1.The correlation between S/CO ratios of different chemiluminescence assays and recombinant immunoblot in anti-HCV antibody detection
Lishui WANG ; Mingjie XU ; Changlin JIANG ; Jiaying WANG ; Yan YANG ; Lanxiang OU
Chinese Journal of Laboratory Medicine 2016;39(2):90-94
Objective To investigate relationships between signal/cutoff (S/CO) ratios of antiHCV recombinant immunoblot assay (RIBA) and their positivity with different chemiluminescence immunoassay(CLIA) reagents.Methods A case-control study was performed.From March 2014 to March 2015,anti-HCV antibody was detected in 2 616 serum of outpatients and inpatients coming from Department of Clinical Laboratory,Qilu Hospital of Shandong University by three kinds of homemade CLIA reagents and one imported CLIA reagents.The positive samples were further tested by RIBA.The correlation between the positivity and the S/CO ratios was analyzed.The difference between different reagents were compared by x2 method.Results The predicted positivities of Shandong Laibo were 97.8% and 33.3% with S/CO ratio ≥ 26.8 and 1 to 26.8,respectively;The predicted positivities of Beijing Yuande were 96.7% and 20% with S/CO ratio ≥ 16.6 and 1 to 16.6,respectively;The predicted positivities of Beijing Kemei were 97.0% and 9.8% with S/CO ratio ≥ 16.7 and 1 to16.7,respectively;The predicted positivities of Abbott were 96.9% and 12.8% with S/CO ratio≥5 and 1 to 5,respectively.Conclusions Anti-HCV CLIA S/CO ratio and RIBA confirmatory test results have some relevance.Domestic reagents also can refer to import reagents determine the relationship between the positivity and the S/CO ratio.Different domestic reagent of positivity has different S/CO ratio.Although each reagent S/CO ratio to the same positivity has large difference,suggesting each manufacturer should set their products corresponding values according to the situation,providing reference for the clinical use of unit in result determination of the clinical trials.
2.HCV antigen detection method and clinical application
Lanxiang OU ; Wenhui GUO ; Yan YANG ; Chenglong ZHU ; Wenge XING
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2024;32(2):168-172
Hepatitis C is distributed worldwide and possesses a hidden characteristic. The traditional methods of screening and diagnosis of hepatitis C infection commonly used in clinics are based on anti-HCV antibody and HCV RNA detection. Advances in HCV antigen detection technologies can apparently reduce the window period for anti-HCV antibodies, providing new clinical evidence for the early detection, diagnosis, and treatment of HCV infection. This article is a current review of HCV antigen detection methodologies, clinical applications, and detection strategies.