PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Epidemiology of zoonotic hepatitis E: a community-based surveillance study in a rural population in China.

  • Feng-Cai Zhu,
  • Shou-Jie Huang,
  • Ting Wu,
  • Xue-Feng Zhang,
  • Zhong-Ze Wang,
  • Xing Ai,
  • Qiang Yan,
  • Chang-Lin Yang,
  • Jia-Ping Cai,
  • Han-Min Jiang,
  • Yi-Jun Wang,
  • Mun-Hon Ng,
  • Jun Zhang,
  • Ning-Shao Xia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087154
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e87154

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundHepatitis E is caused by two viral genotype groups: human types and zoonotic types. Current understanding of the epidemiology of the zoonotic hepatitis E disease is founded largely on hospital-based studies.MethodsThe epidemiology of hepatitis E was investigated in a community-based surveillance study conducted over one year in a rural city in eastern China with a registered population of 400,162.ResultsThe seroprevalence of hepatitis E in the cohort was 38%. The incidence of hepatitis E was 2.8/10,000 person-years. Totally 93.5% of the infections were attributed to genotype 4 and the rest, to genotype 1. Hepatitis E accounted for 28.4% (102/359) of the acute hepatitis cases and 68.9% (102/148) of the acute viral hepatitis cases in this area of China. The disease occurred sporadically with a higher prevalence during the cold season and in men, with the male-to-female ratio of 3∶1. Additionally, the incidence of hepatitis E increased with age. Hepatitis B virus carriers have an increased risk of contracting hepatitis E than the general population (OR = 2.5, 95%CI 1.5-4.2). Pre-existing immunity to hepatitis E lowered the risk (relative risk = 0.34, 95% CI 0.21-0.55) and reduced the severity of the disease.ConclusionsHepatitis E in the rural population of China is essentially that of a zoonosis due to the genotype 4 virus, the epidemiology of which is similar to that due to the other zoonotic genotype 3 virus.