A systematic review of hepatitis C virus epidemiology in Europe, Canada and Israel.
Cornberg, Markus 1; Razavi, Homie A. 2; Alberti, Alfredo 3; Bernasconi, Enos 4; Buti, Maria 5,6; Cooper, Curtis 7; Dalgard, Olav 8; Dillion, John F. 9; Flisiak, Robert 10; Forns, Xavier 11; Frankova, Sona 12; Goldis, Adrian 13; Goulis, Ioannis 14; Halota, Waldemar 15; Hunyady, Bela 16,17; Lagging, Martin 18; Largen, Angela 2; Makara, Michael 19; Manolakopoulos, Spilios 20; Marcellin, Patrick 21; Marinho, Rui T. 22; Pol, Stanislas 23; Poynard, Thierry 24; Puoti, Massimo 25; Sagalova, Olga 26; Sibbel, Scott 2; Simon, Krzysztof 27; Wallace, Carolyn 2; Young, Kendra 2; Yurdaydin, Cihan 28; Zuckerman, Eli 29; Negro, Francesco 30; Zeuzem, Stefan 31
[Article]
Liver International.
31 Suppl. 2:30-60, July 2011.
(Format: HTML, PDF)
Background and Aim: Decisions on public health issues are dependent on reliable epidemiological data. A comprehensive review of the literature was used to gather country-specific data on risk factors, prevalence, number of diagnosed individuals and genotype distribution of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in selected European countries, Canada and Israel.
Methodology: Data references were identified through indexed journals and non-indexed sources. In this work, 13 000 articles were reviewed and 860 were selected based on their relevance.
Results: Differences in prevalence were explained by local and regional variances in transmission routes or different public health measures. The lowest HCV prevalence (<=0.5%) estimates were from northern European countries and the highest (>=3%) were from Romania and rural areas in Greece, Italy and Russia. The main risk for HCV transmission in countries with well-established HCV screening programmes and lower HCV prevalence was injection drug use, which was associated with younger age at the time of infection and a higher infection rate among males. In other regions, contaminated glass syringes and nosocomial infections continue to play an important role in new infections. Immigration from endemic countries was another factor impacting the total number of infections and the genotype distribution. Approximately 70% of cases in Israel, 37% in Germany and 33% in Switzerland were not born in the country. In summary, HCV epidemiology shows a high variability across Europe, Canada and Israel.
Conclusion: Despite the eradication of transmission by blood products, HCV infection continues to be one of the leading blood-borne infections in the region.
Copyright (C) 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.