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Epidemiological and phylogenetic evidence for patient-to-patient hepatitis C virus transmission during sclerotherapy of varicose veins

✍ Scribed by Victor de Lédinghen; Pascale Trimoulet; Géraldine Cazajous; Pierre-Henri Bernard; Marie-Hélène Schrive; Juliette Foucher; Muriel Faure; Laurent Castéra; Julien Vergniol; Michel Amouretti; Hervé Fleury; Patrice Couzigou


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
88 KB
Volume
76
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The aim of this study was to provide evidence for patient‐to‐patient nosocomial hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission during sclerotherapy of varicose veins. Forty‐three patients who had evidence of current infection by genotype 2 HCV have had sclerotherapy by the same physician. Based on this observation, a detailed epidemiological questionnaire on risk factors for HCV in genotype 2 infected patients was conducted. Seventeen sequences in the hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) of the HCV genome obtained from 17 HCV RNA positive patients with a past history of sclerotherapy, were compared with 17 sequences derived from genotype 2 patients with no past history of sclerotherapy, and with 25 sequences sampled from GenBank. Two hundred seven genotype 2 HCV infected patients were included. The main risk factors for HCV infection were transfusion (n = 76), drug use (n = 6), and sclerotherapy of varicose veins (n = 62 including 43 (20.8%) by the same physician), other or unknown (n = 76). These sclerotherapy sessions were carried out in the 1980s for many years. Five of these 43 patients had jaundice within a few weeks after a sclerotherapy session. Sequence analysis of HVR1 from 17 patients who had sclerotherapy by the same physician revealed that they were all infected with HCV genotype 2c. The phylogenetic tree indicated clustering of the patients with a past history of sclerotherapy. The method by which infection was likely to have been transmitted was probably the use of a single vial for multiple patients. This study provides strong evidence that sclerotherapy of varicose veins is a risk factor for HCV infection. J. Med. Virol. 76:279–284, 2005. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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