Detection of a cluster of hepatitis C infections in a renal transplant unit by analysis of sequence variation of the NS5a gene

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Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1 isolates from 31 patients on dialysis or with renal transplants were studied for evidence of patient-to-patient spread of infection. Nucleotide sequences from a variable region (NS5V) of the NS5a (nonstructural 5a) gene and the hypervariable region of the second envelope gene (env2) were compared. Investigation of phylogenetically related isolates of HCV type 1a with identical derived amino acid sequences in the NS5V led to recognition of a cluster of 4 patients who had received renal transplants within an 8-day period in 1984. This demonstrates the value of molecular epidemiologic techniques in reconstructing routes of infection and adds to the evidence for nosocomial transmission of HCV by routes other than blood transfusion.

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Munro, J., Douglas Briggs, J., & McCruden, E. A. B. (1996). Detection of a cluster of hepatitis C infections in a renal transplant unit by analysis of sequence variation of the NS5a gene. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 174(1), 177–180. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/174.1.177

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