Hepatitis C Virus Infection and HCV Genotypes of Hemodialysis Patients

Background: To evaluate the prevalence of hepatitis C by antibody testing, HCV-RNA detection by PCR and relative risk fac­tors of HCV infection among HD patients and staff members in Markazi Province/Iran. The other purpose was to deter­mine genotypes of HCV in this population. Methods: The study gr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: K Samimi-rad, M Hosseini, B shahbaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2008-09-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijph.tums.ac.ir/index.php/ijph/article/view/2048
Description
Summary:Background: To evaluate the prevalence of hepatitis C by antibody testing, HCV-RNA detection by PCR and relative risk fac­tors of HCV infection among HD patients and staff members in Markazi Province/Iran. The other purpose was to deter­mine genotypes of HCV in this population. Methods: The study group consisted of 204 HD patients and 47 staff members from all 9 dialysis centers in Markazi Prov­ince, Iran. Anti-HCV antibodies were tested using a third generation ELISA and confirmed by RIBA. HCV RNA was deter­mined by RT-PCR and genotyping was performed by a reverse hybridization assay (LiPA). Results: The overall prevalence of HCV (HCV antibody and HCV-RNA) was 5.4%. Female sex (P= 0.019), duration of dialy­sis (P= 0.003) and kidney transplant (P= 0.049) were significantly correlated with HCV infection. The predominant sub­type was HCV-1a, detected in 4(50%) of the 8 HD patients. Genotype 4, 3a and 1b were found in 2(25%), 1(12.5%) and 1(12.5%) patients respectively.  The prevalence of anti-HCV among staff members of HD units was 0%. Conclusion: The presence of anti HCV positive patients who had never been transfused, high prevalence of genotype 4 in this population, duration of HD as a risk factor for HCV positivity and non significant association between blood transfu­sion and HCV infection suggest nosocomial transmission of the virus in dialysis units that needs to be confirmed by phyloge­netic analysis of subgenomic regions of HCV. HD staff members dose not seem to be at increased risk of hepatitis C de­spite the frequent blood exposure and lack of strict adherence to universal infection control precautions.
ISSN:2251-6085
2251-6093