Abstract

Seroprevalence of HCV indicates that HCV is found in more than 10% of HBV- or HDV-infected patients worldwide leading to liver disease. Here we show HBV and HDV coinfection association with HCV infected Pakistani patients, study of disease severity, and possible interpretation of associated risk factors in coinfected patients. A total of 730 liver diseased patients were included, out of which 501 were found positive for HCV infection via PCR. 5.1% of patients were coinfected with HBV while 1% were coinfected with HBV and HDV both. LFTs were significantly altered in dually and triply infected patients as compared to single HCV infection. Mean bilirubin, AST, and ALT levels were highest (3.25 mg/dL, 174 IU/L, and 348 IU/L) in patients with triple infection while dual infection LFTs (1.6 mg/dL, 61 IU/L, and 74 IU/L) were not high as in single infection (1.9 mg/dL, 76 IU/L, and 91 IU/L). The most prominent risk factor in case of single (22%) and dual infection (27%) group was “reuse of syringes” while in triple infection it was “intravenous drug users” (60%). It is concluded that HBV and HDV coinfections are strongly associated with HCV infected Pakistani patients and in case of severe liver disease the possibility of double and triple coinfection should be kept in consideration.

Highlights

  • Chronic hepatitis is a common cause of liver related morbidity due to different hepatic viruses, where hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C (HCV) have been identified as the main cause [1] and lead to many complications

  • Infection with multiple viruses leads to management problems with higher incidence of morbidity and mortality [5]

  • Since there is no report on triple infection caused by hepatitis viruses from Pakistani population [23], the aim of this study is to find the rate of coinfection of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) in HCV infected Pakistani patients

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Chronic hepatitis is a common cause of liver related morbidity due to different hepatic viruses, where hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C (HCV) have been identified as the main cause [1] and lead to many complications. Over a million persons die annually due to HBV related complications [2, 3]. HCV leads to many complications including HCC in 32% of infected patients [4]. Infection with multiple viruses leads to management problems with higher incidence of morbidity and mortality [5]. Since hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and hepatitis D share almost the same modes of transmission, infection with more than one virus is possible [6]. Presence of dual and triple viral infections has been reported from various parts of the world [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call