Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Nov 2007)

High proportion of hepatitis C virus genotypes 1 and 3 in a large cohort of patients from Southern Brazil

  • Cláudia Maria Dornelles da Silva,
  • Cintia Costi,
  • Luciano Percival Krug,
  • Ana Beatris Ramos,
  • Tarciana Grandi,
  • Vitório Luiz Gandolfi,
  • Maria Elizabeth Menezes,
  • Maristela Ocampos,
  • Christian Niel,
  • Maria Lucia Rosa Rossetti

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102, no. 7
pp. 867 – 870

Abstract

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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) isolates have been divided into six genotypes (1 to 6). The duration of hepatitis C standard treatment is 48 weeks for patients infected with HCV genotype 1 vs 24 weeks for those infected with genotypes 2 and 3. A total of 1544 HCV isolates from chronic patients living in the southern Brazilian states of Rio Grande do Sul (RS, n = 627) and Santa Catarina (SC, n = 917) were genotyped by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products. In RS, 338 (53.9%; 95% CI 50.0 - 57.8%), 34 (5.4%; 95% CI 3.8 - 7.4%) and, 255 (40.7%; 95% CI 36.9 - 44.6%) samples were from genotypes 1, 2, and 3, respectively. In SC, 468 (51%; 95% CI 47.8 - 54.2%), 26 (2.9%; 95% CI 1.9 - 4.1%) and, 423 (46.1%; 95% CI 42.9 - 49.3%) samples were from genotypes 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Genotyping results were confirmed by direct nucleotide sequencing of PCR products derived from 68 samples, without any discrepancy between PCR-RFLP and nucleotide sequencing methods. In conclusion, almost half of the hepatitis C patients from South of Brazil are infected by genotypes 2 and 3 and, these results have important consequential therapeutic implications as they can be treated for only 24 weeks, not 48.

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