Abstract

BackgroundEpstein-Barr virus (EBV) is an important human pathogen; it infects >90% people globally and is linked to infectious mononucleosis and several types of cancer. Vaccines against EBV are in development. In this study we present the first systematic review of the literature on risk factors for EBV infection, and discuss how they differ between settings, in order to improve our understanding of EBV epidemiology and aid the design of effective vaccination strategies.MethodsMEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science were searched on 6th March 2017 for observational studies of risk factors for EBV infection. Studies were excluded if they were published before 2008 to ensure relevance to the modern day, given the importance of influencing future vaccination policies. There were no language restrictions. After title, abstract and full text screening, followed by checking the reference lists of included studies to identify further studies, data were extracted into standardised spreadsheets and quality assessed. A narrative synthesis was undertaken.ResultsSeventy-seven papers met our inclusion criteria, including data from 31 countries. There was consistent evidence that EBV seroprevalence was associated with age, increasing throughout childhood and adolescence and remaining constant thereafter. EBV was generally acquired at younger ages in Asia than Europe/North America. There was also compelling evidence for an association between cytomegalovirus infection and EBV. Additional factors associated with EBV seroprevalence, albeit with less consistent evidence, included ethnicity, socioeconomic status, other chronic viral infections, and genetic variants of HLA and immune response genes.ConclusionsOur study is the first systematic review to draw together the global literature on the risk factors for EBV infection and includes an evaluation of the quality of the published evidence. Across the literature, the factors examined are diverse. In Asia, early vaccination of infants would be required to prevent EBV infection. In contrast, in Western countries a vaccine could be deployed later, particularly if it has only a short duration of protection and the intention was to protect against infectious mononucleosis. There is a lack of high-quality data on the prevalence and age of EBV infection outside of Europe, North America and South-East Asia, which are essential for informing effective vaccination policies in these settings.

Highlights

  • MethodsMEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science were searched on 6th March 2017 for observational studies of risk factors for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection

  • Socioeconomic status, household size, smoking, body mass index (BMI), co-infections and genetic variants of immunological genes were associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) serostatus, with varying degrees of certainty

  • While multiple studies have studied links between genes involved in antiviral immunity and EBV-related disease [2], we identified only three studies examining links between such genes and EBV serostatus within the time period of our inclusion criteria

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Summary

Methods

MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science were searched on 6th March 2017 for observational studies of risk factors for EBV infection. Abstract and full text screening, followed by checking the reference lists of included studies to identify further studies, data were extracted into standardised spreadsheets and quality assessed. MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science were searched on 6th March 2017 for articles on risk factors for EBV infection. Studies published before 2008 were excluded to ensure that the risk factors reported are relevant in the present day. Studies were excluded if they examined risk factors for EBV-associated disease (eg, IM, cancers or autoimmune conditions) rather than infection, if there was no comparison group, or if they did not include original research (reviews, editorial pieces, case reports)

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