| Literature DB >> 33374859 |
Giuseppina La Rosa1, Pamela Mancini1, Giusy Bonanno Ferraro1, Marcello Iaconelli1, Carolina Veneri1, Rosa Paradiso1, Dario De Medici2, Teresa Vicenza2, Yolande Therese Rose Proroga3, Orlandina Di Maro3, Anna Rita Ciccaglione4, Roberto Bruni4, Maurizio Della Rotonda5, Elisabetta Suffredini2.
Abstract
The genetic diversity of Hepatitis A Virus (HAV) circulating in the Campania Region in years 2015-2018 was investigated through the monitoring of sentinel bivalve shellfish and water matrices. Overall, 463 water samples (71 sewage samples, 353 coastal discharge waters, and 39 seawaters samples), and 746 bivalve shellfish samples were analyzed. Positivity for HAV was detected in 20/71 sewage samples, 14/353 coastal discharge waters, 5/39 seawaters, and 102/746 bivalve shellfish. Sixty-one of the positive samples were successfully sequenced and were characterized as genotype IA (n = 50) and IB (n = 11). The prevalent strain circulating in 2015 in both bivalves and waters was the IA strain responsible for the outbreak occurring around the same time in the Naples area. This variant was no longer identified in subsequent years (2017-2018) when, instead, appeared two of the IA variants of the multistate outbreak affecting men who have sex with men (MSM), VRD_521_2016, and RIVM-HAV16-090, with the former prevailing in both shellfish and water environments. HAV IB isolates were detected over the years in shellfish and in water matrices, but not in clinical samples, suggesting that this genotype had been circulating silently. An integrated surveillance system (environment/food/clinical cases) can be a useful tool to monitor changes in viral variants in the population, as well as an early warning system.Entities:
Keywords: HAV; PCR; bivalves; hepatitis A; sequencing; sewage; typing
Year: 2020 PMID: 33374859 DOI: 10.3390/v13010016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048