Limited access to nucleic acid testing (NAT) to quantify HBV DNA levels, an essential tool to determine anti‐HBV treatment eligibility, represents a significant barrier to scale up HBV diagnostic services… Click to show full abstract
Limited access to nucleic acid testing (NAT) to quantify HBV DNA levels, an essential tool to determine anti‐HBV treatment eligibility, represents a significant barrier to scale up HBV diagnostic services in resource‐limited countries. Hepatitis B core‐related antigen (HBcrAg) has the potential to become an affordable alternative because of its low cost (US$ <15/assay) and strong correlation with HBV DNA levels in treatment‐naïve patients. However, the current assay requires plasma or serum. To further facilitate its application to decentralized settings, we developed and evaluated a standardized procedure to quantify HBcrAg using dried blood spots as a tool to diagnose HBV‐infected people with high viraemia. We evaluated the following elution method optimized to quantify HBcrAg: suspension of a punched blood‐soaked disc (11 mm) of Whatman 903 Protein Saver Card in 450 µL of PBS 0.05% Tween 20, followed by an incubation for 4 h at room temperature and a centrifugation at 10,000 g for 10 minutes. 150 µL of DBS eluate was used to quantify HBcrAg using chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay (LUMIPULSE® G600II, Fujirebio). The limit of detection of dried blood spot HBcrAg in relation with HBV DNA levels was 19,115 IU/mL across the five major HBV genotypes (A/B/C/D/E). A strong linear correlation was confirmed between dried blood spot HBcrAg and HBV DNA levels (r = 0.94, p < 0.0001) in samples with high viral loads (range: 3.7–7.0 log IU/mL). The coefficient of variation ranged between 4.0–11.2% for repeatability and 3.9–12.2% for reproducibility. Analytical specificity was 100% (95% CI: 83.9–100%) in HBV‐negative samples. Using our elution method, it may be possible to identify HBV‐infected patients with high viraemia who need antiviral therapy using dried blood spot and HBcrAg. A large‐scale clinical validation is warranted in resource‐limited countries.
               
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