| Literature DB >> 30448155 |
Sumathi Ramachandran1, Hong Thai2, Joseph C Forbi2, Romeo Regi Galang3, Zoya Dimitrova2, Guo-Liang Xia2, Yulin Lin2, Lili T Punkova2, Pamela R Pontones4, Jessica Gentry4, Sara J Blosser4, Judith Lovchik4, William M Switzer5, Eyasu Teshale2, Philip Peters5, John Ward2, Yury Khudyakov2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A high prevalence (92.3%) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection among HIV patients identified during a large HIV outbreak associated with injection of oxymorphone in Indiana prompted genetic analysis of HCV strains.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30448155 PMCID: PMC6284413 DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2018.10.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EBioMedicine ISSN: 2352-3964 Impact factor: 8.143
emographic information, risk factors and testing information of Indiana cases with HCV and HIV infection.
| Variable demographics | Total patients (N = 492) |
|---|---|
| Reason for testing | Number |
| Injection drug user | 274 |
| Recent exposure | 153 |
| Past exposure | 7 |
| Correctional screening | 23 |
| Routine screening | 8 |
| Confirmatory | 3 |
| Not available/unknown | 24 |
| Race | |
| White | 474 |
| Other or missing data | 18 |
| Sex | |
| Male | 313 |
| Female | 179 |
| County | |
| Scott | 295 |
| Clark | 64 |
| Jackson | 65 |
| Other | 68 |
| Age (years) | |
| <25 | 92 |
| 25–34 | 212 |
| 35–44 | 113 |
| ≥45 | 75 |
| HCV molecular data | |
| HCV RNA positive | 359 |
| HIV Co-infected HCV RNA positive | 91 |
| NS5B sanger sequencing | 299 |
| HVR1 NG sequencing | 281 |
| Sanger and/or NG sequencing | 329 |
| HCV RNA positive, no sequencing results | 20 |
| HCV Ab positive, PCR negative | 38 |
| Acute HCV cases | 12 |
| Reference HCV cases from 2010 | 10 |
Samples include anti-HCV and/or anti-HIV, anti-HCV and/or HCV RNA positive.
Fig. 1Phylogenetic analysis of HCV NS5b sequences. Colored nodes identify HCV strains sampled from Indiana in this study. Red nodes - HCV infected Indiana cases. Blue nodes - HIV-co-infected Indiana cases. Gray nodes - reference HCV strains circulating in North America. N shows the number of HCV infected (red and blue nodes) and HIV co-infected (blue nodes) cases in clusters. Endemic clusters 1, 2, 3 and 5 are composed exclusively of the Indiana HCV variants (no reference sequences - gray nodes).
Fig. 2Genetic complexity of intra-host HCV HVR1 variants. Phylogenetic tree of HVR1 variants from 40 cases. Each case is shown in different colour. HCV HVR1 variants sampled from cases linked by transmission are highlighted in gray shaded circles. Triangles identify HVR1 variants obtained from cases with mixed subtype/genotype infection. Open circles identify HVR1 variants obtained from cases infected with >1 HCV strain of the same subtype.
Fig. 3GHOST-identified HCV transmission clusters. Each node is an HCV sample, a link is drawn if the minimal hamming distance between sequences from two samples is smaller than the validated genetic relatedness threshold [26]. A total of 23 HCV transmission clusters were identified. Clusters are colour coded (Panel a). Blue nodes represent unrelated cases. Orange nodes identify the largest transmission cluster (n = 130). Panel b represents the number of HIV cases identified in the HCV related and unrelated cases.
Fig. 4k-step network of the HCV variants found in three cases sampled at different time points of infection. Examples of evolving HCV diversity over time in 3 cases. Each node is a distinct HCV variant found in 12 infected cases who were followed up. Panel (a) shows in red HVR1 variants sampled in a case at the first time-point. Panel (b) shows in red HVR1 variants sampled from a case at the second time-point, while the variants seen at the previous time-point are shown in blue. Case 1 is infected with a second strain of the same subtype 1a; Case 2 is infected with HCV strains of different genotypes (1a to 1a/3a); Case 3 experienced a complete switch from one HCV genotype to another (genotype 1a to 2b).