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Featured researches published by George Kuo.


The Lancet | 1989

Hepatitis C virus antibodies among risk groups in Spain.

J.I. Esteban; Luis Viladomiu; Antonio Gonzalez; Mercè Roget; Joan Genescà; Rafael Esteban; Juan Carlos Lopez-Talavera; J.M. Hernandez; Victor Vargas; Maria Buti; J. Guardia; Michael Houghton; Q-L. Choo; George Kuo

The frequency of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in Spain was assessed by means of a recombinant-based immunoassay for serum anti-HCV antibodies. 836 serum samples were tested from 676 patients selected according to their risk of blood-borne viral infections and presence of liver disease. Among patients at high risk of infection (with or without liver disease) anti-HCV antibodies were found in 85% of prospectively followed patients with post-transfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis, 62% of patients with chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis and a history of blood transfusion, 70% of haemophiliacs receiving replacement therapy, 70% of intravenous drug abusers, and 20% of haemodialysis patients. Only 8% of homosexual men infected with human immunodeficiency virus and 6% of female contacts of drug abusers were positive. Among patients with liver disease and no history of parenteral exposure to blood, anti-HCV antibodies were detected in 38% with cryptogenic, alcoholic, or primary biliary cirrhosis and in 44% with chronic active hepatitis. Among healthy subjects without risk factors for hepatitis the overall prevalence of anti-HCV was 1.2%.


The Lancet | 1990

Detection of hepatitis C viral sequences in non-A, non-B hepatitis

Amy J. Weiner; George Kuo; C. Lee; Jody Rosenblatt; Qui Lim Choo; Michael Houghton; Daniel W. Bradley; F. Bonnino; Giorgio Saracco

The role of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in post-transfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) was investigated by analysing clinical samples for both HCV RNA by cDNA/polymerase chain reaction and antibodies against C100-3 by radioimmunoassay. Of fifteen chronic NANBH patients and one patient with chronic cryptogenic liver disease, ten were positive for anti-C100-3 and seven of the ten had viral sequences in their livers. However, two patients negative for anti-C100-3 also had substantial levels of HCV RNA in their livers. In acute post-transfusion NANBH (one surgical patient and two experimentally infected chimpanzees), HCV RNA was detected in the absence of anti-C100-3. In addition, infectious plasma from a seronegative patient with acute post-transfusion NANBH and a seronegative pool of plasma from a chimpanzee with chronic post-transfusion NANBH had high levels of HCV. These findings show that anti-C100-3-positive patients with chronic post-transfusion NANBH are likely to be viraemic; confirm that antibodies to C100-3 are a marker for infectivity; and suggest that the prevalence of HCV infections may be underestimated from the frequency of antibodies to C100-3 alone.


The Lancet | 1989

PREVALENCE OF ANTIBODIES TO HEPATITIS C VIRUS IN ITALIAN PATIENTS WITH HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA

M. Colombo; Qui Lim Choo; E. Del Ninno; Nicola Dioguardi; George Kuo; Maria Francesca Donato; Maurizio Tommasini; Michael Houghton

A sensitive radioimmunoassay was used to detect antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and chronic hepatitis. HCV antibodies (anti-HCV) were detected in 86 of 132 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma with no relation to the presence or absence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg). The prevalence of anti-HCV was also high in patients with diseases thought to predispose to hepatocellular carcinoma, such as non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis (74%). In HBsAg-negative patients with hepatocellular carcinoma the prevalence of anti-HCV was lower than that in patients with non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis (16% vs 55%); the prevalence of serum antibodies to hepatitis B core antigen (anti-HBc), a marker of hepatitis B virus infection, was 70% and 28%, respectively. In HBsAg-negative patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, anti-HCV and anti-HBc occurred together nearly three times as often as in patients with chronic hepatitis (54% vs 19%). These data indicate that, in Italy, HCV is an important factor associated with hepatocellular carcinoma and non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis.


Gastroenterology | 1993

T-lymphocyte response to hepatitis C virus in different clinical courses of infection.

Patrizia Botarelli; Maurizia Rossana Brunetto; Maria A. Minutello; Pierluigi Calvo; Derya Unutmaz; Amy J. Weiner; Qui-Lim Choo; Jeffrey R. Shuster; George Kuo; Michael Houghton; Sergio Abrignam

BACKGROUND To assess the role played by the immune response in the outcome of hepatitis C virus infection, the CD4+ T-lymphocyte response to viral antigens was studied in infected individuals with different clinical courses. METHODS Using six recombinant proteins of hepatitis C virus, the study assessed the proliferative responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 41 patients with chronic hepatitis C, 11 patients whose chronic hepatitis was successfully treated with interferon alfa and 11 healthy HCV seropositive individuals. RESULTS (1) Sixty-five percent of hepatitis C virus-seropositive individuals had CD4+ T-cell responses to viral proteins. (2) All viral proteins were immunogenic for T cells, although NS4 was the most immunogenic. (3) There was a significant correlation between the presence of CD4+ T cell responses to Core and a benign course of infection in healthy seropositives, most of whom were viremic. CONCLUSIONS CD4+ T-cell responses to Core, although they do not coincide with virus clearance, are associated with a benign course of infection and may be required to maintain humoral and cellular responses protective against the disease.


The Lancet | 1989

ANTI-HEPATITIS C ANTIBODIES AND NON-A, NON-B POST-TRANSFUSION HEPATITIS IN THE NETHERLANDS

C.L. van der Poel; P.N. Lelie; Q-L. Choo; H. W. Reesink; A.Leent Vaar-Kuypers; George Kuo; Michael Houghton

In a prospective study carried out in the Netherlands (1984-86) to establish the incidence of post-transfusion hepatitis non-A, non-B (PTH-NANB) in patients undergoing open heart surgery, 393 patients received 5315 blood product transfusions. PTH-NANB developed in 9 patients (index cases); stored serum samples from these patients and from 9 control patients, matched for age, sex, and number of blood product transfusions, as well as serum samples of all implicated blood products, were selected retrospectively. Sera were tested under code with a radioimmunoassay for the detection of antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV). PTH-NANB patients received 151 blood product transfusions and control patients 140. 4 of 9 PTH-NANB patients (3/5 chronic, 1/4 acute resolved hepatitis) and 0/9 controls seroconverted. 7 of the transfusions given to PTH-NANB patients but none of those given to control patients were anti-HCV positive. In 7 of 9 serum sets from PTH-NANB index cases plus implicated donors, either a donor or the recipient was anti-HCV positive. Among the donors implicated in transmission of PTH-NANB there was a strong correlation between raised alanine aminotransferase levels and the presence of anti-HCV antibodies.


The Lancet | 1990

Hepatitis C virus antibodies in southern African blacks with hepatocellular carcinoma

Michael Kew; Michael Houghton; Qui Lim Choo; George Kuo

380 southern African blacks with hepatocellular carcinoma and 152 controls were studied. Antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV) were found in 110 patients and 1 control. 184 patients had evidence of current infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) and 122 had had infection with this virus in the past. Only 47 patients had no markers of HCV or HBV infection. Among patients positive for HCV, there was a higher proportion of women and urban dwellers, and the average age was higher. In southern Africa, HCV is associated with hepatocellular carcinoma but HBV is present in a higher proportion of patients.


The Lancet | 1990

Hepatitis C antibody and chronic liver disease in haemophilia.

M. Makris; F.E. Preston; D.R. Triger; J.C.E. Underwood; Qui Lim Choo; George Kuo; Michael Houghton

A radioimmunoassay was used to detect antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) in 154 patients with haemophilia. Prevalence of anti-HCV was associated with exposure to clotting factor concentrates. 76 of 129 (59%) who had received factor VIII or IX had anti-HCV: 42 of 55 (76%) who required over 10,000 units of concentrate annually had anti-HCV, compared with 34 of 74 (46%) who required less, and 0 of 25 patients who had never received concentrates. Anti-HCV were significantly more common in patients seropositive for antibodies against human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV) or with markers of previous hepatitis B infection than in those without anti-HIV or hepatitis B markers (88% vs 39% and 75% vs 46%, respectively). 5 of 23 (22%) haemophiliacs treated only with heated concentrates had anti-HCV compared with 71 of 106 (67%) patients who received unmodified products. 35 patients with chronic liver disease underwent liver biopsy: histological examination showed features associated with post-transfusion hepatitis in 24, all of whom were anti-HCV-positive; of the other 11 patients with no histological features of non-A, non-B hepatitis, 5 were anti-HCV-positive. HCV appears to be the major predisposing factor for most non-A, non-B hepatitis and chronic liver disease in haemophilia.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1990

Risk for Non-A, Non-B (Type C) Hepatitis through Sexual or Household Contact with Chronic Carriers

James E. Everhart; Adrian M. Di Bisceglie; Linda M. Murray; Harvey J. Alter; Jacqueline J. Melpolder; George Kuo; Jay H. Hoofnagle

Excerpt Transmission of non-A, non-B hepatitis through parenteral exposures, including drug abuse, blood transfusion, and occupational injury with a needle contaminated with blood is well documente...


Journal of General Virology | 1993

Expression, identification and subcellular localization of the proteins encoded by the hepatitis C viral genome

Mark Selby; Qui-Lim Choo; Kim Berger; George Kuo; Edward Glazer; Michael R. Eckart; Cindy Lee; David Chien; Carol Kuo; Michael Houghton

We have expressed the full-length coding region and selected domains of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) cDNA in mammalian cells by transfection. Using HCV antibody-positive human sera and monospecific antibodies the proteins encoded by the putative structural and non-structural regions of the open reading frame of HCV were identified as core (p22), E1 (gp32-35), E2 (gp68-72), NS2 (p23), NS3 (p72), NS4a and b (p10 and p27) and NS5a and b (p56 and p70). We have also defined the subcellular localizations of the HCV proteins using indirect immunofluorescence assays.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Hepatitis C virus antigen in hepatocytes: immunomorphologic detection and identification.

Krzysztof Krawczynski; Michael J. Beach; Daniel W. Bradley; George Kuo; Adrian M. Di Bisceglie; Michael Houghton; Gregory R. Reyes; Jungsuh P. Kim; Qui-Lim Choo; Miriam J. Alter

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) antigen was detected immunohistochemically using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled immunoglobulin G fractions from chimpanzee and human sera strongly reactive with recombinant hepatitis C virus structural and non-structural proteins. The antigen was localized in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes in all 9 chimpanzees with acute hepatitis C, in 5 of 10 chimpanzees with chronic HCV infection, and in 11 of 12 patients with chronic hepatitis C. The specificity of the hepatocellular HCV and FITC-labeled probes for HCV was ascertained by blocking studies with paired serum samples obtained from 8 infected and uninfected chimpanzees or from 14 patients during the acute and chronic phases of HCV infection. Absorption experiments on FITC-labeled probes with selected host proteins (normal liver homogenate, plasma proteins, red blood cells) did not indicate cross reactivity of the probes with these antigens. Direct immunomorphologic evidence for the HCV specificity of hepatocellular HCV antigen deposits and the FITC-labeled polyclonal anti-HCVAg probe was established in absorption experiments using recombinant HCV nonstructural proteins. The putative HCV NS3 protein was the most prominent component of hepatocellular HCV antigen.

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