Transmission of hepatitis C virus infection from asymptomatic mother to child in southern India

Parthiban, Rudrapathy ; Shanmugam, Saravanan ; Velu, Vijayakumar ; Nandakumar, Subhadra ; Dhevahi, Elumalai ; Thangaraj, Kumarasamy ; Nayak, H. K. ; Gupte, Mohan Digambar ; Thyagarajan, Sadras Panchatcharam (2009) Transmission of hepatitis C virus infection from asymptomatic mother to child in southern India International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 13 (6). e394-e400. ISSN 1201-9712

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(09)00...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2009.01.013

Abstract

Background: Little information is available on the mother-to-child transmission of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) in India and no interventions to decrease transmission rates have been identified. Hence, we performed a long-term prospective study in infants born to HCV-positive mothers, with the aim of evaluating vertical transmission of HCV and correlated risks factors. Methods: Three thousand one hundred and fifteen healthy asymptomatic pregnant women were included in the study. We used third-generation (Murex anti-HCV) ELISA and HCV RNA reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) for screening and the commercial line probe assay (Inno-LiPA) and direct sequencing HCV genotyping assays were performed to confirm the transmitted HCV genotypes. Results: Of the total 3115 healthy asymptomatic pregnant women, 18 (0.6%) were positive for anti-HCV. Of the 18 anti-HCV-positive women, eight (44.4%) were positive for HCV RNA RT-PCR. HCV transmission was observed in two of the eight babies born to eight HCV RNA-positive mothers who were followed up for 12 months. HCV genotyping of the mother/child pairs revealed the persistent presence of mixed genotypes 1a and 4 throughout the follow-up period. None of the non-viremic (HCV RNA-negative) mothers transmitted HCV infection to their baby. In our study approximately 25% of vertical/perinatal transmission of HCV was observed among HCV RNA-positive antenatal women. Conclusions: This study is of importance as it is the first report from India of a successful attempt to analyze the rate of vertical/perinatal transmission of HCV from infected mothers to their children by a prospective longitudinal follow-up study and to characterize the pattern of genotype(s) of HCV present in the infected mother/baby pairs, so as to confirm the source of HCV acquired by the newborn babies.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Science.
Keywords:Hepatitis C Virus; Mother-to-child Transmission (MTCT); HCV Genotypes; Vertical/Perinatal Transmission
ID Code:107444
Deposited On:24 Jul 2017 10:15
Last Modified:24 Jul 2017 10:15

Repository Staff Only: item control page