TT virus infection in patients with hepatitis C: Frequency, persistence, and sequence heterogeneity

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Abstract

TT virus (TTV) was recently identified in the serum of a patient with hepatitis. The role of TTV in liver disease has not been established. Three polymerase chain reaction (PCR) protocols were used to detect TTV DNA in sera of persons infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and in blood donors. Sera from 11.5% of HCV-infected patients and 7.7% of blood donors were positive by protocols 1 or 2. In contrast, 48.7% and 57.7% of sera, respectively, were positive when tested by protocol 3. There was no difference in the severity of hepatitis in persons coinfected with TTV and HCV when compared with those infected with HCV alone, regardless of which TTV PCR protocol was used. TTV DNA persisted in serum samples taken up to 6 years apart in individual patients. Sequence analysis indicated that most vital sequences were distinct between patients, and there was evidence of genetic heterogeneity and vital evolution within individuals.

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Irving, W. L., Ball, J. K., Berridge, S., Curran, R., Grabowska, A. M., Jameson, C. L., … Thomson, B. J. (1999). TT virus infection in patients with hepatitis C: Frequency, persistence, and sequence heterogeneity. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 180(1), 27–34. https://doi.org/10.1086/314825

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