| Literature DB >> 26252424 |
Gora Lô1, Amina Sow-Sall1, Halimatou Diop-Ndiaye1, Nokoa Chadia Ines Danty Mandiouba1, Moussa Thiam1, Fatou Diop1, Ousseynou Ndiaye1, Sokhna Bousso Gueye1, Sidy Mouhamed Seck2, Abou Abdallah Malick Dioura1, Moustapha Mbow1, Aïssatou Gaye-Diallo1, Souleymane Mboup1, Coumba Touré-Kâne1.
Abstract
The study aimed to estimate the prevalence of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and to describe the HBV virological profiles among Senegalese HIV-1-infected patients. We conducted a retrospective study between 2006 and 2010 among Senegalese HIV-1-infected patients from the antiretroviral therapy cohort. Samples were screened using Determine(®) HBsAg or MONOLISA(®) POC test. The HBsAg positivity status was confirmed by Architect(®) HBsAg. Detection of HBeAg, anti-HBe Ab, and HBV DNA load were done for the HBsAg-positive samples. Then, Anti-HBcAb was tested for the HBsAg-negative samples. Microsoft Excel was used for data collection and statistical analyses were performed using Epi info 3.5.1. Overall, 466 HIV-infected patients were enrolled including 271 women (58.4%), and 193 men (41.6%) with a median age of 39 years (19-74 years). The global prevalence of HIV/HBV coinfection (HBsAg positive) was 8.8% (41/466). For HBsAg positives samples, the prevalence of HBeAg and the anti-HBeAb were, respectively, 24.4 and 69.2% and the median of HBV DNA viral load, for 27 HBsAg-positive samples, was 3.75 log10 copies/ml. The virological profiles were the following: 7, 15, and 5 patients infected, respectively, by a replicative virus, an inactive virus and a probably mutant virus. For HBsAg-negative samples, 83 out of 109 were positive for anti-HBcAb. This study showed a significant decrease of the prevalence of HBV/HIV coinfection between 2004 and 2014 (P = 0.003), which highlighted the performance of the Senegalese HBV vaccine program. However, implementing a systematic quantification of HBV DNA viral load could improve the monitoring of HBV-infected patient.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; Senegal; hepatitis B virus; prevalence
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26252424 DOI: 10.1002/jmv.24344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Virol ISSN: 0146-6615 Impact factor: 2.327