Author:
BALOGUN M. A.,RAMSAY M. E.,PARRY J. V.,DONOVAN L.,ANDREWS N. J.,NEWHAM J. A.,CLIFFE S.,HARRIS K. A.,TEO C.-G.
Abstract
The prevalence and genetic diversity of hepatitis C infection in women attending antenatal
clinics in two regions of England was investigated to inform future surveillance and control
measures. Women booking into antenatal care are routinely offered a test for immunity to
rubella. Serum residues from these tests were unlinked, anonymized and archived as part of the
Unlinked Anonymous Prevalence Monitoring Programme (UAPMP). The serum specimens
were tested for anti-HCV using a cost-effective pooling strategy. After taking into account
differential sampling from the UAPMP serum archive, the adjusted overall prevalence of anti-HCV
was 0·43% (95% CI: 0·32–0·53) in London and 0·21% (95% CI: 0·14–0·28) in the
Northern and Yorkshire region. Restriction fragment length polymorphism of amplified HCV
RNA identified type 3a as the most common HCV genotype in these antenatal women. The
prevalence of anti-HCV in antenatal women in the UK is low and consistent with that
expected from injecting drug use.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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