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. 2018 May 2;17(1):17.
doi: 10.1186/s12941-018-0269-6.

Hepatitis E virus infection in Turkey: a systematic review

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Hepatitis E virus infection in Turkey: a systematic review

Hakan Leblebicioglu et al. Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob. .

Abstract

Hepatitis E virus (HEV), a non-enveloped single stranded RNA virus causes sporadic cases of hepatitis or outbreaks. The disease is generally self-limited although it may cause fulminant hepatitis in pregnant women, elderly, those with underlying chronic hepatitis, immunosuppressed, and transplant recipients. It is transmitted through fecal-oral route and zoonotic transmission. Hepatitis is a main health care problem in Turkey; HBV and HCV prevalences are 4 and 1% respectively. Hepatitis D represents another considerable hepatitis etiology with a prevalence of 5-27%. The information about HEV is not clear. In this systematic review, we aimed to analyze HEV studies reported from Turkey, to determine the current situation of the disease in the country, to delineate the limits of the studies and to determine the future study areas. The prevalence of HEV ranged from 0 to 12.4%. Children had lower prevalence than the adults. The prevalence was determined as 7-8% in pregnant women, 13% in chronic HBV patients, 54% in chronic HCV patients, 13.9-20.6% in patients with chronic renal failure, and ≈ 35% in agriculture workers. Among individuals immigrating form Turkey to Europe, HEV seroprevalence was found 10.3% in Italy and 33.4% in the Netherlands. HEV prevalence seems high in certain risk groups. Although previous studies suggest that Turkey is among the endemic countries of HEV, there are some pitfalls for the analysis of data: the studies are not powered enough to represent the whole population; they did not include immunosuppressed patients and solid organ recipients; and the prevalence of non-A non-B hepatitis was not determined.

Keywords: Hepatitis E virus; Prevalence; Systematic review; Travel; Turkey.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Flow diagram for literature search
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Distribution of the studies. Colors represent number of studies (total number of sites are more than actual study numbers because some studies were done in more than one city)

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