Quest Diagnostics, Madison, NJ, has announced that it will automatically perform molecular testing on all patient specimens whose antibody screening results indicate hepatitis C virus infection, and remove standalone positive antibody screening as a test option.

The change to the company’s service menu eliminates the prospect that a patient may receive a positive screening result but fail to undergo additional molecular testing, as recommended by medical guidelines, to help confirm a diagnosis of active hepatitis C infection, the cause of chronic hepatitis C.

Pesano

Rick L. Pesano, MD, PhD, Quest Diagnostics.

Conventional laboratory and medical practice for hepatitis C virus infection involves referring a patient for a second office visit and blood draw if the initial antibody screening test produces a positive result. As many as 60% of people who receive a positive antibody screening test for hepatitis C in the United States do not undergo guideline-recommended molecular testing to help identify active infection.

“This change to Quest’s test offerings is medically responsible and appropriate. It closes a gap in current hepatitis C care by reducing the possibility a patient will undergo multiple office visits and blood draws or be inappropriately referred to specialists based on incomplete testing,” says Rick L. Pesano, MD, PhD, vice president for development, science, and innovation at Quest Diagnostics. “With this change to our offering, we will help more people receive insights they can use to access effective treatment and ultimately lead healthier lives.”

A hepatitis C screening test identifies viral antibodies while a molecular test identifies viral RNA when the infection is active. In some people, the immune system clears hepatitis C infection on its own, but antibodies may linger in the blood for decades. As a result, a positive antibody screening test can signify resolved or active infection, and as much as 3% of antibody screens produce a false positive.

Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommend molecular testing for all positive antibody screening tests to differentiate resolved and active infection. Specimens that produce negative antibody screening results generally do not undergo molecular testing.

With the change to the Quest menu, any specimen that an antibody screening test indicates is positive will automatically reflex to molecular testing. Pricing for the screen and molecular tests are the same as before; positive screening results will reflex to molecular testing automatically and be charged the additional molecular test fee.

According to CDC, as many as 3.9 million Americans are chronically infected with the hepatitis C virus, making it is the most common chronic bloodborne infection in the United States. Hepatitis C may not manifest symptoms for decades, and most patients are unaware of infection. Early diagnosis, through laboratory blood tests, and treatment can help prevent liver damage, cirrhosis, liver cancer, and death. In 2012, CDC recommended screening for Baby Boomers—individuals born from 1945 through 1965—who are five times more likely than other adults to be infected with hepatitis C. The CDC guidelines also acknowledge recently introduced hepatitis C therapies, called direct acting agents, which have cure rates of more than 90%.

“The need for streamlined hepatitis C virus testing takes on greater urgency given medical guidelines recommending one-time antibody screening for the large Baby Boomer cohort and other populations at heightened risk for chronic hepatitis C,” adds Pesano. “Reliable, prompt diagnosis is essential for these populations to fully benefit from highly efficacious new drug therapies.”

Quest Diagnostics is a leader in hepatitis diagnostic information testing with services that include genotyping, risk stratifying, and viral load and antiviral resistance testing to aid diagnosis, treatment, and monitoring. The company also collaborates with CDC to identify trends in screening, diagnosis, and treatment for viral hepatitis (hepatitis A, B, C, and E) in the United States based on the national Quest Diagnostics Health Trends database of deidentified clinical hepatitis test data. The goal of the collaboration is to improve the ability of public health authorities to develop and monitor the effectiveness of CDC medical guidelines designed to reduce disease prevalence and enhance outcomes through earlier diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis.

For further information, visit Quest Diagnostics.