Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors

Progression of chronic hepatitis C is known to be associated with some factors, but influence of HCV genotypes is still controversial. Association between HCV genotypes and other risk factors was examined to determine which factors are associated with progression of infection. One hundred consecutive anti-HCV positive volunteer blood donors were evaluated for several risk factors, examined for HCV genotypes, and submitted to hepatic biopsy and biochemical exams.HCV genotyping were carried out in 89 patients and hepatic biopsy in 78. Transmission routes were found to be illicit intravenous drug use (26%), Gluconergan® use in a non-safe manner (48%) and blood transfusion (15%). HCV genotype was 1 in 45%, 3 in 40%, and it was not associated with the stage of fibrosis or with inflammatory activity. There was no significant association of factors related to infection, chronic alcohol use, or duration of illness, with progression of the lesion. There was a significant association of aminotransferase levels and the fibrosis stage. Univariate analysis showed that the age at contamination, patient's age, GT-gamma, and aminotransferase levels over three times the upper normal limits, were associated with fibrosis stages 2 to 4. Multivariate analysis detected age (odds ratio=1.19), and GT-gamma (odds ratio=2.02) as independent factors.

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Main Authors: Silva,Giovanni Faria, Nishimura,Nancy F., Coelho,Kunie Iabuki Rabello, Soares,Elza Cotrim
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases 2005
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702005000200004
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spelling oai:scielo:S1413-867020050002000042005-08-18Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donorsSilva,Giovanni FariaNishimura,Nancy F.Coelho,Kunie Iabuki RabelloSoares,Elza Cotrim Hepatitis C fibrosis risk factors Progression of chronic hepatitis C is known to be associated with some factors, but influence of HCV genotypes is still controversial. Association between HCV genotypes and other risk factors was examined to determine which factors are associated with progression of infection. One hundred consecutive anti-HCV positive volunteer blood donors were evaluated for several risk factors, examined for HCV genotypes, and submitted to hepatic biopsy and biochemical exams.HCV genotyping were carried out in 89 patients and hepatic biopsy in 78. Transmission routes were found to be illicit intravenous drug use (26%), Gluconergan® use in a non-safe manner (48%) and blood transfusion (15%). HCV genotype was 1 in 45%, 3 in 40%, and it was not associated with the stage of fibrosis or with inflammatory activity. There was no significant association of factors related to infection, chronic alcohol use, or duration of illness, with progression of the lesion. There was a significant association of aminotransferase levels and the fibrosis stage. Univariate analysis showed that the age at contamination, patient's age, GT-gamma, and aminotransferase levels over three times the upper normal limits, were associated with fibrosis stages 2 to 4. Multivariate analysis detected age (odds ratio=1.19), and GT-gamma (odds ratio=2.02) as independent factors.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessBrazilian Society of Infectious DiseasesBrazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases v.9 n.2 20052005-04-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702005000200004en10.1590/S1413-86702005000200004
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Silva,Giovanni Faria
Nishimura,Nancy F.
Coelho,Kunie Iabuki Rabello
Soares,Elza Cotrim
spellingShingle Silva,Giovanni Faria
Nishimura,Nancy F.
Coelho,Kunie Iabuki Rabello
Soares,Elza Cotrim
Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
author_facet Silva,Giovanni Faria
Nishimura,Nancy F.
Coelho,Kunie Iabuki Rabello
Soares,Elza Cotrim
author_sort Silva,Giovanni Faria
title Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
title_short Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
title_full Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
title_fullStr Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
title_full_unstemmed Grading and staging chronic hepatitis C and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
title_sort grading and staging chronic hepatitis c and its relation to genotypes and epidemiological factors in brazilian blood donors
description Progression of chronic hepatitis C is known to be associated with some factors, but influence of HCV genotypes is still controversial. Association between HCV genotypes and other risk factors was examined to determine which factors are associated with progression of infection. One hundred consecutive anti-HCV positive volunteer blood donors were evaluated for several risk factors, examined for HCV genotypes, and submitted to hepatic biopsy and biochemical exams.HCV genotyping were carried out in 89 patients and hepatic biopsy in 78. Transmission routes were found to be illicit intravenous drug use (26%), Gluconergan® use in a non-safe manner (48%) and blood transfusion (15%). HCV genotype was 1 in 45%, 3 in 40%, and it was not associated with the stage of fibrosis or with inflammatory activity. There was no significant association of factors related to infection, chronic alcohol use, or duration of illness, with progression of the lesion. There was a significant association of aminotransferase levels and the fibrosis stage. Univariate analysis showed that the age at contamination, patient's age, GT-gamma, and aminotransferase levels over three times the upper normal limits, were associated with fibrosis stages 2 to 4. Multivariate analysis detected age (odds ratio=1.19), and GT-gamma (odds ratio=2.02) as independent factors.
publisher Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases
publishDate 2005
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-86702005000200004
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