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Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis

Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis. Ashry Gad Mohamed Prof. of Epidemiology Consultant Medical Epidemiologist. Hepatitis A. Abrupt onset. Fever Malaise Anorexia Abdominal discomfort Jaundice. More than 90% are asymptomatic Seroprevalence increases with age.

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Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis

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  1. Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis Ashry Gad Mohamed Prof. of Epidemiology Consultant Medical Epidemiologist

  2. Hepatitis A • Abrupt onset. • Fever • Malaise • Anorexia • Abdominal discomfort • Jaundice

  3. More than 90% are asymptomatic • Seroprevalence increases with age. • At age 15, 95% are seropositive. • Case fatality rate (CFR)= 0.3%. • If age > 40 years CFR=2%. • Studies in KSA: 1997 25% 1999 25% Taif 10-82% Jazan (1-12 years)

  4. Agent: RNA virus • Reservior : Human (Clinical & subclinical cases) • Incubation period: 15-35 days ( median one month).

  5. Period of communicability : Last twoweeks of I.P. + one week of illness. • Modes of transmission: Fecal-oral route. Common source outbreaks. Blood transfusion (rare).

  6. Prevention and Control • Good sanitation & personal hygiene. “Careful hand washing” • Day- Care centers Hand washing after every diaper change and before eating. • Shellfish heat 85-90C 4 minutes. steam 90 seconds.

  7. Inactivated hepatitis A vaccine 0 -1 -6 months. Protection after one month. Lasting immunity at least 10 years. • Hepatitis A patient: Enteric precaution for the PC

  8. Hepatitis B • Incidous onset. • Anorexia. • Abdominal discomfort. • Nausia. • Vomiting. • Arthralgia. • Jaundice.

  9. Carriage rates: Sudan 13-19% Pakistan 10-16% Egypt 2.7-15% Saudi Arabia 8.5% Jordan 7-10. Syria 4-6% Iraq 4-5% Morocco 3-6% Yemen 5-6%

  10. More than 500,000 death/year 2 billion people infected 360 million CHB

  11. OVERALL PREVALENCE OF HBsAg AMONG SAUDIS IN THE 80’S ACCORDING TO REGIONS Positivity (%) Al-Faleh. Annals of Saudi Medicine, 1988

  12. COMPARISON OF PREVALENCE OF HBsAg AMONG SAUDI CHILDREN IN 1989 (n=4575) AND 1997 (n=5355) – ACCORDING TO AGE Al Faleh, J Infect 1999

  13. PREVALENCE OF HBsAg POSITIVITY AMONG BLOOD DONORS IN KKUH FROM 1987 TO 2000 Positivity (%)

  14. Natural History • Gow, BMJ2001

  15. Agent: Double strand DNA. Serotypes adw, ayw, adr, ayr. • Reservior: Human (case + carrier). • I.P. 2-3 months. • P.C. One week of I.P. + illness period + carriage. • Carriage depends on age.

  16. Modes of transmission: • Percutaneous and permucosal exposure to infective body fluids. Blood transfusion. Organs transplants. Sharing needles. Haemodialysis. Needlestick. Tattooing. Razors & toothbrushes.

  17. Sexual transmission. • Perinatal transmission.

  18. Prevention and control • Wide scale immunization of infants. • Immunization of high risk persons. Haemodialysis patients. Bleeding disorders. Susceptible households. Health care personnels. • Blood banks: avoid donors from risky groups.

  19. Education & history taking. Testing for HBs Ag. • Discourage: Tattooing, Drug abuse, Extramarital sexual relations. • Needle stick Single dose of HBIG (24 hours). Vaccine series.

  20. Sexual exposure Single dose of HBIG (14 days). Vaccination. • Infants to HBsAg +ve mothers. 0.5 ml HBIG im. First dose of the vaccine. 2nd & 3rd doses at 1 & 6 months later. • Health care personnel. Universal precautions

  21. Hepatitis C

  22. WESTERN EUROPE 9 M FAR EAST/ASIA 60 M EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN 20M USA 4 M SOUTH EAST ASIA 30 M AFRICA 32 M SOUTH AMERICA 10 M AUSTRALIA 0.2 M 170 Million Hepatitis C virus (HCV) carriers 3-4 MM new cases / year WHO, 1999

  23. AGE SPECIFIC PREVALENCE OF ANTIBODY TO HCV/ANTI-HCV AMONG HEALTHY SAUDIS Al-Faleh et al, Hepatology Vol. 14(2), 1991

  24. COMPARISON OF PREVALENCE OF ANTI-HCV IN SAUDI CHILDREN BETWEEN THE STUDIES CARRIED OUT IN 1989 AND 1997

  25. PREVALENCE OF ANTIBODY TO HCV TO SAUDI HIGH RISK GROUPS 2nd-generation anti-HCV tests and confirmation were only done in this study.

  26. ANTI-HCV IN HAEMODYLYSIS PATIENTS IN SAUDI POPULATION

  27. Hepatitis C Virus Genotypes • 11( 6 major) with many subtypes and quasispecies • The predominate genotype in Saudi is Genotype 4 (62.9% ) • Europe & America Genotype 1 75 (24.8) %  severe disease • Genotype 2 = 10.8 (7.4) % • Genotype 3 = 5.8 (5.9) % • Genotype 1 & 4  Poor response to therapy

  28. Natural History of HCV Infection Exposure (Acute phase) 15% (15) 85% (85) HIV and Alcohol Resolved Chronic 80% (68) 20% (17) Stable Cirrhosis 75% (13) 25% (4) Slowly Progressive HCC Transplant Death MJ Semin Liver Dis 1995; 15: Management of Hepatitis C NIH Consensus Statement 1997; March 24-26:15(3).

  29. Important HCV Transmission Modes Blood transfusion IV drug abuse 80% infected in first year 1:100,000 in US

  30. Uncommon HCV Transmission Modes Household transmission Vertical transmission mother - Child ? 1-5% Needle stick injury 3%

  31. Features of Hepatitis C Virus Infection Incubation periodAverage 6-7 weeks Range 2-26 weeks Acute illness (jaundice)Mild (<20%) Case fatality rate Low Chronic infection60%-85% Chronic hepatitis10%-70% Cirrhosis<5%-20% Mortality from CLD 1%-5% Age- related

  32. Chronic Hepatitis C Factors Promoting Progression or Severity • Increased alcohol intake • Age > 40 years at time of infection • HIV co-infection • Other • Male gender • Chronic HBV co-infection

  33. Serologic Pattern of Acute HCV Infection with Progression to Chronic Infection anti-HCV Symptoms +/- HCV RNA Titer ALT Normal 6 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4 5 Years Months Time after Exposure

  34. Exposures Known to Be Associated With HCV Infection in the United States • Injecting drug use • Transfusion, transplant from infected donor • Occupational exposure to blood • Mostly needle sticks • Iatrogenic (unsafe injections) • Birth to HCV-infected mother • Sex with infected partner • Multiple sex partners

  35. Injecting Drug Use and HCV Transmission • Highly efficient • Contamination of drug paraphernalia, not just needles and syringes • Rapidly acquired after initiation • 30% prevalence after 3 years • >50% after 5 years • Four times more common than HIV

  36. Occupational Transmission of HCV • Average incidence 1.8% following needle stick from HCV-positive source • Associated with hollow-bore needles • Prevalence 1-2% among health care workers • Lower than adults in the general population • 10 times lower than for HBV infection

  37. HCV Related to Health Care Procedures • Recognized primarily in context of outbreaks • Chronic hemodialysis • Hospital inpatient setting • Private practice setting • Home therapy • Unsafe injection practices • Reuse of syringes and needles • Contaminated multiple dose medication vials

  38. HCW to Patient Transmission of HCV • Rare • In U.S., none related to performing invasive procedures • Most appear related to HCW substance abuse • Reuse of needles or sharing narcotics used for self-injection • No restrictions routinely recommended for HCV-infected HCWs

  39. Perinatal Transmission of HCV • Transmission only from women HCV-RNA positive at delivery • Average rate of infection 6% • Higher (17%) if woman co-infected with HIV • Role of viral titer unclear • No association with • Delivery method • Breastfeeding • Infected infants do well • Severe hepatitis is rare

  40. Sexual Transmission of HCV • Case-control, cross sectional studies • Infected partner, multiple partners, early sex, non-use of condoms, other STDs, sex with trauma, Partner studies • Low prevalence (1.5%) among long-term partners • infections might be due to common percutaneous exposures (e.g., drug use), BUT • Male to female transmission more efficient • more indicative of sexual transmission

  41. Household Transmission of HCV • Rare but not absent • Could occur through percutaneous/mucosal exposures to blood • Contaminated equipment used for home therapies • IV therapy, injections • Theoretically through sharing of contaminated personal articles (razors, toothbrushes)

  42. Reduce or Eliminate Risks for Acquiring HCV Infection • Screen and test donors • Virus inactivation of plasma-derived products • Risk-reduction counseling and services • Obtain history of high-risk drug and sex behaviors • Provide information on minimizing risky behavior, including referral to other services • Vaccinate against hepatitis A and/or hepatitis B • Safe injection and infection control practices

  43. Reduce Risks for Disease Progressionand Further Transmission • Identify persons at risk for HCV and test to determine infection status • Routinely identify at risk persons through history, record review • Provide HCV-positive persons • Medical evaluation and management • Counseling • Prevent further liver damage • Prevent transmission to others MMWR 1998;47 (No. RR-19)

  44. HCV Prevalence by Selected GroupsUnited States Hemophilia Injecting drug users Hemodialysis STD clients Gen population adults Surgeons, PSWs Pregnant women Military personnel Average Percent Anti-HCV Positive

  45. HCV Testing Routinely Recommended • Ever injected illegal drugs • Received clotting factors made before 1987 • Received blood/organs before July 1992 • Ever on chronic hemodialysis • Evidence of liver disease • Healthcare, emergency, public safety workers after needle stick/mucosal exposures to HCV-positive blood • Children born to HCV-positive women Based on increased risk for infection Based on need for exposure management

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