Title: Hepatitis C
1Hepatitis C UpdateLaboratory Issues
- Hema Kapoor MD. SM
- Virology Section Manager
- Bureau of Laboratories
- Michigan Department of Community Health
2Laboratory Tests for HCV
- Available at MDCH
- Screening tests
- EIA
- Supplemental
- RIBA ( Recombinant immunoblot assay)
- Nucleic acid Amplification tests
- Additional Tests Available Commercially
- CIA (Chemiluminescence's immunoassays)
- Quantitative RNA Tests
- Genotyping
- Core Protein Antigen
3Laboratory Algorithm for HCV Testing
HCV EIA 2.0 ( Abbott), HCV version 3.0 ELISA(
Ortho), VITROS Anti-HCV
4Anti-HCV EIA False Positivity by Population
Prevalence
100
HCWs Military STD Clients Pregnant Women
50
Percent False Positive
Dialysis Transfused
Injecting Drug Users
NANB Hepatitis ALT
0
lt5 10 60 gt90
Prevalence of HCV Infection
As judged by RIBA or NAT
Source CDC
5CDC
6 Consistency of Reported Anti-HCV Results
- Screening test positive signal to cutoff ratios
- Results above the cutoff should predict a true
antibody positive - Only results below the cutoff would require
supplemental antibody testing - Cutoff should perform the same regardless of the
population being tested
Not intended for use in screening donors as
provided by FDA guidance
7Anti-HCV Test Versions Evaluated
- Ortho 3.0, RIBA 3.0
- N25,532
- High-risk
- Hemodialysis patients
- STD patients
- HCWs
- General population (NHANES IV)
- VITROS Anti-HCV (Ortho), RIBA 3.0
- N1326
- Clinical specimens (Hospital-based patients)
- Low prevalence populations
- Abbott 2.0, RIBA 3.0 N8,754
- STD patients
- Students
8EIA Signal to Cutoff Ratio
- Signal Optical density (OD) value of the sample
being tested. - Cut off Mean absorbance of negative Control
plus 0.600.
Example Sample OD Cutoff OD S/CO 1.595 0.623
2.56 1.243 0.543 2.29 1.271 0.543 2.34
s/cut off (s/co)- ?3.8
9Proportion of Anti-HCV EIA Screening Test
Positive Results Testing RIBA Positive by
Average S/Co Ratio
Prevalence
4.3
2.2
0
EIA 2.0 or EIA 3.0
Source CDC. MMWR 200352 (No. RR-3).
10Proportion of Anti-HCV CIA Screening Test
Positive Results Testing RIBA Positive by S/Co
Ratio
Prevalence
VITROS Anti-HCV assay
Source CDC. MMWR 200352 (No. RR-3).
11Proportion of Anti-HCV EIA RR Results Requiring
RIBA Based on S/CO Ratio lt3.8and HCV Prevalence
Source CDC. MMWR 200352 (No. RR-3).
12Use of EIA/CIA S/CO Ratio to Determine Need for
Additional Routine Testing
- Screening-test-positive samples with s/co ratios
gt3.8/8 can be reported based on screening test - gt95 will be RIBA positive.
- Screening-test-positive samples with s/co
lt3.8/8 require additional testing because most
are falsely positive. - In high prevalence populations few in this range.
- Limits cost while improving accuracy of reported
results.
Applies only to Ortho 3.0 or Abbott 2.0 EIA
Applies only to Ortho Vitros CIA
13Laboratory Algorithm for Anti-HCV Testing and
Result Reporting MMWR 2003
HCV EIA 2.0( Abbott), HCV version 3.0 ELISA
(Ortho), VITROS Anti-HCV
Source CDC. MMWR 200352 (No. RR-3).
14Repeatedly Reactive Anti HCV
- Supplementary serological confirmation testing
was not performed on this specimen with a high
serum to cut-off ration in accordance with CDC
guidelines (MMWR, 52 RR03 1-16). Appx 95 of
specimens with a high serum to cut-off ratio
confirm positive when tested in supplementary
tests. The serum to cutoff ratio is not related
to severity of disease or acute/chronic phase of
infection. Supplementary testing is available
only after consultation with Dr. Jeff Massey
15Advantages and Impact ?
16Advantages of Revised Laboratory Guidelines
- Standard reporting of anti-HCV positive results.
- Reliable Interpretation of anti-HCV results.
- Ensure positive patients receive follow-up
- Prevent unnecessary evaluation of
false-positives - Low cost of additional testing
- Better understanding of performance and
interpretation
17Implications
- Patients and physicians can reliably interpret
results - Further clinical evaluation limited to true
positives - Limit psychological stress on patients who test
falsely positive - Substantially improve ability to establish public
health surveillance systems to monitor effect of
prevention and intervention activities