Rural habitat as risk factor for hepatitis E virus seroconversion in HIV ‐infected patients: A prospective longitudinal study
Summary
Our objective was to determine the incidence and clinical manifestations of acute hepatitis E virus (HEV) in HIV‐infected patients. A prospective longitudinal study including HIV‐infected HEV‐seronegative patients was conducted; HEV seroconversion (to IgG and/or IgM) was the main outcome variable. All patients were tested for HEV antibodies every 3–6 months. For patients who developed HEV seroconversion, a data collection protocol was followed to identify associated clinical manifestations and analytical alterations. A total of 627 patients (89.9%) were followed during a median of 11.96 months (IQR: 8.52–14.52 months) and formed the study population. Forty‐one patients developed detectable anti‐HEV antibodies (7.2 cases per 100 patients/year). Our study found a high incidence of HEV in HIV‐infected patients in southern Spain strongly associated with a rural habitat.
Source: Zoonoses and Public Health - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: A. Rivero ‐Juarez, F. Cuenca‐Lopez, A. Martinez‐Peinado, A. Camacho, L. M. Real, M. Frias, A. Gordon, S. Cantisán, J. Torre‐Cisneros, J. A. Pineda, A. Rivero Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLE Source Type: research
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