Concordance among assays for HBags and PCR positivity varied between poor and moderate; only two of the tests coincided with the PCR results. There was no concordance among the various immunoenzymatic assays, nor in viral RNA presence for HVC. The unexpected discrepancies among the various commercial kits could be due to inherent characteristics of these populations such as multiple co-infections, especially parasitic. These factors could be affecting the specificity of the diagnostic kits, situation less frequently observed in other Venezuelan populations. This study emphasizes the importance of validating serologic tests in these populations, through confirmation and molecular assays.
Palavras-chave : hepatitis; Amerindians; diagnosis; prevalence.