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The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan

BACKGROUND: Genotyping of HBV is generally used for determining the epidemiological relationship between various virus strains and origin of infection mostly in research studies. The utility of genotyping for clinical applications is only beginning to gain importance. Whether HBV genotyping will con...

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Autores principales: Baig, Saeeda, Siddiqui, Anwar Ali, Ahmed, Waqaruddin, Qureshi, Huma, Arif, Ambreen
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2212638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18042293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-4-128
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author Baig, Saeeda
Siddiqui, Anwar Ali
Ahmed, Waqaruddin
Qureshi, Huma
Arif, Ambreen
author_facet Baig, Saeeda
Siddiqui, Anwar Ali
Ahmed, Waqaruddin
Qureshi, Huma
Arif, Ambreen
author_sort Baig, Saeeda
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Genotyping of HBV is generally used for determining the epidemiological relationship between various virus strains and origin of infection mostly in research studies. The utility of genotyping for clinical applications is only beginning to gain importance. Whether HBV genotyping will constitute part of the clinical evaluation of Hepatitis B patients depends largely on the availability of the relevance of the evidence based information. Since Pakistan has a HBV genotype distribution which has been considered less virulent as investigated by earlier studies from south East Asian countries, a study on correlation between HBV genotypes and risk of progression to further complex hepatic infection was much needed METHODS: A total of 295 patients with HBsAg positive were selected from the Pakistan Medical Research Council's (PMRC) out patient clinics. Two hundred and twenty six (77%) were males, sixty nine (23%) were females (M to F ratio 3.3:1). RESULTS: Out of 295 patients, 156 (53.2%) had Acute(CAH), 71 (24.2%) were HBV Carriers, 54 (18.4%) had Chronic liver disease (CLD) Hepatitis. 14 (4.7%) were Cirrhosis and HCC patients. Genotype D was the most prevalent genotype in all categories of HBV patients, Acute (108), Chronic (39), and Carrier (53). Cirrhosis/HCC (7) were HBV/D positive. Genotype A was the second most prevalent with 28 (13%) in acute cases, 12 (22.2%) in chronics, 14 (19.7%) in carriers and 5 (41.7) in Cirrhosis/HCC patients. Mixed genotype (A/D) was found in 20 (12.8%) of Acute patients, 3 (5.6%) of Chronic and 4 (5.6%) of carriers, none in case of severe liver conditions. CONCLUSION: Mixed HBV genotypes A, D and A/D combination were present in all categories of patients except that no A/D combination was detected in severe conditions. Genotype D was the dominant genotype. However, genotype A was found to be more strongly associated with severe liver disease. Mixed genotype (A/D) did not significantly appear to influence the clinical outcome.
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spelling pubmed-22126382008-01-24 The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan Baig, Saeeda Siddiqui, Anwar Ali Ahmed, Waqaruddin Qureshi, Huma Arif, Ambreen Virol J Research BACKGROUND: Genotyping of HBV is generally used for determining the epidemiological relationship between various virus strains and origin of infection mostly in research studies. The utility of genotyping for clinical applications is only beginning to gain importance. Whether HBV genotyping will constitute part of the clinical evaluation of Hepatitis B patients depends largely on the availability of the relevance of the evidence based information. Since Pakistan has a HBV genotype distribution which has been considered less virulent as investigated by earlier studies from south East Asian countries, a study on correlation between HBV genotypes and risk of progression to further complex hepatic infection was much needed METHODS: A total of 295 patients with HBsAg positive were selected from the Pakistan Medical Research Council's (PMRC) out patient clinics. Two hundred and twenty six (77%) were males, sixty nine (23%) were females (M to F ratio 3.3:1). RESULTS: Out of 295 patients, 156 (53.2%) had Acute(CAH), 71 (24.2%) were HBV Carriers, 54 (18.4%) had Chronic liver disease (CLD) Hepatitis. 14 (4.7%) were Cirrhosis and HCC patients. Genotype D was the most prevalent genotype in all categories of HBV patients, Acute (108), Chronic (39), and Carrier (53). Cirrhosis/HCC (7) were HBV/D positive. Genotype A was the second most prevalent with 28 (13%) in acute cases, 12 (22.2%) in chronics, 14 (19.7%) in carriers and 5 (41.7) in Cirrhosis/HCC patients. Mixed genotype (A/D) was found in 20 (12.8%) of Acute patients, 3 (5.6%) of Chronic and 4 (5.6%) of carriers, none in case of severe liver conditions. CONCLUSION: Mixed HBV genotypes A, D and A/D combination were present in all categories of patients except that no A/D combination was detected in severe conditions. Genotype D was the dominant genotype. However, genotype A was found to be more strongly associated with severe liver disease. Mixed genotype (A/D) did not significantly appear to influence the clinical outcome. BioMed Central 2007-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2212638/ /pubmed/18042293 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-4-128 Text en Copyright © 2007 Baig et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Baig, Saeeda
Siddiqui, Anwar Ali
Ahmed, Waqaruddin
Qureshi, Huma
Arif, Ambreen
The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title_full The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title_fullStr The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title_short The association of complex liver disorders with HBV genotypes prevalent in Pakistan
title_sort association of complex liver disorders with hbv genotypes prevalent in pakistan
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2212638/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18042293
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-4-128
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