Back to Search Start Over

A systematic review of hepatitis C virus epidemiology in Asia, Australia and Egypt.

Authors :
Sievert, William
Altraif, Ibrahim
Razavi, Homie A.
Abdo, Ayman
Ahmed, Ezzat Ali
AlOmair, Ahmed
Amarapurkar, Deepak
Chien-Hung Chen
Xiaoguang Dou
Khayat, Hisham El
elShazly, Mohamed
Esmat, Gamal
Guan, Richard
Kwang-Hyub Han
Koike, Kazuhiko
Largen, Angela
McCaughan, Geoff
Mogawer, Sherif
Monis, Ali
Nawaz, Arif
Source :
Liver International. Jul2011 Supplement, Vol. 31, p61-80. 20p. 2 Charts, 1 Map.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The hepatitis C pandemic has been systematically studied and characterized in North America and Europe, but this important public health problem has not received equivalent attention in other regions. The objective of this systematic review was to characterize hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemiology in selected countries of Asia, Australia and Egypt, i.e. in a geographical area inhabited by over 40% of the global population. Data references were identified through indexed journals and non-indexed sources. In this work, 7770 articles were reviewed and 690 were selected based on their relevance. We estimated that 49.3-64.0 million adults in Asia, Australia and Egypt are anti-HCV positive. China alone has more HCV infections than all of Europe or the Americas. While most countries had prevalence rates from 1 to 2% we documented several with relatively high prevalence rates, including Egypt (15%), Pakistan (4.7%) and Taiwan (4.4%). Nosocomial infection, blood transfusion (before screening) and injection drug use were identified as common risk factors in the region. Genotype 1 was common in Australia, China, Taiwan and other countries in North Asia, while genotype 6 was found in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. In India and Pakistan genotype 3 was predominant, while genotype 4 was found in Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria. We recommend implementation of surveillance systems to guide effective public health policy that may lead to the eventual curtailment of the spread of this pandemic infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14783223
Volume :
31
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Liver International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
61140094
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-3231.2011.02540.x