HBs- Ag can be determined qualitatively and quantitatively. Quantitative detection plays a role as a progression parameter during treatment (Gressner 2019).
In an acute infection with hepatitis B, HBs- Ag is already detectable before the onset of clinical symptoms (approx. 2 - 6 weeks before [Kasper 2015]). At the onset of the disease, it is found in approx. 90 % of patients (Herold 2022).
As a rule, HBs- Ag is no longer detectable 1 - 2 months after the onset of the disease. As soon as this is the case, antibodies against HBs- Ag appear for the first time. Occasionally, however, there may be a diagnostic gap of several weeks. Once anti-HBs appear, they persist for life (Kasper 2022).
The detection of HBs- Ag always means virus persistence (Cornberg 2021) and thus infectivity, as virus replication continues to take place in this case (Herold 2022). If HBe-Ag is also detectable, this additionally increases infectivity (Kasper 2015).
Since 1994, general HBs- Ag screening for pregnant women has been mandatory in Germany, as there is a risk of infection for the child if the mother is HBs- Ag positive (Cornberg 2021). In > 90 % of cases, HBs- Ag-positive mothers transmit the virus to their newborn, compared to only 10 - 15 % of HBs- Ag-positive mothers (Kasper 2015).
Hepatitis D
HBs- Ag is also always detectable in the context of hepatitis D (Kasper 2015), as the hepatitis D virus is only able to form infectious virus particles through an HBs- Ag-containing envelope (RKI 2016).
Extrahepatic manifestation
HBs- Ag can occasionally be deposited in the blood vessels in acute hepatitis B and prodromally cause symptoms similar to serum sickness(Kasper 2015).
In patients with chronic hepatitis B, immune complex diseases such as glomerulonephritis with nephrotic syndrome occasionally occur. In this case, deposits of HBs- Ag are found in the glomerular basement membrane. HBs- Ag can also be detected in the small and medium-sized arterioles in polyarteritis nodosa (Kasper 2015).