Hepatitis e virus seroprevalence in pregnant women in Pakistan: Maternal and fetal outcomes

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Abstract

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is endemic in Pakistan. Although otherwise asymptomatic, HEV infection becomes fatal in pregnancy, with considerable maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality. We conducted a descriptive study from April to October 2015 in 10 tertiary care hospitals throughout Pakistan to determine maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality in HEV-positive pregnant women with acute jaundice or raised liver function tests. Twenty-one of 135 women were HEV positive and in 3rd trimester except for 1 in 1st trimester. Overall prevalence of HEV in pregnancy was 0.19%. Ten women were artificially induced, 3 had premature labour, 4 delivered spontaneously (full term), 3 died and there was 1 intrauterine death. One woman had a home abortion before coming to hospital. There were 7 perinatal infant deaths: 4 intrauterine, 3 stillbirths and 1 abortion. Maternal mortality was significantly associated with delivery, as 17 mothers who lived went into labour spontaneously or were artificially induced, whereas 3 women who continued their pregnancy and did not deliver, died. Case fatality rate of HEV infection in pregnancy was 14.2%.

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Javed, N. A., Ullah, S. H., Hussain, N., Sheikh, M. A., Khan, A., Ghafoor, F., … Muhyudin, G. (2017). Hepatitis e virus seroprevalence in pregnant women in Pakistan: Maternal and fetal outcomes. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 23(8), 559–563. https://doi.org/10.26719/2017.23.8.559

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