| Literature DB >> 30326600 |
Stoyan Velkov1, Jördis J Ott2, Ulrike Protzer3,4, Thomas Michler5,6.
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is divided into nine genotypes, A to I. Currently, it remains unclear how the individual genotypes contribute to the estimated 250 million chronic HBV infections. We performed a literature search on HBV genotyping data throughout the world. Over 900 publications were assessed and data were extracted from 213 records covering 125 countries. Using previously published HBV prevalence, and population data, we approximated the number of infections with each HBV genotype per country and the genotype distribution among global chronic HBV infections. We estimated that 96% of chronic HBV infections worldwide are caused by five of the nine genotypes: genotype C is most common (26%), followed by genotype D (22%), E (18%), A (17%) and B (14%). Genotypes F to I together cause less than 2% of global chronic HBV infections. Our work provides an up-to-date analysis of global HBV genotyping data and an initial approach to estimate how genotypes contribute to the global burden of chronic HBV infection. Results highlight the need to provide HBV cell culture and animal models that cover at least genotypes A to E and represent the vast majority of global HBV infections to test novel treatment strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis B virus; chronic hepatitis B; genotype; molecular epidemiology; sequencing
Year: 2018 PMID: 30326600 PMCID: PMC6210291 DOI: 10.3390/genes9100495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Flow chart on selection of records describing primary hepatitis B virus (HBV) genotyping data.
Figure 2Quality of acquired HBV genotyping data per country. One (red) indicates the lowest and ten (green) represents the highest data quality. The scoring system was based on the sampling region, study population, sampling year, genotyping method, year of analysis, and number of analyzed samples.
Figure 3Distribution of HBV genotypes by country. Pie charts indicate proportional HBV genotype distributions in the respective countries. Genotype distributions within samples with successful genotyping are presented, excluding inter-genotype recombinant viruses, co-infections with more than one HBV genotype or undefined infections. Underlying literature sources and number of sequenced isolates are given in Table S1 (Supplementary Materials).
Figure 4Contribution of genotypes to global chronic HBV infections. The number of infections with each genotype in a respective country is illustrated as percentage of global chronic HBV infections.
Figure 5Approximation of the contribution of HBV genotypes to global burden of chronic HBV infection. (A) Estimation of the number of chronic infections with each genotype per world region. *: Oceania includes pooled data of Australia/New Zealand, Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia. (B) Approximation of the genotype distribution within global chronic HBV infections. Values <2% are given with two decimals to prevent distortion of genotype distribution. Recombinant/co-infection: infection with an inter-genotype recombinant or with more than one HBV genotype; Undefined: genotype allocation not possible.