| Literature DB >> 24523871 |
Orlando Mayorga Perez1, Martin W G Brinkhof2, Matthias Egger2, Gert Frösner3, Christian Herzog4, Marcel Zwahlen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Nicaragua is highly endemic for hepatitis A. We aimed to provide an estimate of the change in the age-specific risk of hepatitis A virus (HAV) infection based on serological data from cross-sectional and longitudinal samples collected in León, Nicaragua, in 1995/96 (n = 979) and 2003 (n = 494).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24523871 PMCID: PMC3921130 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0087643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Socio-demographic data of individuals included in the cross-sectional and longitudinal samples.
| 1995 | 1995/96 | 2003 | ||
| cross-sectional | longitudinal | cross-sectional | ||
| Total number of subjects included | 974 | 117 | 496 | |
| Sex, No (%) | male | 496 (50.9) | 60 (51.3) | 244 (49.2) |
| female | 478 (49.1) | 57 (48.7) | 252 (50.8) | |
| No by age (mean age; range) | 1–<7 years | 974 (3.42; 1.4–6.1) | 117 (2.95; 1.3–5.9) | 231 (3.1; 1.0–6.0) |
| 7–11 years | n.a. | n.a. | 37 (9.6; 7.2–11.9) | |
| 12–16 years | n.a. | n.a. | 33 (14.1; 12.0–16.2) | |
| 18–25 years | n.a. | n.a. | 56 (22.1; 17.9–25.7) | |
| 26–33 years | n.a. | n.a. | 56 (30.2; 26.1–33.8) | |
| 34–40 years | n.a. | n.a. | 53 (38.4; 34.0–40.7) | |
| No of inhabitants per room (mean ± sd) | 1–<7 years | n.a. | 4.0±2.3 | 3.6±2.1 |
| Indoor water (%) | 1–<7 years | n.a. | 106 (90.6) | 187 (81.0) |
| Flush toilet (%) | 1–<7 years | n.a. | 42 (35.9) | 77 (33.3) |
n.a. = not applicable or not assessed.
For 5 out of 979 children enrolled (field trial screening12) the exact age was not known.
Includes 30 infants (<1 year of age).
In households with children 1–<7 years.
Seroprevalence of naturally acquired anti-HAV antibodies in the cross-sectional samples from 1995 and 2003.
| Seroprevalence n/N (%) | ||
| Age groups | 1995 | 2003 |
| 6–11 months | n.a. | 14/30 (46.7) |
| 12–17 months | n.a. | 4/34 (11.8) |
| 18–23 months | 48/126 (38.1) | 3/28 (10.7) |
| 24–29 months | 58/113 (51.3) | 7/29 (24.1) |
| 30–35 months | 83/145 (57.3) | 12/35 (34.3) |
| 36–47 months | 170/232 (73.3) | 15/33 (45.5) |
| 48–59 months | 150/189 (79.4) | 23/38 (60.5) |
| 60–71 months | 148/169 (87.6) | 20/32 (62.5) |
| 7–11 years | n.a. | 32/37 (86.5) |
| 12–16 years | n.a. | 32/34 (94.1) |
| 18–25 years | n.a. | 56/56 (100) |
| 26–33 years | n.a. | 56/56 (100) |
| 34–40 years | n.a. | 53/53 (100) |
≥20 mIU/mL anti-HAV antibodies (ELISA Enzygnost Anti HAV Behring).
≥10 mIU/mL anti-HAV antibodies (HAVAB 2.0 quantitative EIA AxSYM Abbott).
For two children (age group 18–23 months) no anti-HAV data were available.
All 14 children had maternal anti-HAV antibodies (range; 12–653 mIU/mL).
1 child of 4 children had recent HAV infection (13700 mIU/mL), 3 children had maternal antibodies (26, 28, and 31 mIU/mL).
n.a. = not applicable.
Figure 1Estimated age-specific risk (95% confidence intervals) of HAV infection based on cross-sectional samples.
Solid circles represent estimates derived from the 1995 survey; open circles are estimates from the 2003 data.
Figure 2Estimated age-specific risk (95% confidence intervals) of HAV infection in 1995 from cross-sectional and longitudinal samples.
The solid circles represent estimates derived from the cross-sectional 1995 survey and open circles the estimates from the longitudinal data.
Figure 3Age-specific seroprevalence, GMC and maximum values of anti-HAV antibodies in the 2003 cross-sectional sample.
The shaded bars (upper scale) represent seroprevalence rates; the diamonds (lower scale) indicate GMC with lines representing 95% confidence intervals. * The seroprevalence of the 6–11 months old children is entirely due to maternal anti-HAV antibodies (see Table 2). ** The maximal concentration of 13700 mIU/mL was caused by one recent HAV infection. Three other anti-HAV positive children in this group had maternal anti-HAV with concentrations of 26, 28 and 31 mIU/ml (see Table 2).