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Occupational exposure and hepatitis C
Clinical bottom line
Occupational exposure to
blood, including needlestick injuries, is a risk factor for
hepatitis C.
Reference
LJ Yee et al.
Risk factors for acquisition of hepatitis C virus infection: a
case series and potential implication for disease surveillance.
BMC Infectious Diseases 2001 1: 8 ( ).
Study
This study examined risk
factors for acquisition of hepatitis C virus infection in the
United States [3]. Consecutive chronically infected Hepatitis C
Virus patients eligible for a clinical trial were recruited,
with HBV and HIV as specific exclusions, as was advanced liver
disease. A detailed questionnaire about risk factors was
completed during an interview with a single investigator.
Results
There were 148 patients (88
men, 60 women) aged 18 to 72 years (mean 45 years).Only 5% had
no known risk factor, and the most commonly found known risk
factors were injected drug use, sharing razors and toothbrushes,
body piercing, being a recipient of blood products, sexual
exposure and occupational exposure to blood in 48% to 32% of
cases. Tattooing was associated with 17% of cases.
Exposure to risk factors
differed greatly between men and women, with 92% of women having
body piercing (Figure 1).
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Most cases had more than one risk factor. Of
the 23 persons with a single risk factor 3 underwent
body piercing, and one had a needlestick exposure.
Comment
This study confirms the fact the
occupational exposure to blood carries a risk of
contracting hepatitis C. |
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Risk
factors for acquisition of hepatitis C virus infection:
a case series and potential implications for disease
surveillance
1Department
of Epidemiology and International Health, School of
Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham,
Birmingham, Alabama, 35294, USA
2Department of Medicine, Division of
Gastroenterology/Hepatology (UAB Liver Center), School
of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham,
Birmingham, Alabama, 35294, USA
3Infectious Disease Epidemiology Unit, London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E
7HT, United Kingdom
4Biostatistics Unit, Comprehensive Cancer
Center, The University of Alabama at Birmingham,
Birmingham, Alabama, 35294-0007, USA
5Division of Gastroenterology, Department of
Medicine, School of Medicine, The University of South
Alabama, Mobile Alabama, 36617-2293, USA
BMC Infectious Diseases 2001 1:8
© 2001
Yee et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Verbatim copying
and redistribution of this article are permitted in any
medium for any non-commercial purpose, provided this
notice is preserved along with the article's original
URL. For commercial use, contact info@biomedcentral.com
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Abstract
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Background
Transmission of hepatitis C vims (Hepatitis C Virus) is
strongly associated with use of contaminated blood
products and injection drugs. Other "non-parental" modes
of transmission including sexual activity have been
increasingly recognized. We examined risk factors for
acquiring Hepatitis C Virus in patients who were
referred to two tertiary care centers and enrolled in an
antiviral therapy protocol.
Methods
Interviews of 148 patients were
conducted apart from their physician evaluation using a
structured questionnaire covering demographics and risk
factors for Hepatitis C Virus acquisition.
Results
Risk factors (blood products,
injection/intranasal drugs, razor blades/ toothbrushes,
body/ear piercing, occupational exposure, sexual
activity) were identified in 141 (95.3%) of
participants; 23 (15.5%) had one (most frequently blood
or drug exposure), 41 (27.7%) had two, and 84 (53.4%)
had more than two risk factors. No patient reported
sexual activity as a sole risk factor. Body piercing
accounted for a high number of exposures in women. Men
were more likely to have exposure to street drugs but
less exposure to blood products than women. Blood
product exposure was less common in younger than older
Hepatitis C Virus patients.
Conclusion
One and often multiple risk factors
could be identified in nearly all Hepatitis C
Virus-infected patients seen in a referral practice.
None named sexual transmission as the sole risk factor.
The development of a more complete profile of factors
contributing to transmission of Hepatitis C Virus
infection may assist in clinical and preventive efforts.
The recognition of the potential presence of multiple
risk factors may have important implications in the
approach to Hepatitis C Virus surveillance, and
particularly the use of hierarchical algorithms in the
study of risk factors. |
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Background
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An estimated 4 million individuals in
the United States and 200 million people worldwide are
infected with the hepatitis C virus (Hepatitis C Virus)
. Infection with Hepatitis C Virus may lead to disabling
symptoms, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma and is
said to account for a significant proportion of
end-stage liver disease among Hepatitis C Virus-infected
individuals (incidence of 3.1 per 1000 person-years).
From 2010–2019, Hepatitis C Virus may lead to the loss
of 1.83 million years of life among those under 65, at a
societal cost of billions of dollars.
Blood-borne transmission of Hepatitis C
Virus infection is undisputed and reflected in the
prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus among injection drug
users (IDUs) and patients exposed to contaminated blood
products. Hepatitis C Virus infection has also been
linked to other exposures such as intranasal cocaine use
("snorting") , which probably promotes passage through
vessels of the nasal septum. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) data have highlighted sexual
exposure without other risk factors in 15–20% patients;
two-thirds had an anti-Hepatitis C Virus positive sexual
partner, but sexual practices appear to play a minor
role among IDUs. For a perspective on tertiary care
settings we inquired about the routes of infection in
referred patients. We aimed to examine the distribution
of risk factors for Hepatitis C Virus acquisition among
patients chronically infected with Hepatitis C Virus who
were seeking anti-viral treatment in a tertiary care
setting |
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Methods
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We recruited consecutive chronically
infected Hepatitis C Virus patients eligible for a trial
of interferon-alpha and ribavirin therapy at two
academic referral settings. They were selected from over
2500 patients referred to the University of Alabama at
Birmingham Liver Center and the University of South
Alabama Gastroenterology and Hepatology Division.
Concomitant HBV or HIV infection or advanced liver
disease (decompensated cirrhosis) were trial exclusion
criteria. Extensive data on demographic factors as well
as routes and estimated year of exposure to known
Hepatitis C Virus risk factors were gathered in an
interviewer-assisted questionnaire . Sexual exposure, in
the present study, was defined as having at least 1
sexual contact with an individual known or suspected to
have Hepatitis C Virus. One investigator (LJY) conducted
all interviews privately with assurance that data would
remain separate from medical records. To enhance recall,
questions were repeated with different phrasing.
Standard statistical methods including calculations of
prevalence, mean, median and standard deviation were
applied using SAS® software (Cary, NC). This
study was approved by the Institutional Review Board for
Human Use of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and
patients gave informed consent for the interviews. |
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Results
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Demographics
Patient age ranged from 18 to 72 years with the mean ±
SD of 45 ± 8.1 years and a median age of 44 years. Of
148 patients, 88 (59.5%) were males; 130 (88%) were
Caucasians and 18 (12%) were African-Americans; 126
(85%) had completed high school.
Frequency of risk
factors
Most patients (80%) reported more than
one potential exposure to Hepatitis C Virus. Only 7
individuals (4.7%) reported no risk factor. Injection
drug use was strongly associated with cocaine use (over
90% of individuals had both) and therefore they were
combined in the analysis. Among those who did not report
concomitant cocaine and injection drug use, the majority
reported only using injection drugs and as a result of
these small numbers, an analysis of cocaine as a sole
risk factor was precluded. Of the 23 persons with one
risk factor, 10 (43.5%) had received a transfusion, 7
(30.4%) used intravenous drugs or cocaine; 3 (13.0%)
underwent body/ear piercing, 2 (8.7%) shared razors and
toothbrushes, and 1(4.3%) had occupational exposure
(needle stick, and exposures to major amounts of blood,
as from work in an emergency room or administering first
aid at a construction site). In no case was sexual
activity reported as an independent risk factor.
Risk Factors and
demographic characteristics
Patients exposed to blood products
tended to be older while IDUs and patients with sexual
exposure or tattoos tended to be younger. Women reported
more risk factors than men. Exposure to blood products
was considerably more common in women than men and
exposure to intravenous drugs and intranasal cocaine
more common in men than women. Neither race nor
education was associated with the number of risk
factors.
Prevalence of
sexual exposure in conjunction with other risk factors
Sexual exposure was reported by 14 of
54 (25.9%) patients who had been tattooed, 33 of 53
(62.3%) who shared razors/tooth brushes, and 16 of 34
(47.1%) who received blood/blood products. |
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Discussion
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Numerous risk factors promote Hepatitis
C Virus acquisition, and multiple risk factors may be
present in a single individual. Infected persons cannot
be dichotomized into "injection drug users" and "blood
product recipients;" many in each group may have other
risk factors as well. Investigators pursuing research on
the origin or duration of Hepatitis C Virus infection by
sexual routes should consider multiplicity of exposure
in designing studies in various settings. For example,
blood contact from frequent sharing of razors could also
result in Hepatitis C Virus transmission.
The recent United States National
Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys III (NHANES
III), based on a random probability cluster sample,
found a high prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus among
African-Americans. In contrast, our patients were
recruited into an Hepatitis C Virus study protocol after
satisfying enrollment criteria, and African-Americans
were under-represented relative to the Birmingham city
and Alabama state populations. Less than 10% of our
population was uninsured and this demographic probably
more closely resembles those seen in offices of private
physicians than in other groups (such as a random
population sample). Because ongoing Hepatitis C Virus
awareness campaigns will likely bring increasing numbers
of Hepatitis C Virus patients to private physicians,
those physicians should be providing appropriate advice
on disease management (e.g., curtailing alcohol
consumption and consideration of antiviral therapy).
They may advise patients on preventing spread of the
virus, but also prevent excessive anxiety in this
respect. Under most circumstances transmission rates are
low, but all potential sources of transmission should be
discussed.
Currently in the United States for most
physicians in private practice, Hepatitis C Virus
patients frequently first present with abnormal alanine
amino transferase (ALT) levels or are found to be
Hepatitis C Virus positive as part of a routine health
check for life insurance or attempt to donate blood.
With the increased Hepatitis C Virus awareness
campaigns, however, it is plausible that an increasing
number of patients seen in physician offices are there
because they have a history of injection drug use or
have received at sometime in the past blood or blood
products and consequently over-represent the number of
individuals with known risk factors. It is also possible
that due to the exclusion criteria of our study (none
were HIV or HBV positive) those with "high risk" sexual
behaviors were excluded from this study. Addressing
these issues was out of the scope of the present case
series; however they should be addressed in future
protocols examining Hepatitis C Virus transmission in
specific "high-risk" groups such as those with a high
prevalence of HIV disease, or those who had Hepatitis C
Virus diagnosed in clinics for the treatment of sexually
transmitted diseases. A case-control comparison of
tertiary care and primary care clinic populations would
help clarify some of these issues.
Although blood transfusion was recently
reported to account for only 7% of Hepatitis C Virus
infections in the US, 40% of our patients received
transfusions. Many of these patients were identified in
Hepatitis C Virus-screening campaigns that focused on
recipients of transfusions before 1992, prior to the
introduction of more sensitive Hepatitis C Virus
testing. In our population the older age of recipients
of blood products compared with IDUs likely reflects a
cohort effect due to the relatively higher risk of
acquiring Hepatitis C Virus from blood transfusion in
the more distant past.
Sexual activity was not implicated as
an independent risk factor even after exclusion of
individuals exposed to blood or injection drugs. Other
studies, including those among spouses, have suggested
low sexual transmission of Hepatitis C Virus . Frequent
sharing of razors and toothbrushes among persons who
reported sexual exposure also belies the automatic
assumption of sexual transmission between a dually
infected couple. The assessment of risk remains
particularly difficult when comparing infrequent but
high-risk contact (e.g. parenteral exposure) with more
frequent but lower risk exposure such as sexual
activity. Even with our relatively general definition of
sexual exposure, we were unable to observe any
individuals with sexual contact as a sole risk factor.
Inability to test all current and/or past sexual
partners of individuals reporting sexual exposure
precluded definitive confirmation of partner Hepatitis C
Virus status. We were therefore unable to separate those
who had at least one reported sexual contact with a
person suspected of having Hepatitis C Virus from those
who had at least one sexual contact with a person known
to have Hepatitis C Virus. Factors like piercing and
tattooing may need to be refined into different levels
of risk depending upon the setting (e.g. service by an
unskilled individual versus a professional trained in
proper hygiene).
The multiplicity of risk factors
observed in our case series presents some important
ramifications with respect to disease surveillance. Many
of the disease surveillance networks employ a
hierarchical algorithm to determine routes for Hepatitis
C Virus acquisition when multiple risk factors are
present in individuals. While these hierarchies are
based on the presumed likelihood of transmission per
exposure, their use may potentially obscure the true
contribution of "lower risk" exposures. Clearly,
alternative methods of modeling risk factors should also
be considered. Most importantly, attributing Hepatitis C
Virus acquisition to "lower risk" behaviors such as
sexual exposure should be done with caution, and only
after exclusion of other risk factors, and in
particular, those of "higher risk," such as parenteral
contact. Detailed inquiry into risk factor exposure may
also increase accuracy in the ascertainment of the time
of Hepatitis C Virus acquisition. Accurate estimates of
the duration of infection have proved useful in
interpreting data on factors that influence rate of
disease progression. If a high number of individuals
have multiple risk factors, this may provide an
inappropriate picture of the true distributions of risk
factors and consequently, routes of acquisition.
In summary, identification of multiple
risk factors for Hepatitis C Virus infection may be
valuable for both individual patient assessment and
population studies. The presence of multiple risk
factors within individuals should also prompt us to
re-evaluate how we interpret and present surveillance
data. |
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Acknowledgements
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This study was supported by an
unrestricted grant in aid of hepatitis C research
provided by Schering-Plough /Integrated Therapeutics
Inc. to the UAB Liver Center (D.J.vL)
We would like to acknowledge the
support of the Alabama Hepatitis C Study Group: Joseph
R. Bloomer, Gary A. Abrams, Brendan M. McGuire, Michael
B. Fallon, Tracey Gwaltney, Emilie Barnett, Anita
Johnson, and Clint Nail.
We are grateful to the CDC Sentinel
Counties Surveillance System and the Vermont Hepatitis
Investigation for providing their questionnaires which
helped with developing our focused questionnaire.
This study was presented, in part, at
the 10th International Symposium on Viral
Hepatitis and Liver Disease in Atlanta, Georgia, USA,
April 12, 2000. |
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Table
1A
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Number
of known risk factors in 148 patients with chronic
hepatitis C infection evaluated at two Alabama tertiary
care medical centers. A. Number and % of patients
exposed to each risk factor (includes multiple
exposures)*
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KNOWN RISK FACTOR |
N (%) |
REFERENCES |
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No known risk factor |
7 (4.7) |
— |
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Injection Drug or intranasal cocaine use |
71 (48) |
7 |
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Sharing of razors and toothbrushes |
65 (44) |
17,18 |
|
Body/ear piercing |
63 (42.6) |
7,17 |
|
Recipient of blood (products) before 1992 |
62 (41.9) |
7, 19, 20 |
|
Sexual exposure |
55 (37.2) |
1,8 |
|
Occupational exposure to blood |
47 (31.8) |
21 |
|
Tattooing |
25 (16.9) |
17,22,23 |
|
Hemodialysis |
0 (0) |
24,21 |
|
Acupuncture |
0 (0) |
25,26 |
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*For
example, if an individual has exposure to both blood
products and tattooing, they are counted under
"Tattooing" as well as "Recipient of blood (products)
before 1992" |
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Table
1B
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B.
Number and % of the 148 patients exposed to successively
higher numbers of different risk factors simultaneously
(frequency of multiple risk factors).
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NO. RISK FACTORS |
NO. PATIENTS (%) |
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No known risk factor |
7 (4.7) |
|
1 |
23 (15.5) |
|
2 |
41 (27.7) |
|
3 |
38 (25.7) |
|
4 |
21 (14.2) |
|
5 |
13 (8.8) |
|
6 |
5 (3.4) |
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Table
2
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Number
and % of 148 patients with risk factors for Hepatitis C
Virus infection at two Alabama tertiary care medical
centers, stratified by age, gender and race.
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RISK FACTOR |
BY AGE |
BY GENDER |
BY RACE |
|
|
≤ 45 |
>45 |
Male |
Female |
White |
Black |
|
|
N (%) |
N (%) |
N (%) |
N (%) |
N(%) |
N (%) |
|
|
N = 88 |
N = 60 |
N = 88 |
N = 60 |
N = 130 |
N = 18 |
|
|
|
Blood/Blood Prod |
29 (33.0) |
32 (53.3) |
22 (25) |
40 (66.7) |
54 (41.5) |
7 (38.9) |
|
Drug Use |
52 (59.0) |
19 (31.7) |
57 (64.8) |
14 (23.3) |
60 (46.2) |
11 (61.1) |
|
Body/Ear Piercing |
45 (51.1) |
28 (46.7) |
18 (20.5) |
55 (91.7) |
61 (46.9) |
11 (61.1) |
|
Occupational |
31 (35.2) |
16 (26.7) |
26 (29.5) |
21 (35.0) |
37 (28.5) |
10 (55.6) |
|
Tattooing |
18 (20.5) |
7 (11.7) |
18 (20.5) |
7 (11.7) |
24 (18.5) |
1 (5.6) |
|
Sexual Exposure |
42 (47.7) |
13 (21.7) |
62 (70.5) |
23 (38.3) |
50 (38.5) |
5 (27.7) |
|
Sharing of razors/ |
42 (47.7) |
23 (38.3) |
36 (40.9) |
29 (48.3) |
56 (43.1) |
9 (50) |
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