» Articles » PMID: 15378431

Frequent Hepatitis C Virus Superinfection in Injection Drug Users

Overview
Journal J Infect Dis
Date 2004 Sep 21
PMID 15378431
Citations 20
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The frequency of hepatitis C virus (HCV) superinfection with a divergent viral strain was determined in a cohort of recently infected young injection drug users (IDUs) with an HCV incidence rate of 25%. HCV was amplified, by use of polymerase chain reaction (PCR), from plasma samples collected from 25 HCV-infected individuals over an average period of 12 months, and their viral sequences were compared. Phylogenetic analysis identified 5 IDUs with superinfection (20%) occurring after seroconversion: 2 IDUs were superinfected with different HCV genotypes, and 3 were superinfected with divergent strains of the same genotype. The superinfecting strains were not detected as minority variants (<0.5%) in the initial plasma HCV quasi species. Extensive measures were taken to exclude PCR contamination and mix-up of samples, and superinfection results were concordant at 2 HCV genetic loci. HCV superinfection in IDUs, both intra- and intergenotype, is therefore a frequent event, with an incidence rate similar to that of de novo infections. These results suggest that no cross-protecting immunity develops during the first year of chronic infection with HCV.

Citing Articles

Acute hepatitis C virus infection: clinical update and remaining challenges.

Liu C, Kao J Clin Mol Hepatol. 2023; 29(3):623-642.

PMID: 36800699 PMC: 10366792. DOI: 10.3350/cmh.2022.0349.


Prevalence of mixed genotype hepatitis C virus infections in the UK as determined by genotype-specific PCR and deep sequencing.

McNaughton A, Sreenu V, Wilkie G, Gunson R, Templeton K, Leitch E J Viral Hepat. 2017; 25(5):524-534.

PMID: 29274184 PMC: 5947153. DOI: 10.1111/jvh.12849.


Spatiotemporal Reconstruction of the Introduction of Hepatitis C Virus into Scotland and Its Subsequent Regional Transmission.

McNaughton A, Cameron I, Wignall-Fleming E, Biek R, McLauchlan J, Gunson R J Virol. 2015; 89(22):11223-32.

PMID: 26311892 PMC: 4645645. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02106-15.


Mixed HCV infection and reinfection in people who inject drugs--impact on therapy.

Cunningham E, Applegate T, Lloyd A, Dore G, Grebely J Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2015; 12(4):218-30.

PMID: 25782091 DOI: 10.1038/nrgastro.2015.36.


Frequent longitudinal sampling of hepatitis C virus infection in injection drug users reveals intermittently detectable viremia and reinfection.

Page K, Osburn W, Evans J, Hahn J, Lum P, Asher A Clin Infect Dis. 2012; 56(3):405-13.

PMID: 23090930 PMC: 3540042. DOI: 10.1093/cid/cis921.