» Articles » PMID: 11442209

Hepatitis C and Cirrhotic Liver Disease in the Nile Delta of Egypt: a Community-based Study

Overview
Specialty Tropical Medicine
Date 2001 Jul 10
PMID 11442209
Citations 25
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Residents of Egypt's Nile river delta have among the world's highest seroprevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. To assess the impact of HCV on chronic liver disease, we studied the association between HCV, other hepatitis viruses, and cirrhotic liver disease in a cross-sectional, community-based survey of 801 persons aged > or = 10 years living in a semi-urban, Nile delta village. Residents were systematically sampled using questionnaires, physical examination, abdominal ultrasonography and serologically for antibodies to HCV (confirmed by a third-generation immunoblot assay) and to hepatitis A virus (HAV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and hepatitis E virus (HEV). The seroprevalence of HCV increased with age from 19% in persons 10-19 years old to about 60% in persons 30 years and older. Although no practices that might facilitate HCV transmission were discovered, the seroprevalence of HCV was significantly associated with remote (> 1 year) histories of schistosomiasis. Sonographic evidence of cirrhosis was present in 3% (95% CI: 1%, 4%) of the population (0.7% of persons under 30 years of age and in 5% of older persons), and was significantly associated with HCV seroreactivity. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that past mass parenteral chemotherapy campaigns for schistosomiasis facilitated HCV transmission, and that HCV may be a major cause of the high prevalence of liver cirrhosis in this Nile village.

Citing Articles

Epidemiological Perspectives: A Four-Year Insight Into Hepatitis C Surveillance in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Almajid A, Albarbari H, Bazroon A, Al-Awami H, Aljurayyad R, Albadran R Cureus. 2024; 16(1):e52646.

PMID: 38249649 PMC: 10800009. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.52646.


Human umbilical cord blood mesenchymal stem cells as a potential therapy for schistosomal hepatic fibrosis: an experimental study.

Abou Rayia D, Ashour D, Abo Safia H, Abdel Ghafar M, Amer R, Saad A Pathog Glob Health. 2022; 117(2):190-202.

PMID: 35435145 PMC: 9970248. DOI: 10.1080/20477724.2022.2064795.


Apology and Unintended Harm in Global Health.

Addiss D, Amon J Health Hum Rights. 2019; 21(1):19-32.

PMID: 31239611 PMC: 6586980.


Cardiovascular disease risk in patients with hepatitis C infection: Results from two general population health surveys in Canada and the United States (2007-2017).

Badawi A, Di Giuseppe G, Arora P PLoS One. 2018; 13(12):e0208839.

PMID: 30540839 PMC: 6291240. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208839.


Toxoplasma gondii Infection and Chronic Liver Diseases: Evidence of an Association.

El-Sayed N, Ramadan M, Ramadan M Trop Med Infect Dis. 2018; 1(1).

PMID: 30270858 PMC: 6082049. DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed1010007.