| Literature DB >> 34372535 |
Abstract
The adverse relationship between viral hepatitis and pregnancy in developing countries had been interpreted as a reflection of retrospectively biased hospital-based data collection by the West. However, the discovery of hepatitis E virus (HEV) as the etiological agent of an epidemic of non-A, non-B hepatitis in Kashmir, and the documenting of the increased incidence and severity of hepatitis E in pregnancy via a house-to-house survey, unmasked this unholy alliance. In the Hepeviridae family, HEV-genotype (gt)1 from genus Orthohepevirus A has a unique open reading frame (ORF)4-encoded protein which enhances viral polymerase activity and viral replication. The epidemics caused by HEV-gt1, but not any other Orthohepevirus A genotype, show an adverse relationship with pregnancy in humans. The pathogenesis of the association is complex and at present not well understood. Possibly multiple factors play a role in causing severe liver disease in the pregnant women including infection and damage to the maternal-fetal interface by HEV-gt1; vertical transmission of HEV to fetus causing severe fetal/neonatal hepatitis; and combined viral and hormone related immune dysfunction of diverse nature in the pregnant women, promoting viral replication. Management is multidisciplinary and needs a close watch for the development and management of acute liver failure. (ALF). Preliminary data suggest beneficial maternal outcomes by early termination of pregnancy in patients with lower grades of encephalopathy.Entities:
Keywords: acute liver failure; delivery; epidemic hepatitis; fetus; genotypes; hepatitis E; hepatitis E vaccine; hepatitis E virus; neonate; pregnancy; sporadic hepatitis
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34372535 PMCID: PMC8310059 DOI: 10.3390/v13071329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Gulmarg Kashmir Epidemic, 1978–1979. (A) Upper panel. The epidemic curve with the weekly occurrence of hepatitis E cases. The region had an open-source water supply from a canal (Ningli Nallah) which originates from the Alpather Lake situated at the foot of Apharwat Peaks, Gulmarg. After passing through mountains as the world-famous Sharanz waterfall, the stream crosses the valley to join the Wular lake. The canal along its route is used for multiple purposes including drinking water, linen washing, swimming, fishing, and sewage and garbage disposal, and thus stays highly polluted. Lower panel. The data on incidence and severity of viral hepatitis in men (15–45 years), NPF (nonpregnant females; 15–45 years) and PF (pregnant females) were collected by four door-to-door surveys done at 4 to 6 week intervals during the epidemic. (B) Kashmir strain of HEV (Pinglina epidemic, 1993–94, Kashmir, India [20].). Unrooted phylogenetic tree generated by Maximum Likelihood method using MEGA software (version 10.1.8), on the basis of 326 bp sequences of HEV ORF1 genomic. Reference sequences of different HEV genotypes from GenBank are shown in gray filled circles, while country specific HEV sequences are shown in color filled circles. Kashmir strain of HEV was of genotype 1 with 94.6% homology with the Burmese isolates of HEV (Courtesy Saleem Kamili & Xia, Guo-Liang, both at CDC, Atlanta, Georgia). α = 6 pregnant women died.
Figure 2Hepatitis E virus Genotype 1. Genomic organization. (a) The hepatitis E virus genome; (b) Genomic RNA and bicistronic sub-genomic RNA; (c) Four Open reading frames (ORFs) and (d) Four encoded proteins (pORF1, pORF2, pORF3, and pORF4). ORF4, spanning nt2835-3308 and overlapping ORF1 in present in HEV genotype 1 alone, and its protein expression is regulated via an IRES-like RNA element (nt2701-2787). ORF4 encodes a protein (pORF4) of 124 aa, which functions to enhance viral polymerase activity and promote viral replication and is indispensable for the HEV genotype 1 life cycle.
Epidemics of hepatitis E with number of recorded cases, case fatality rate (overall and in pregnant women) and relationship with hepatitis E virus genotypes.
| Region Year [References µ] | Number of HEV Infections | CFR (%) | HEV Genotypes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Pregnancy | |||
| Kashmir 1978–2013 [ | 55,563 | 3.19 | 22.0 | HEV-gt-1 |
| New Delhi 1956 [ | 29,300 | 0.9 | 10.5 | HEV |
| Kanpur 1991 [ | 79,091 | 0.06 | 27.0 | HEV |
| Azamgarh 1982 [ | 152 | 12 | 39.0 | ENANBH |
| Kolhapur 1981 [ | 1169 | 0.25 | 8.33 | HEV-gt1a |
| Islamabad 1997 [ | 3827 | 0.2 | 11.4 | HEV-gt1b |
| Rangoon 1985 [ | 399 | 3.5 | 12.0 | HEV-gt1 |
| Kathmandu 1981 [ | 12,000 | - | 21.0 | HEV-gt1 |
| Kathmandu 1987 [ | 7405 | 0.41 | 24.65 | HEV-gt1 |
| Bangladesh 2008 [ | 4198 | 0.47 | 19.0 | HEV-gt1 |
| Bangladesh 2010 [ | 2162 | 0.55 | 25 | HEV-gt1 |
| Turkmenistan 1985 [ | 16,175 | 0.12 | 27.4 | HEV-gt1 |
| Uzbekistan 1985 [ | 12,000 | - | 7.1 | HEV-gt1 |
| Xinjiang 1986 [ | 120,000 | 0.59 | 13.3 | HEV-gt1 |
| Indonesia 1991 [ | 1688 | 1.78 | 26.3 | HEV |
| Algeria 1980 [ | 788 | 1.39 | 100 | HEV-gt1 |
| Sudan 2006 [ | 253 | 13.5 | 31.1 | HEV-gt1 |
| Djibouti 1998 [ | 42 | 9.5 | 33.3 | HEV-gt1 |
| Central African Republic 2002 [ | 715 | 0.55 | 14.28 | HEV-gt1 |
| Somalia1993 [ | 11,413 | 2.9 | 13.8 | HEV-gt1 |
| Kenya 1991 [ | 1702 | 3.70 | 14.28 | HEV-gt1 |
| Sudan 2004 [ | 2621 | 1.71 | 31.14 | HEV-gt1 |
| Uganda 2007 [ | 4789 | 1.50 | 6.87 | HEV-gt1 |
| Mexico 1986 [ | 223 | 1.35 | 0 | HEV-gt2 |
| Namibia 1995 [ | >600 | 0.50 | 1 death β | HEV-gt2 |
| Namibia 1983 [ | 201 | 3.48 | 85.7 | HEV-gt1 |
| Nigeria 2018 [ | 146 | 1.37 | 8 | HEV-gt1 & HEV-gt2 |
| Central African Republic 2008 [ | 222 | 1.8 | 20 | HEV-gt1 |
| Chad 2004 [ | 989 | 3.0 | - | HEV-gt1 & HEV-gt2 |
| Namibia 2017 [ | 7247 | 0.80 | 6.00 | HEV |
| Chad 2016 [ | 1293 | 0.69 | 3.16 | HEV-gt1 |
CFR = Case fatality rate, gt = genotype, ENANBH = Epidemic non-A, non-B hepatitis, β = number of pregnant women not mentioned in calculating CFR. µ = The references include reports of the epidemic and further studies on the stored samples to characterize the epidemic and the HEV genotypes.
Prevalence of HEV infection among pregnant women with acute sporadic viral hepatitis.
| Author, Year. [References] | Study | HEV-AVH (%) | HEV-ALF (%) | HEV Status | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PF | Others | PF | Others | PF | Others | ||
| Khuroo et al., 1983 [ | 27 | 266α | 19 (70.4) | 136 (51.1) | 6 (31.6) | 13 (9.6) | HEV |
| Nayak et al., 1989 [ | 169 | 70β | 138 (81.6) | 34 (48.6) | 21 (28.5) | ETNANBH | |
| Jaiswal et al., 2001 [ | 127 | 146β | 83 (65.4) | 129 (88.4) | 44 (53.0) | 17 (13.2) | HEV |
| Khuroo et al., 2003 [ | 76 | 337β | 65 (85.5) | 140 (41.5) | 46 (70.8) | 14 (10) | HEV |
| Beniwal et al., 2003 [ | 97 | - | 46 (47.4) | - | 18 (39.1) | - | HEV |
| Patra et al., 2007 [ | 220 | - | 132 (60) | - | 73 (55.3) | - | HEV |
PF = Pregnant females, α = all age groups, β = nonpregnant women of childbearing age.
Figure 3Pathogenesis of hepatitis E virus-related acute liver failure in pregnancy. IAVH = icteric acute viral hepatitis, AIAVH = Anicteric acute viral hepatitis, HEV-ALF = Hepatitis E virus related acute liver failure.
Vertical transmission of HEV and maternal and obstetric events and neonatal outcome.
| Author Year. [References] | HEV-PF | Maternal & Obstetric Events | HEV-Neonatal Status | Pattern of Neonatal HEV Disease | Outcome of HEV-Infected Neonates | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Babies | HEV-Infections | |||||
| Khuroo et al., 1995 [ | 10 | ALF 6, Died 3, (DUD 2), FTD 7, PD 1. | 8 | 6 (RNA 5, IgM 3, IgG-Seroconversion 1). | HEV-ALF 2, I-HEV 1, AI-HEV 3. | Died 2 (HEV-ALF, Liver biopsy 1 MHN), Recovered 4, RNA in 2 lasted 1 month. |
| Khuroo et al., 2009 [ | 26 | ALF 15, Died 9 (DUD 5), FTD 15, PD 4, Ab 2. | 19 (Died 1 due prematurity) + 2 aborted. | 15 (RNA 10, IgM 12). | HEV-ALF 6, I-HEV 4, AI-HEV 5. | Died 6 (HEV-ALF, Liver biopsy 1 MHN with HEV RNA in liver), Recovered 9. RNA lasted for 4 weeks in 4, 8 weeks in 1, 32 weeks in 1. IgM lasted for 4 weeks in 3, for 8 weeks in 2. |
| Khuroo et al., 2006 [ | 36 | ALF 16, DIC 9, Died 10, FTD 26, PD 7, Ab 3. | 33 + 3 aborted. | 25 (RNA 20, IgM 24). | HEV-ALF 14, I-HEV 9, AI-HEV 2. | Died 14 (HEV-ALF, Liver biopsy 14 MHN), Recovered 11. |
| Kumar et al., 2001 [ | 28 | ALF 6, Died 3 (DUD 2), PD 2. | 26 | 26 (RNA 26) | HEV-ALF 2, I-HEV 21, AI-HEV 3. | Died 2 (HEV-ALF), Recovered 24. |
| Singh et al., 2003 [ | 22 | ALF 14, Died 14. | NK *, 6 | 3 (RNA 3). | I-HEV 1. | - |
| Kumar et al., 2004 [ | 28 | ALF 9, Died 7, PD 18. | NK *, 18 | 6 (RNA 4, IgM 3). | - | - |
| Chibber et al., 2004 [ | 92 | FTD 92 (Vaginal delivery 80, Caesarean in 12) | 92 | 4 (RNA 4, IgM 4). | I-HEV 4 *** | - |
| El Sayed Zaki et al., 2013 [ | 9 | 9 ** | 9 | 9 (RNA 5, IgM 1, IgG 6). | RDS with icterus 5, I-HEV 3, Sepsis 1. | - |
| Sharma et al., 2017 [ | 144 | ALF 41, Died 6 (DUD 6). | 128 | 59 (RNA 15, IgM 59). | - | - |
| Bonney et al., 2012 [ | 3 | ALF 2, Died 2 (DUD 1), PD 1, Ab 1. | 1 + 1 aborted | 1 (RNA 1, IgM 1). | I-HEV 1. | Recovered, RNA -ve 3 weeks., IgM -ve 4 weeks. |
| Pradhan et al., 2012 [ | 1 | Fetal HEV-AVH 15 weeks. | 1 | 1 (IgM cord blood, amniotic fluid & serum at birth). | Fetal ascites at 15 weeks pregnancy, resolved in follow up | Healthy baby delivered 38 weeks., LFT normal, IgM +ve. |
PF = Pregnant females, ALF = acute liver failure, I-HEV = Icteric hepatitis E virus infection, AI-HEV= Anicteric hepatitis E virus infection, MHN = Massive hepatic necrosis, DIC = disseminated intravascular coagulation, FTD = full term delivery, DUD = mother died with baby undelivered, Ab = abortion, PD = premature delivery, RNA = HEV RNA +ve, IgM = IgM anti-HEV +ve, IgG = IgG anti-HEV +ve, RDS = respiratory distress syndrome. LFT = liver function tests, * = total babies born not known, ** = all deliveries had complicated clinical course, *** = baby developed icterus at 6 weeks of birth.
Figure 4Fetal-neonatal hepatitis E virus infection recorded in fetuses and neonates from 72 pregnant women with hepatitis E virus infection seen at Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Srinagar Kashmir, India from Dec 1993 onwards [140,174,175]. ALF = acute liver failure, RNA = HEV RNA, IgM = IgM anti-HEV.
Figure 5Spontaneous Vaginal Delivery in pregnancy with HEV-ALF and the outcome on maternal disease. A 30-year-old pregnant woman presented with features of icteric hepatitis E virus infection. On the 24th day of her illness, she had rapid deterioration with encephalopathy, cerebral edema, and laboratory features of DIC. She delivered a live baby vaginally with icteric hepatitis E four days after the onset of encephalopathy. Serial follow-up showed rapid clinical improvement in encephalopathy, cerebral edema, and DIC. PSE = portosystemic encephalopathy, CE = cerebral edema, DIC = disseminated intravascular coagulation, RNA = HEV RNA, IgM = IgM anti-HEV, IgG = IgG anti-HEV.