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Transfusion‐transmitted virus infection in China: Prevalence in blood donors and in patients with liver diseases
Author(s) -
He Chuan,
Nomura Fumio,
Yukimasa Nobuyasu,
Itoga Sakae,
YamadaOsaki Maki,
Sumazaki Ryo,
Nakai Toshiaki
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of gastroenterology and hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.214
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1440-1746
pISSN - 0815-9319
DOI - 10.1046/j.1440-1746.1999.01970.x
Subject(s) - genotype , genotyping , virology , medicine , virus , polymerase chain reaction , fulminant hepatitis , blood transfusion , hepatitis , liver disease , viral disease , immunology , biology , gastroenterology , gene , genetics
AbstractBackground: Prevalence of transfusion‐transmitted virus (TTV) infection among blood donors and in patients with liver diseases in China was studied.Methods: DNA was extracted from serum and amplified by seminested polymerase chain reaction with reported primer sets from a conserved region of the TTV genome.Results: TT Virus DNA was detected in 55 of 196 blood donors (28%); 31% (40 of 127) in the north and 22% (15 of 69) in the south. TT Virus DNA was also detected in 14 of 31 patients (45%) with non‐A–non‐G fulminant hepatitis and in eight of 25 patients (32%) with non‐A–non‐G chronic hepatitis. The rate of TTV viraemia in these patients with liver disease was comparable to that in blood donors. TT Virus DNA sequencing of 12 isolates showed that the prevalence of genotype 2 was significantly higher than that reported in Japan (66.7 vs 2.6%, P < 0.001). Furthermore, genotyping assays based on restriction fragment length polymorphism were carried out on all 88 TTV DNA‐positive samples. It was found that 42 isolates (47.7%) belonged to genotype 1 and 40 (45.5%) to genotype 2. It was of particular interest that the prevalence of genotype 1 in patients with non‐A–non‐G fulminant hepatitis was significantly higher than that in blood donors (10/14 vs 22/55, P < 0.05).Conclusions: The data indicate that TTV infection is common in China and that the pathogenic potential of TTV toward the liver (if any) may differ between genotypes.