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J Med Virol ; 78(11): 1411-22, 2006 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16998896

ABSTRACT

Because several children were found infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) at a pediatric oncohematological department in Vilnius, 474 children were tested for anti-HCV. Fifty-eight percent of 96 children treated with blood and plasma products manufactured before the introduction of anti-HCV screening of blood in Lithuania in 1994 were positive for anti-HCV versus 3.4% of those treated after 1994. The possible route of transmission for 45 of these was investigated by phylogenetic analyses within the NS5B region. Children treated before 1995 were infected with a multiplicity of strains of different subtypes, predominantly 1b found in 21 cases, 3a in 5 cases, 2 in 3 cases, 1a in 1 case, and not subtypeable genotype 1 strains in 2 cases. Children who had received blood products after 1994 were infected with only two subtypes, 1b in six and 3a in seven. Genetic analysis showed multiple introductions of HCV before 1995 and that horizontal spread between patients had occurred only to a minor extent at the department. However, two transmission chains involved children treated before 1995. Another chain involved five children treated after 1994. Since the most important risk factor for acquiring hepatitis C was blood products manufactured before the introduction of donor screening for anti-HCV, the spread between children would not have been revealed without molecular tools. These and the background strains provide the first reported sequence data on Lithuanian HCV strains. In general, these were shown to form autochthonous clades, except the 3a strains that were related to strains from the former USSR.


Subject(s)
Blood Banks , Disease Transmission, Infectious/statistics & numerical data , Hematologic Neoplasms , Hepacivirus/genetics , Hepacivirus/isolation & purification , Hepatitis C/transmission , Transfusion Reaction , Child , Cross Infection , Donor Selection , Female , Hepatitis C/blood , Hepatitis C/epidemiology , Hepatitis C Antibodies/blood , Humans , Lithuania/epidemiology , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny
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