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High levels of hepatitis B virus DNA in body fluids from chronic carriers.

Author

Summary, in English

infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major global health problem. Transmission is mainly blood-borne, although the route of infection during horizontal transmission in childhood is unclear. Nosocomial outbreaks of HBV have been widely reported, but have mainly focused on blood-borne transmission. There is Limited knowledge of the viral Load Levels in other body fluids. In the present study, chronic HBV carriers were tested for the presence of HBV DNA in serum, saliva, nasopharyngeal fluid, urine and tears by means of qualitative and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods. Twenty-five patients who were positive for HBV DNA with both PCRs were included. Low titres in real-time PCR corresponded with weak bands in the qualitative assay. HBV DNA was found in two urine samples, 10 saliva samples, five nasopharyngeal, swabs and in tear fluid from four patients. One highly viraemic HBeAg-positive carrier with serum HBV DNA Levels of 7 x 10(9) genome copies had high copy numbers detected in both saliva and nasopharyngeal fluid. These results demonstrate that highly viraemic HBV carriers may have high titres of HBV DNA in other body fluids. This has particular importance for infection control programmes and regulations, underlining the importance of aiming towards regular HBV DNA testing and thus infectivity assessment of chronic carriers in order to prevent transmission. (c) 2006 The Hospital Infection Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Publishing year

2006

Language

English

Pages

352-357

Publication/Series

Journal of Hospital Infection

Volume

64

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Infectious Medicine

Keywords

  • infection control
  • nasopharynx
  • nosocomial
  • tears
  • saliva

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0195-6701