| Literature DB >> 23799878 |
Yousra A Mohamoud1, Ghina R Mumtaz, Suzanne Riome, Dewolfe Miller, Laith J Abu-Raddad.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Egypt has the highest prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the world, estimated nationally at 14.7%. Our study's objective was to delineate the evidence on the epidemiology of HCV infection among the different population groups in Egypt, and to draw analytical inferences about the nature of HCV transmission in this country.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23799878 PMCID: PMC3702438 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Flow of article selection for the HCV prevalence and incidence in Egypt search. This chart, adapted from the PRISMA 2009 flow diagram, displays the flow of article selection for the HCV incidence and prevalence in Egypt search of scientific databases, namely PubMed and Embase.
Studies reporting hepatitis C virus incidence in Egypt
| Mohamed,05 [ | 1997-2000 | Qalubyia, Lower Egypt | Village residents | 2,463 | 6.8 |
| Mohamed,05 [ | 1997-2000 | Assuit, Upper Egypt | Village residents | 4,275 | 0.8 |
| Saleh,08 [ | 1997-2006 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | Pregnant women | 2,177 | 5.2 |
| Mostafa,10 [ | 2001-2003 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | Village residents | 3,580 | 2.4 |
| Saleh,10 [ | 2000-2006 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | Children of 3 villages with high prevalence of HCV | 2,852 | 2.7 |
Studies reporting hepatitis C virus prevalence among the general population in Egypt
| Khalifa,93 [ | 1990-1 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Children | 84 | 0.0% | N/A |
| El-Nanawy,95 [ | N/A | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | Children | 110 | 11.8% | N/A |
| Miras,02 [ | N/A | Tanta, Gharbia, Lower Egypt | CS | In/out-patient children living in HCV endemic region | 105 | 0.0% | N/A |
| El-Raziky,07 [ | 2004 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Children 1–9 yrs old | 1,042 | 1.4% | 0.5% |
| Kandil,07 [ | 2004-6 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Healthy children | 20 | 5.0% | N/A |
| Hassan,93 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 1,536 | 4.3% | N/A |
| Agha,98 [ | 1996-7 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 767 | 13.7% | 23.7% |
| Kassem,00 [ | 1996 | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | | 100 | 19.0% | 14.0% |
| Stoszek,05 [ | 1997-03 | 3 rural villages in Nile River Delta, Lower Egypt | CS | | 2,587 | 15.8% | 10.8% |
| Zahran,10 [ | 2008-9 | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | | 500 | 8.0% | 7.4% |
| Abdulqawi,10 [ | 2003-8 | Benha, Qalubiya, Lower Egypt | CS | | 1,224 | 8.6% | 6.8% |
| Abo Elmagd,11 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | 20-40 year old mothers | 61 | 13.0% | N/A |
| Kamel,92 [ | 1992 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Male university students, 20–27 years | 2,164 | 9.7% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,92 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 76 | 5.2% | N/A |
| Darwish,92 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 90 | 14.4% | N/A |
| Darwish,93 [ | 1992 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 163 | 13.6% | N/A |
| El-Ahmady,94 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Paid blood donors | 99 | 35.4% | N/A |
| Quinti,95 [ | 1992-4 | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | | 283 | 20.8% | N/A |
| Bassily,95 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 188 | 26.6% | N/A |
| El Gohary,95 [ | 1990-2 | Suez city, Suez and Ismailia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 1,187 | 14.5% | N/A |
| Attia,96 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 156 | 21.8% | N/A |
| Arthur,97 [ | 1993 | 24 Governorates | CS | | 2,644 | 24.8% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,97 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 180 | 9.4% | N/A |
| Gad,01 [ | 1998 | Ismailia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 20 | 20.0% | N/A |
| Tanaka,04 [ | 1999 | 13 governorates, Upper and Lower Egypt | CS | | 3,608 | 8.8% | 6.2% |
| Hashish,05 [ | N/A | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | | 95 | 23.2% | N/A |
| El-Gilany,06 [ | 2002-3 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | Student voluntary blood donors | 2,157 | 2.7% | N/A |
| Agha,06 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 2,400 | 8.0% | N/A |
| El Damaty,07 [ | 2001 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 2,845 | 7.6% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,08 [ | 2005 | 26 governorates | Random | All blood donors | 760 | 5.0% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,08 [ | 2005 | 26 governorates | | Female blood donors | 124 | 6.5% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,08 [ | 2005 | 26 governorates | | Male blood donors | 636 | 4.7% | N/A |
| Ismail,09 [ | 2000-7 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 55,922 | 12.0% | N/A |
| Ashour,09 [ | 2006-8 | 8 governorates | CS | | 515,758 | 4.8% | N/A |
| Elkareh,09 [ | 2008 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Family replacement blood donors | 4,709 | 12.7% | N/A |
| Elkareh,09 [ | 2008 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Blood donors | 3,569 | 6.3% | N/A |
| Elkareh,09 [ | 2008 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Family replacement blood donors | 8,705 | 14.6% | N/A |
| Elkareh,09 [ | 2008 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Blood donors | 414 | 8.7% | N/A |
| Rushdy,09 [ | 2006-7 | Suez Canal area | CS | All blood donors | 9,150 | 5.6% | N/A |
| Rushdy,09 [ | 2006-7 | Suez Canal area | | Male blood donors | 7,155 | 2.9% | N/A |
| Rushdy,09 [ | 2006-7 | Suez Canal area | | Female blood donors | 1,995 | 1.7% | N/A |
| Eita,09 [ | 2005-8 | Dakhilia, Lower Egypt | CS | Voluntary blood donors | 73,431 | 4.6% | N/A |
| Eita,09 [ | 2005-8 | Dakhilia, Lower Egypt | CS | Family blood donors | 113,504 | 5.5% | N/A |
| Khattab,10 [ | 2000-8 | Minya, Lower Egypt | CS | | 211,772 | 9.0% | N/A |
| Radwan,10 [ | 2009 | N/A | CS | | 27,537 | 4.0% | N/A |
| Wasfi,11 [ | 2007-8 | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | | 3,420 | 3.5% | N/A |
| Awadalla,11 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 1,000 | 16.8% | N/A |
| Farawela,12 [ | 2010-1 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 100 | 5% | N/A |
| Abdel-Wahab,94 [ | 1992 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 270 | 18.1% | N/A |
| Kamel,94 [ | 1992 | Sada, Kafr El Sheikh, Lower Egypt | All village residents | | 1,259 | 15.9% | N/A |
| El Gohary,95 [ | 1990-2 | Suez Canal area | CS | Healthy blood volunteers resident to rural area with high schistosomiasis | 271 | 14.4% | N/A |
| El Gohary,95 [ | 1990-2 | North Sinai, frontier | CS | Bedouin population with low schistosomiasis | 148 | 15.5% | N/A |
| Darwish,95 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Healthy villagers and non-professional blood donors | 188 | 21.8% | N/A |
| Darwish,96 [ | 1994 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents:1–3 years | 12 | 0.0% | N/A |
| Darwish,96 [ | 1994 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: 4–9 years | 21 | 0.0% | N/A |
| Darwish,96 [ | 1994 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: 10–19 years | 46 | 8.0% | N/A |
| Darwish,96 [ | 1994 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: 20–39 years | 29 | 20.0% | N/A |
| Darwish,96 [ | 1994 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: 40–67 years old | 47 | 51.0% | N/A |
| El-Sayed,97 [ | 1993-4 | Sinai, frontier | CS | Immigrants to a newly reclaimed area endemic for schistosomiasis | 506 | 10.3% | N/A |
| Nafeh,00 [ | N/A | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Village residents ≥ 5 years of age (overall) | 6,031 | 8.7% | 5.4% |
| Nafeh,00 [ | N/A | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Village residents ≤30 years | 4,164 | 3.6% | 2.0% |
| Nafeh,00 [ | N/A | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Village residents >30 years | 1,867 | 20.0% | 12.9% |
| Abdel-Aziz,00 [ | 1997 | Aghour El Soughra, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents ≥5 years old (overall) | 3,999 | 24.3% | 14.8% |
| Abdel-Aziz,00 [ | 1997 | Aghour El Soughra, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: ≤20 years | 2,105 | 9.3% | N/A |
| Abdel-Aziz,00 [ | 1997 | Aghour El Soughra, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents >20 years | 1,894 | 41.0% | N/A |
| Darwish,01 [ | 1994-5 | Kalama, Qaluobyia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents >10 years of age | 796 | 40.0% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 842 | 27.4% | 7.4% |
| Arafa,05 [ | 2002-3 | Zawiat Razin, Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 4,020 | 11.8% | N/A |
| Arafa,05 [ | 2002-3 | Zawiat Razin, Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: under 20 years old | 1,759 | 2.8% | N/A |
| Arafa,05 [ | 2002-3 | Zawiat Razin, Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: 20 and over years old | 2,252 | 18.9% | N/A |
| Mohamed,06 [ | 2002 | Zawiat Razin, Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents 18–65 years of age | 2,425 | 18.5% | N/A |
| Eassa,07 [ | 2006-7 | Zagazig district, Sharkia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village households | 304 | 10.9% | N/A |
| Aguilar,08 [ | N/A | Fakkous and 8 surrounding villages | CS | Village residents: males | 78 | 51.3% | 38.5% |
| Aguilar,08 [ | N/A | Fakkous and 8 surrounding villages, Sharkia, Lower Egypt | CS | Village residents: females | 81 | 42.0% | 29.6% |
| Abdel-Wahab,94 [ | 1992 | Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Rural male primary school children | 190 | 12.1% | N/A |
| El-Sherbini,03 [ | 1994 | N/A | CS | Village school children 6–15 years old | 294 | 5.8% | 2.4% |
| Mohamed,06 [ | 1997 | Nile River Delta, Lower Egypt | CS | Village children 5–18 years old | 1,823 | 8.2% | N/A |
| Mohamed,06 [ | 1997 | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Village children 5–18 years old | 2,808 | 2.5% | N/A |
| El Sherbini,07 [ | 2002 | Tanta, Gharbia, Lower Egypt | CS | School children | 470 | 2.1% | 0.8% |
| Barakat,11 [ | 2005 | Alexandria city, Alexandria | PBS | School children | 500 | 5.8% | 4.4% |
| El-Sayed,96 [ | South Sinai, frontier | CS | Tourism workers | 740 | 14.3% | N/A | |
| Mohamed,96 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Egyptians applying for work abroad | 5,071 | 31.5% | N/A |
| Mohamed,96 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Egyptians applying for work abroad: Females | N/A | 13.2% | N/A |
| Mohamed,96 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Egyptians applying for work abroad: Males | N/A | 34.0% | N/A |
| Gohar,95 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 15 | 13.3% | N/A |
| Halim,99 [ | 1996 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Healthy staff of the university | 50 | 6.0% | N/A |
| Hassan,01 [ | 1995-6 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Healthy individuals visiting hospitalized friends | 35 | 42.9% | N/A |
| Strickland,02 [ | N/A | Nile River Delta, Lower Egypt | CS | | 212 | 46.7% | 36.3% |
| El-sayed,06 [ | 2002 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 36 | 8.3% | 2.8% |
| El Bassuoni,08 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 10 | 30.0% | N/A |
| Salama,09 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 20 | 5.0% | N/A |
| Farghaly,93 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | Army recruits | 726 | 33.0% | N/A |
| Abdel-Wahab,94 [ | 1992 | Lower Egypt | CS | Army recruits | 300 | 22.1% | N/A |
| Quinti,95 [ | 1992-4 | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | Fire brigade personnel | 541 | 39.0% | N/A |
| El-Ahmady,94 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 292 | 24.3% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | | 1,422 | 25.8% | 7.7% |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | General population in urban areas | 580 | 23.4% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | General population: <20 years | 414 | 4.8% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | General population: 20 – 30 years | 163 | 14.1% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | General population: 30 – 40 years | 253 | 30.0% | N/A |
| El-Sadawy,04 [ | N/A | Sharkia, Lower Egypt | PBS | General population: >40 years | 592 | 41.9% | N/A |
| Mohamed,04 [ | 1996-7 | 10 governorates | PBS | General population | 7,357 | 13.5% | N/A |
| El Zanaty,09 [ | 2008 | Nationwide | PBS | 11,126 | 14.7% | 9.8% | |
CS convenience sampling, PBS probability-based sampling, N/A not available.
Figure 2Hepatitis C virus (HCV) prevalence among the general population and populations at direct or high risk in Egypt, in studies conducted pre- and post-2001. A: Graph depicting HCV prevalence among different general population groups. B: Graph depicting HCV prevalence among different high/direct risk populations. In this figure, we included only stratified HCV prevalence measures, if these stratified measures were available. Otherwise, we included the overall prevalence measures in the study.
Studies reporting prevalence of hepatitis C virus among populations at direct or high risk of exposure in Egypt
| El-Ahmady,94 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 51 | 25.5% | N/A |
| El-Gohary,94 [ | N/A | Suez city, Suez | CS | | 140 | 19.2% | N/A |
| El Gaafary,05 [ | 2002 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 309 | 14.9% | N/A |
| Meky,06 [ | 2002-5 | Nile River Delta, Lower Egypt | CS | | 47 | 78.7% | 70.2% |
| Zakaria,07 [ | 2001-2 | Giza, Upper Egypt | CS | | 200 | 13.0% | N/A |
| Kalil,10 [ | 2004-5 | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Children with viral hepatitis | 150 | 8.7% | 8.7% |
| Talaat,10 [ | 2001-4 | Alexandria city, Alexandria/Abassia, Cairo/Mahalla, Gharbia, Lower Egypt/Qena and Aswan, Upper Egypt | CS | | 4,189 | 29.8% | N/A |
| Eldin,10 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 235 | 4.3% | N/A |
| Badawy,12 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Male military recruits with viral hepatitis | 99 | 8% | N/A |
| Khalifa,93 [ | 1990-1 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children | 84 | 55.0% | N/A |
| Abdel-Wahab,94 [ | 1992 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children | 71 | 54.9% | N/A |
| Said,09 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children with hematological disorders | 49 | 81.6% | 49.0% |
| Said,09 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children with hematological malignancies | 51 | 17.6% | 23.5% |
| Salama,09 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children | 33 | 15.2% | N/A |
| Kalil,10 [ | 2004-5 | Assuit, Upper Egypt | CS | Multi-transfused children | 165 | 58.2% | 41.2% |
| Tonbary,10 [ | 2000-8 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | Multi-transfused children | 72 | 11.1% | N/A |
| El-Faramawy,12 [ | N/A | Qena, Upper Egypt | CS | Multi-transfused children | 33 | 39% | N/A |
| Abdelwahab,12 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Multi-transfused children | 100 | 40% | N/A |
| El-Nanawy,95 [ | N/A | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | Children with thalassemia | 18 | 44.4% | N/A |
| El Gohary,95 [ | 1990-2 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Children with thalassemia | 45 | 75.6% | N/A |
| Khalifa,04 [ | 2000-3 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | Children with thalassemia | 56 | 69.6% | N/A |
| Abdalla,06 [ | 2005 | Cairo city, Cairo / Banha, Qalubiya, Lower Egypt | CS | Children with thalassemia | 33 | 60.6% | N/A |
| Omar,11 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 174 | 51.7% | 32.2% |
| Mansour,12 [ | 2009-10 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | Children with thalassemia | 200 | 19.5% | N/A |
| El-Faramawy,12 [ | N/A | Qena, Upper Egypt | CS | Children with thalassemia | 67 | 48% | N/A |
| Bassily,92 [ | N/A | Nile River Delta, Lower Egypt | CS | | 31 | 41.9% | N/A |
| El-Nanawy,95 [ | N/A | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | | 21 | 38.1% | N/A |
| El-Zayadi,97 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 320 | 16.3% | N/A |
| Zekri,02 [ | 1998-00 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 47 | 42.5% | N/A |
| Arafa,05 [ | 2002-3 | Zawiat Razin, Menoufia, Lower Egypt | CS | Schistomiasis patients treated with PAT | 206 | 51.5% | N/A |
| El-Sabah,11 [ | N/A | Rural area, Cairo/ Gharbia, Lower Egypt | CS | Schistosomiasis patients treated with PAT | 50 | 84.0% | N/A |
| El-Sabah,11 [ | N/A | Rural area, Cairo/ Gharbia, Lower Egypt | CS | Schistosomiasis patients treated orally up to 8 years ago | 52 | 7.7% | N/A |
| Hassan,93 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 105 | 67.0% | N/A |
| Abdel-Wahab,94 [ | 1992 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 78 | 46.2% | N/A |
| El-Ahmady,94 [ | N/A | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 25 | 84.0% | N/A |
| El Gohary,95 [ | 1990-2 | Suez city, Suez and Ismailia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 108 | 70.4% | N/A |
| Gohar,95 [ | N/A | N/A | CS | | 64 | 87.5% | N/A |
| Hassan,00 [ | 1996 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 210 | 59.0% | N/A |
| Shatat,00 [ | 1999 | N/A | CS | | 83 | 78.5% | N/A |
| Gad,02 [ | 1998 | Ismailia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 47 | 72.0% | N/A |
| Zekri,02 [ | 1998-00 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 30 | 56.6% | N/A |
| El Yazeed,06 [ | 2002-4 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 40 | 100.0% | N/A |
| Kandil,07 [ | 2004-6 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 31 | 51.6% | N/A |
| Hammad,09 [ | 2008 | Mansoura, Dakahlia, Lower Egypt | CS | | 34 | 94.1% | N/A |
| Attia,10 [ | 2008-9 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 206 | 46.1% | N/A |
| Ibrahim,10 [ | 2007 | Cairo city, Cairo | CS | | 100 | 75.0% | N/A |
| El-Ghazzawi,95 [ | N/A | Alexandria city, Alexandria | CS | 100 | 63.0% | N/A | |
CS convenience sampling, N/A not available, PAT parenteral antischistosomiasis therapy.
Figure 3Hepatitis C virus (HCV) prevalence among populations at indirect or intermediate risk and special clinical populations in Egypt, in studies conducted pre and post the 2001. A: Graph depicting HCV prevalence among different populations at indirect or intermediate risk in Egypt. B: Graph depicting HCV prevalence among different special clinical populations1 in Egypt. In this figure, we included only stratified HCV prevalence measures, if these stratified measures were available. Otherwise, we included the overall prevalence measures in the study. 1Acronyms: BC: bladder cancer, CLD: chronic liver disease, CRF: chronic renal failure, CV: cutaneous vasculitis, GIB: gastrointestinal bleeding, GN: glomerulonephritis, HCC: hepatocellular carcinoma, HCCA:hilarcholangiocarcinoma, HL: Hodgkin’s lymphoma, KTP: kidney transplant patients, LD: liver diseae, LP:lichen planus, MDS: myelodysplastic syndrome NHL: non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, RHD: rheumatic heart disease, SLE: systematic lupus erthymatosus.
Figure 4Time trend of hepatitis C prevalence among the different general population subgroups in Egypt.