Abstract

BackgroundHepatitis D virus (HDV) infection is considered to cause more severe hepatitis than hepatitis B virus (HBV) monoinfection. With more than 9.5 million HBV-infected people, Vietnam will face an enormous health burden. The prevalence of HDV in Vietnamese HBsAg-positive patients is speculative. Therefore, we assessed the prevalence of HDV in Vietnamese patients, determined the HDV-genotype distribution and compared the findings with the clinical outcome.Methods266 sera of well-characterized HBsAg-positive patients in Northern Vietnam were analysed for the presence of HDV using newly developed HDV-specific RT-PCRs. Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis were performed for HDV-genotyping.ResultsThe HDV-genome prevalence observed in the Vietnamese HBsAg-positive patients was high with 15.4% while patients with acute hepatitis showed 43.3%. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated a predominance of HDV-genotype 1 clustering in an Asian clade while HDV-genotype 2 could be also detected. The serum aminotransferase levels (AST, ALT) as well as total and direct bilirubin were significantly elevated in HDV-positive individuals (p<0.05). HDV loads were mainly low (<300 to 4.108 HDV-copies/ml). Of note, higher HDV loads were mainly found in HBV-genotype mix samples in contrast to single HBV-infections. In HBV/HDV-coinfections, HBV loads were significantly higher in HBV-genotype C in comparison to HBV-genotype A samples (p<0.05).ConclusionHDV prevalence is high in Vietnamese individuals, especially in patients with acute hepatitis B. HDV replication activity showed a HBV-genotype dependency and could be associated with elevated liver parameters. Besides serological assays molecular tests are recommended for diagnosis of HDV. Finally, the high prevalence of HBV and HDV prompts the urgent need for HBV-vaccination coverage.

Highlights

  • Hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection is considered to account for more severe complications of viral hepatitis with rapid progression to cirrhosis, increased risk of hepatic decompensation and death compared to hepatitis B virus (HBV) monoinfection [1,2]

  • There were no significant difference in HBV loads among the investigated patient groups (AHB, chronic hepatitis B (CHB), liver cirrhosis (LC), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)) (ANOVA-test, p=0.70)

  • The HBV prevalence will possibly reduce in this area in near future, the incidence and prevalence of HBV-associated LC and HCC could be gradually increasing in the two decades due to the long latency of chronic hepatitis B [31]

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection is considered to account for more severe complications of viral hepatitis with rapid progression to cirrhosis, increased risk of hepatic decompensation and death compared to hepatitis B virus (HBV) monoinfection [1,2]. Hepatitis D can occur only in HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) positive individuals as HDV is a defective RNA virus, comparable to satellite viruses and viroids, that requires HBsAg for its propagation [3,4]. Hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection is considered to cause more severe hepatitis than hepatitis B virus (HBV) monoinfection. The prevalence of HDV in Vietnamese HBsAg-positive patients is speculative. Results: The HDV-genome prevalence observed in the Vietnamese HBsAg-positive patients was high with 15.4% while patients with acute hepatitis showed 43.3%. Higher HDV loads were mainly found in HBVgenotype mix samples in contrast to single HBV-infections. Conclusion: HDV prevalence is high in Vietnamese individuals, especially in patients with acute hepatitis B. The high prevalence of HBV and HDV prompts the urgent need for HBV-vaccination coverage

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