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. 2009 Mar 25:9:35.
doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-9-35.

Acute viral hepatitis morbidity and mortality associated with hepatitis E virus infection: Uzbekistan surveillance data

Affiliations

Acute viral hepatitis morbidity and mortality associated with hepatitis E virus infection: Uzbekistan surveillance data

Makhmudkhan B Sharapov et al. BMC Infect Dis. .

Abstract

Background: In Uzbekistan, routine serologic testing has not been available to differentiate etiologies of acute viral hepatitis (AVH). To determine the age groups most affected by hepatitis E virus (HEV) during documented AVH epidemics, trends in AVH-associated mortality rate (MR) per 100,000 over a 15-year period and reported incidence of AVH over a 35-year period were examined.

Methods: Reported AVH incidence data from 1971 to 2005 and AVH-associated mortality data from 1981 to 1995 were examined. Serologic markers for infection with hepatitis viruses A, B, D, and E were determined from a sample of hospitalized patients with AVH from an epidemic period (1987) and from a sample of pregnant women with AVH from a non-epidemic period (1992).

Results: Two multi-year AVH outbreaks were identified: one during 1975-1976, and one during 1985-1987. During 1985-1987, AVH-associated MRs were 12.3-17.8 per 100,000 for the general population. Highest AVH-associated MRs occurred among children in the first 3 years of life (40-190 per 100,000) and among women aged 20-29 (15-21 per 100,000). During 1988-1995 when reported AVH morbidity was much lower in the general population, AVH-associated MRs were markedly lower among these same age groups. In 1988, AVH-associated MRs were higher in rural (21 per 100,000) than in urban (8 per 100,000) populations (RR 2.6; 95% CI 1.16-5.93; p < 0.05). Serologic evidence of acute HEV infection was found in 280 of 396 (71%) patients with AVH in 1987 and 12 of 99 (12%) pregnant patients with AVH in 1992.

Conclusion: In the absence of the availability of confirmatory testing, inferences regarding probable hepatitis epidemic etiologies can sometimes be made using surveillance data, comparing AVH incidence with AVH-associated mortality with an eye to population-based viral hepatitis control measures. Data presented here implicate HEV as the probable etiology of high mortality observed in pregnant women and in children less than 3 years of age in Uzbekistan during 1985-1987. High mortality among pregnant women but not among children less than 3 years has been observed in previous descriptions of epidemic hepatitis E. The high mortality among younger children observed in an AVH outbreak associated with hepatitis E merits corroboration in future outbreaks.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Acute viral hepatitis incidence (1971–2005) and associated mortality rates (1981–1995), by year, Uzbekistan (per 100,000 population). Left ordinate (y-axis) and line graph: mortality per 100,000 population. Right ordinate (y-axis) and bar diagram: reported acute viral hepatitis incidence per population.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Acute viral hepatitis-associated mortality rates for children in various age groups, and reported acute viral hepatitis incidence in all age groups, per 100,000 population, by year, Uzbekistan, 1985–1995. Left ordinate (y-axis) and bar diagram: age- and gender-specific mortality: "black bars" – mortality among boys; "white bars" – mortality among girls, per 100,000 population of corresponding age and sex. Right ordinate (y-axis) and line diagram: reported acute viral hepatitis incidence in the general population, per 100,000.

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