| Literature DB >> 31762722 |
Daouda Sévédé1,2, Moussa Doumbia1, Viviane Kouakou1, Vicky Djehiffe1, Pascal Pineau3, Mireille Dosso1,2.
Abstract
Type-E hepatitis is responsible for more than three million symptomatic cases and more than 40,000 deaths worldwide. The situation of this hepatitis is overall poorly known in sub-Saharan Africa. Notably, the baseline circulation of HEV outside sporadic outbreaks has been barely characterized in this large region. More specifically, the impact of superinfection by this virus on the health status of the large reservoir of patients chronically infected with other hepatitis viruses remains to be evaluated. We searched for anti-HEV immunoglobulins in a series of 200 pregnant women and 92 patients with persistent liver infections with hepatitis B or C viruses and subsequently tried to assess serological co-variations with demographical and clinical features. We observed that only 1.5 % of expectant mothers were seropositive of anti-HEV IgG while it was the case for 18.4 % of patients with chronic liver diseases (P=4.5E-07). The presence of anti-HEV was not linked to any of the collected demographical features (age, sex, education, pork meat consumption, water supply, …). By contrast, the presence of anti-HEV was significantly associated with increased levels (1.6-1.8-fold, P<0.0001) of blood aminotransferases (AST, ALT) in patients with persistent hepatitis B or C. Our work indicates that, in Ivory Coast, the presence of IgG directed against HEV might contribute to a deterioration of liver health in patients with already installed persistent liver infections. The mechanisms explaining such phenomenon at distance of acute phase of infection are still unknown but might be linked either to a residual persistence of HEV in a context of general immune exhaustion or to an inappropriate auto-immune reaction as already observed in the aftermath of other viral infection types.Entities:
Keywords: Côte d'Ivoire; aggravation of liver damage; hepatitis E virus; seropositivity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31762722 PMCID: PMC6868915 DOI: 10.17179/excli2019-1827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EXCLI J ISSN: 1611-2156 Impact factor: 4.068
Table 1Frequency of the demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients included in the study
Table 2Frequency of the demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients included in the study
Figure 1Levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and De Ritis ratio (AST/ALT) as measured for the different group of patients with a persistent liver infection.