Decreasing prevalence of Hepatitis B and absence of Hepatitis C Virus infection in the Warao indigenous population of Venezuela

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Abstract

Prevalence and molecular epidemiology studies for hepatitis B (HBV) and C (HCV) virus are scarce in Warao Amerindians from Venezuela, where an epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has recently been documented. To carry out a molecular epidemiology analysis of hepatitis B (HBV) and C (HCV) virus in Warao individuals from the Delta Amacuro State of Venezuela. A total of 548 sera were tested for serological and molecular markers for HBV and HCV. The prevalence of active infection (presence of HBV surface antigen, HBsAg), exposure to HBV (presence of Antibody to HBV core antigen, anti-HBc) and anti-HCV, was 1.8%, 13% and 0% respectively. HBV exposure was significantly lower in men below 18 years old and also lower than rates previously reported in other Amerindian communities from Venezuela. Thirty one percent (31%, 25/80) of individuals without evidence of HBV infection exhibited anti-HBs titer 10U.I / ml, being significantly more frequent in individuals younger than 20 years. A higher HBV exposure was observed among HIV-1 positive individuals (33% vs 11%, p <0.005). A high prevalence of occult HBV infection was also observed (5.6%, 11/195). Phylogenetic analysis of S gene and complete HBV genomes showed that F3 is the only circulating subgenotype, different from the F2 subgenotype found in 1991 in this population. These results suggest a recent introduction of subgenotype F3, with a low divergence among the isolates. These results highlight the importance of molecular epidemiology studies for viral control, and support the effectiveness of vaccination in reducing transmission of HBV.

Figures

  • Table 1. Serological prevalence of HBV markers (HBsAg and anti- HBc) by age group in Amerindian Warao communities from Delta Amacuro State, Venezuela.
  • Fig 1. Distribution anti-HBs titres (IU/ml) by age in population Amerindian Warao. The gray shadow indicates the group under 20 years of age with anti-HBs titers significantly higher (p = 0.01) than those obtained in the population over 20 years of age. GM refers to the geometric mean of the anti-HBs titer.
  • Fig 2. Occult hepatitis B Infection (OBI) prevalence in Warao Amerindians. Positive and negative samples are represented with + o–symbol respectively.
  • Fig 3. Phylogenetic tree of HBV isolated from Amerindian Warao population. A) Phylogenetic analysis of HBV S region (658 bp) and B) of two complete genome HBV isolated of Amerindian Warao population. Genetic distance was estimated by Kimura two parameters correction, MEGA version 7.0.26. Phylogenetic tree was constructed with the Neighbour-joining method. Numbers at each node correspond to bootstrap values (>50%) obtained with 1000 replicates. The prototype strains are designated by their GenBank accession number, and country or ethnic group, except the Warao isolates of this study (bold). VNZ: Venezuela. These Warao isolates were obtained between the years 1991–1997 and analyzed in a previous study [34]. The sequences of occult HBV infection are underlined. Six isolates for which only a 330 pb fragment could be amplified are not included in the tree.

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APA

Blanco, R. Y., Loureiro, C. L., Villalba, J. A., Sulbarán, Y. F., Maes, M., De Waard, J. H., … Pujol, F. H. (2018). Decreasing prevalence of Hepatitis B and absence of Hepatitis C Virus infection in the Warao indigenous population of Venezuela. PLoS ONE, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0197662

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