Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jan 2022)

Assessment of hepatitis E seropositivity among HIV-infected patients in Bulgaria

  • Elitsa Golkocheva-Markova,
  • Ani Kevorkyan,
  • Ralitsa Raycheva,
  • Chiydem Ismailova,
  • Viliana Yoncheva,
  • Tencho Tenev,
  • Radoslava Emilova,
  • Lyubomira Grigorova,
  • Ivan Baltadzhiev,
  • Radka Komitova

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
p. 102329

Abstract

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It is debatable whether HIV-infected patients are at greater risk for hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection compared with healthy subjects. The reported anti-HEV seroprevalence among different groups in Bulgaria varied from 9.04% to 25.9%, but the information regarding the HIV population is still missing. The aim of the present study was to evaluate hepatitis E seroprevalence among HIV-infected patients in Bulgaria and to analyze demographic and immunological factors associated with HEV infection. Serum samples of 312 HIV-infected patients were analyzed retrospectively. Age, sex, residence and laboratory markers for HEV, HBV, HCV and HIV infection, and lymphocytes subpopulations were collected for all patients. None of the tested samples were positive for HEV RNA. HEV seroprevalence among HIV-infected patients was 10.9%. Males were more affected with the highest prevalence of positivity in the age group > 30 to ≤ 40 years. The documented HIV transmission routes in HIV/HEV co-infected group were heterosexual, homosexual, intravenous drug use (IDU), and vertical with predominace of the heterosexual route (z = 0.2; p = 0.804). There was a statistically significant trend of HIV mixed infection with routes of HIV transmission other than homosexual - heterosexual in HIV/HEV group and injection drug use in HIV/HBV/HCV co-infected group. The route of HIV transmission, in contexts of patients’ behavior, was associated with HEV prevalence among HIV-infected patients.

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