TY - JOUR
T1 - A systematic review of hepatitis C virus epidemiology in Asia, Australia and Egypt
AU - Sievert, William
AU - Altraif, Ibrahim
AU - Razavi, Homie
AU - Abdo, Ayman
AU - Ahmed, Ezzat
AU - AlOmair, Ahmed
AU - Amarapurkar, Deepak
AU - Chen, Chien-Hung
AU - Dou, Xiaoguang
AU - Khayat, Hisham
AU - elShazly, Mohamed
AU - Esmat, Gamal
AU - Guan, Richard
AU - Han, Kwang-Hyub
AU - Koike, Kazuhiko
AU - Largen, Angela
AU - McCaughan, Geoffrey
AU - Mogawer, Sherif
AU - Monis, Ali
AU - Nawaz, Arif
AU - Piratvisuth, Teerha
AU - Sanai, Faisal
AU - Sharara, Ala
AU - Sibbel, Scott
AU - Sood, Ajit
AU - Suh, Dong
AU - Wallace, Carolyn
AU - Young, Kendra
AU - Negro, Francesco
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - The hepatitis C pandemic has been systematically studied and characterized in North America and Europe, but this important public health problem has not received equivalent attention in other regions. AIM: The objective of this systematic review was to characterize hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemiology in selected countries of Asia, Australia and Egypt, i.e. in a geographical area inhabited by over 40 of the global population. METHODOLOGY: Data references were identified through indexed journals and non-indexed sources. In this work, 7770 articles were reviewed and 690 were selected based on their relevance. RESULTS: We estimated that 49.3-64.0 million adults in Asia, Australia and Egypt are anti-HCV positive. China alone has more HCV infections than all of Europe or the Americas. While most countries had prevalence rates from 1 to 2 we documented several with relatively high prevalence rates, including Egypt (15 ), Pakistan (4.7 ) and Taiwan (4.4 ). Nosocomial infection, blood transfusion (before screening) and injection drug use were identified as common risk factors in the region. Genotype 1 was common in Australia, China, Taiwan and other countries in North Asia, while genotype 6 was found in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. In India and Pakistan genotype 3 was predominant, while genotype 4 was found in Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria. CONCLUSION: We recommend implementation of surveillance systems to guide effective public health policy that may lead to the eventual curtailment of the spread of this pandemic infection.
AB - The hepatitis C pandemic has been systematically studied and characterized in North America and Europe, but this important public health problem has not received equivalent attention in other regions. AIM: The objective of this systematic review was to characterize hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemiology in selected countries of Asia, Australia and Egypt, i.e. in a geographical area inhabited by over 40 of the global population. METHODOLOGY: Data references were identified through indexed journals and non-indexed sources. In this work, 7770 articles were reviewed and 690 were selected based on their relevance. RESULTS: We estimated that 49.3-64.0 million adults in Asia, Australia and Egypt are anti-HCV positive. China alone has more HCV infections than all of Europe or the Americas. While most countries had prevalence rates from 1 to 2 we documented several with relatively high prevalence rates, including Egypt (15 ), Pakistan (4.7 ) and Taiwan (4.4 ). Nosocomial infection, blood transfusion (before screening) and injection drug use were identified as common risk factors in the region. Genotype 1 was common in Australia, China, Taiwan and other countries in North Asia, while genotype 6 was found in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. In India and Pakistan genotype 3 was predominant, while genotype 4 was found in Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria. CONCLUSION: We recommend implementation of surveillance systems to guide effective public health policy that may lead to the eventual curtailment of the spread of this pandemic infection.
UR - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1478-3231.2011.02540.x/pdf
U2 - 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2011.02540.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2011.02540.x
M3 - Article
SN - 1478-3223
VL - 31
SP - 61
EP - 80
JO - Liver International
JF - Liver International
IS - Supp 2
ER -