Abstract
Introduction: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) / hepatitis B virus (HBV) causes higher rates of liver disease compared to infection with just one virus. Co-infection can accelerate the progression to liver fibrosis or hepatocellular carcinoma and disturb the treatment response. APOBEC3G is a host defense factor which interferes with HIV-1 and HBV. We aimed to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) among HIV-infected patients and seronegative controls, and screen the HIV/HBV population for APOBEC3G variants rs8177832, rs35228531 and rs2294367, previously associated with HIV-1 infection susceptibility in Morocco.
Methodology: A case control study was conducted on 404 individuals (204 HIV-infected and 200 eligible blood donors) from April to November 2021. HBsAg was measured on the Roche Cobas e411 automatic analyzer (Roche Diagnostics, Basel, Switzerland) and APOBEC3G polymorphisms were identified using the TaqMan genotyping allelic discrimination method. Fisher Exact test, odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI), and haplotype frequencies were calculated.
Results: Of the 204 HIV-1 seropositive patients and 200 controls, 4.9% (95%CI: 2.38-8.83) and 2.50% (95% CI: 0.82-5.74) were HBsAg-positive respectively. There was a significant association between increasing age (> 40 years) and HBV infection among controls (p = 0.04). The distribution of genotypes and alleles frequencies of APOBEC3G variants was heterogenous and five different haplotypes with frequencies ≥ 5% were obtained, of which ACC (rs8177832, rs35228531, rs2294367) was the most prevalent.
Conclusions: HBV co-infection is common among HIV-1 infected individuals in Morocco. Efforts should be made to prevent, treat and control HBV transmission in this population.
Publisher
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries