Characteristics of hepatitis viruses among Egyptian children with acute
hepatitis
a Center for
Infectious Diseases (CID), Kobe University, Graduate School of Medicine, 7-5-1
Kusunoki-cho, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0017, Japan
b Department of Gastroenterology, Kobe University, Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe, Japan
c Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt
b Department of Gastroenterology, Kobe University, Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe, Japan
c Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt
Abstract
Hepatitis
viral infection is hyperendemic in Egypt, western Asia and Africa. However,
little is known about the status of hepatitis viruses among rural Egyptian
children. Therefore, this study sought to examine the prevalence and
characteristics of hepatitis viruses among symptomatic Egyptian children.
Serological and molecular analyses of hepatitis viral infection were conducted
in 33 children hospitalised at Mansoura University with symptomatic hepatic
dysfunction (mean ± standard deviation age, 9.7±3.4 years; alanine
aminotransferase level, 130±68 IU/ml). Eleven children (33%) were positive for
anti-haemagglutination-IgM and were diagnosed with acute hepatitis A. Hepatitis
B surface antigen (HBsAg) and anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) were detected in 9
(27%) and 7 (21%) children, respectively, indicating acute-on-chronic infection
with hepatitis viruses. None of the children was positive for anti-hepat itis B
core ant igen-IgM. Phylogenetic analysis confr med that all HBVs belonged to
genotype D (subgenotype D1) and that HCV belonged to genotypes 4a and 1g.
HBV-DNA was detected in 9 children (27%) in the pre-S/S region and in 16
children (48%) in the core promoter/precore region. The Y134F amino acid
mutation in the 'α' determinant region was detected in all of the patients. The
A1762T/G1764A double mutation, and the T1846A and G1896A single mutations were
common in children with occult HBV infection. In conclusion, hepatitis viral
infection, including acute-on-chronic infection with HCV and HBV, is common in
Egyptian children hospitalised with acute hepatitis.
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