A high prevalence of serum GB virus C/hepatitis G virus RNA in children with and without liver disease

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Abstract

The role of GB virus C/hepatitis G virus (GBV-C/HGV) in adult and pediatric liver disease is unclear. We detected serum GBV-C/HGV RNA by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in 1 (3%) of 38 cholestatic infants, in 4 (4%) of 95 children without liver disease, and in none of 30 children with autoimmune hepatitis. One cholestatic infant had antibodies, presumably maternal, to GBV-C/HGV. Sequence analysis of a nonstructural 3 region fragment suggested that mother-to-infant transmission was the route of infection for the cholestatic infant. The four infected children without liver disease had normal liver function test results and lacked risk factors for bloodborne infections. Thus, the detection of GBV-C/HGV RNA among children with and without liver disease suggests that chronic GBV-C/HGV infections may be established early in life, possibly by mother-to-infant transmission. This may explain in part the high prevalence of serum GBV- C/HGV RNA and antibodies in healthy adults.

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Halasz, R., Fischler, B., Nemeth, A., Lundholm, S., & Sällberg, M. (1999). A high prevalence of serum GB virus C/hepatitis G virus RNA in children with and without liver disease. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 28(3), 537–540. https://doi.org/10.1086/515157

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