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Hepatology, March 1999, p. 994-995, Vol. 29, No. 3
Correspondence
Genotype Distribution of Hepatitis C Virus in Satildeo Paulo,
Brazil:
Rare Subtype Found
To the Editor:
Genotypes 1, 2, and 3 of the Hepatitis C virus (HCV)
are widely distributed throughout Western countries and the Far East (Japan,
China, Taiwan, Thailand). Types 5 and 6 are mainly confined to South
Africa and Southeast Asia, respectively, in contrast to type 4, which is
predominant in the Middle East and Central Africa.1-3
To investigate the prevalence and distribution of HCV genotypes
in Brazil, 348 subjects from four different populations were studied: 34 anti-HCV-positive
blood donors, 23 hemophiliacs, 40 renal-transplant recipients, and 251 chronic
Hepatitis C (CH-C) patients. HCV genotyping was performed in serum samples of
239 (95%) out of 251 CH-C patients and of all blood-donor and hemophiliac
samples by a reverse hybridization assay (Line Probe Assay - INNO-LiPA
HCV or INNO-LiPA HCV II, second generation, Innogenetics, Ghent, Belgium), in
which a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) product of
the 5'untranslated region (5'UTR) is hybridized with probes from various HCV
genotypes.2 Twelve samples, of the 251 sera
from the CH-C patients, and all from the renal-transplant patients were tested
by a serotyping assay (HCV Serotyping Assay 1-6, Murex Diagnostics, Dartford,
UK).2
The genotyping results of the 348 HCV isolates, on the basis
of the line probe and/or serotyping assays, are shown in table 1.
Four different types were found, and their overall prevalence was 63% for type
1, 4.3% for type 2, 31.3% for type 3, and 0.3% for type 4. Four
subjects revealed mixed infections: two cases within types (1a + 1b
in a renal-transplant recipient and 2a + 2b in a CH-C patient), and two
cases across types (1b + 3a in a blood donor and in a CH-C patient).
A similar distribution was observed for each of the four populations, as a general
rule; the exceptions were genotypes 2 for the renal-transplant recipients
and 3 for the hemophiliacs, whose frequencies were found to be approximately
double (13%) and half (15%), respectively, their values in the other populations.
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View
this table :
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table 1. Prevalence of HCV Genotypes and Their Distribution in
Various Populations of São Paulo, Brazil |
Data available from other Brazilian regions, showed corroborating
figures for 114 blood donors in Rio de Janeiro, Southeast (1a, 42%; 1b,
34%; and 3a, 20%),2 and for 100 CH-C patients
in Porto Alegre, South (type 1, 55%; and type 3, 37%).4
Moreover, as it is known, the current screening assays are based on epitopes
derived from only genotypes 1a or 1b, causing variation in seroreactivity among
different HCV genotypes.5,6
Therefore, the high prevalence hereby reported not only for genotypes 1a and
1b, but for others (3 in particular) should be of main concern and of much
interest for research and development of serological screening assays.
Finally, we have identified in a renal-transplant patient an unpublished
genotype in Brazil: the 4a.
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Leda Bassit, M.Sc.
Gabriela Ribeiro-Dos-Santos, Ph.D.
Luiz C. Da Silva, M.D., Ph.D.
Kioko Takei, Ph.D.
Paula Villaça, M.D., Ph.D.
Elias David-Neto, M.D., Ph.D.
Dalton Chamone, M.D., Ph.D.
Amadeo Sáez-Alquézar, M.Sc.
1Pharmaceutical Sciences and Medical Schools
of the Unversity of São Paulo
2Fundação Pró-Sangue Hemocentro de São
Paulo
3Tropical Medicine Institute, São Paulo, Brazil |
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