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Evidence of shared Epstein-Barr viral isolates between sexual partners, and low level EBV in genital secretions

✍ Scribed by Ranjit Thomas; Karen F. Macsween; Karen McAulay; Daniel Clutterbuck; Richard Anderson; Stuart Reid; Craig D. Higgins; Anthony J. Swerdlow; Nadine Harrison; Hilary Williams; Dorothy H. Crawford


Book ID
102381768
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
129 KB
Volume
78
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Epstein‐Barr virus is present in the saliva of most persistently infected individuals and is generally thought to be spread by close oral contact. However, there are now several reports of EBV in genital secretions, suggesting the possibility of sexual transmission between adults. The present study was undertaken to investigate the risk of sexual transmission of EBV. PCR analysis was used to examined the degree to which a group (n = 11) of patients with infectious mononucleosis (IM) shared the same viral isolates as their sexual partners, and compare this to the extent of isolate sharing among a different group (n = 18) of IM patients and their non‐sexual contacts. There was significantly more sharing of EBV isolates among the IM/sexual‐contact pairs than among the IM/non‐sexual‐contact pairs (P = 0.0012). Female cervical (n = 84), male urethral (n = 55), and semen (n = 30) samples from asymptomatic, unselected volunteers were analyzed for the presence of EBV DNA, revealing 7%, 5%, and 3% to be EBV positive, respectively. Fractionation of cervical and urethral samples into cellular and supernatant fluid components showed EBV to be mainly cell‐associated. Quantitation of EBV in these samples gave levels of below 10 EBV genomes per µg of DNA. Overall the findings support the possibility that EBV could on occasions be transmitted sexually, however, the low levels detected in genital secretions compared to saliva suggest that this is not a major transmission route. The finding of small quantities of cell‐associated virus suggests a latent infection; thus EBV is probably in the B lymphocyte rather than in the epithelial cell component of the secretions. J. Med. Virol. 78:1204–1209, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.