Patient-to-Patient Transmission of Hepatitis C Virus during Colonoscopy

  • Bronowicki J
  • Venard V
  • Botté C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures may be a route for the transmission of the hepatitis C virus (HCV).1–5 In a study of patients in a gastrointestinal-disease unit, endoscopic biopsies were found to be an independent risk factor for HCV infection.6 We report the transmission of HCV during colonoscopy from a person known to have HCV infection to two other patients. The patient-to-patient transmission was ascertained by sequencing the nucleotides in the various HCV isolates. Case Report A 55-year-old man (Patient 1) and his 54-year-old wife (Patient 2) were referred in October 1995. In June 1995, both had had hepatitis-like . . .

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Bronowicki, J.-P., Venard, V., Botté, C., Monhoven, N., Gastin, I., Choné, L., … Gaucher, P. (1997). Patient-to-Patient Transmission of Hepatitis C Virus during Colonoscopy. New England Journal of Medicine, 337(4), 237–240. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199707243370404

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