Molecular Epidemiology of Hepatitis C Virus Infection in an Area
Endemic for Community-Acquired Acute Hepatitis C
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EIICHI YOSHII, HARUHIDE
SHINZAWA, TAKAFUMI SAITO,
LI SHAO, MAKOTO
KUBOKI, KOJI SAITO,
HITOSHI TOGASHI, TSUNEO
TAKAHASHI and MASASHI
MIZOKAMI1
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The Second Department of Internal Medicine, Yamagata University
School of Medicine, Yamagata 990-9585, and 1The Second
Department of Internal Medicine, Nagoya City University Medical School,
Nagoya 467-8601
The southern district of N city (U area), Yamagata Prefecture, is highly
endemic for hepatitic C virus (HCV) infection. Around 20% of the general
population are positive for antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV).
Community-acquired, acute non-A, non-B hepatitis was epidemic from 1967
to 1972 in this area. Our previous study revealed that these people are
actually infected with HCV, but a relationship between this outbreak and
the high positivity rate of anti-HCV in the U area has not been shown.
We followed up 15 anti-HCV-positive individuals who developed hepatitis
during the epidemic and used the serum collected to conduct molecular
evolutional analysis to reveal the characteristics of the HCV epidemic
in the U area. HCV genotypes in the U area were also analyzed.
Phylogenetic analysis of the HCV core gene sequences showed that the
subjects' HCV sequences were closely related and derived from the same
cluster. All subjects were infected with HCV genotype 1b, which was
frequently detected with a high positivity of over 80% of HCV-infected
individuals in the U area. These results confirm that the
community-acquired hepatitis C epidemic occurred around three decades
ago through an unidentified route, and suggest that this episode may
result in a continuing increase in the number of HCV-1b positive
patients in this small area.
Key words---
hepatitis C; phylogenetic tree; epidemiology; HCV RNA
© 1999 Tohoku University Medical Press
Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 1999, 188, 311-316
Address for reprints: Haruhide Shinzawa, M.D., The Second Department of
Internal Medicine, Yamagata University School of Medicine, 2-2-2 Iida,
Yamagata 990-9585, Japan.
e-mail: hsinzawa@med.id.yamagata-u.ac.jp
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