Existence of hepatitis B virus surface protein mutations and other variants: demand for hepatitis B infection control in Cambodia

Author:

Ko Ko,Takahashi Kazuaki,Nagashima Shintaro,Yamamoto Chikako,Ork Vichit,Sugiyama Aya,Akita Tomoyuki,Ohisa Masayuki,Chuon Channarena,Hossain Md. Shafiqul,Mao Bunsoth,Tanaka Junko

Abstract

Abstract Background This study aimed to detect Hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome sequences and their variants as of nationwide scale using dried blood spot (DBS) samples and to provide up-to-date reference data for infection control and surveillance in Cambodia. Method Among 2518 children age 5–7 years and their 2023 mothers participated in 2017 Cambodia nationwide sero-survey on hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) prevalence using multistage random sampling strategy, 95 mothers and 13 children positive to HBsAg were included in this study. HBV DNA was extracted from DBS, then performed polymerase chain reaction. HBV genotypes and potential variants were examined by partial and full length genomic analysis. Results HBsAg positive rate was 4.7% (95/2023) in mothers and 0.52% (13/2518) in their children. Genotype C (80.49%) was abundantly found throughout the whole Cambodia whilst genotype B (19.51%) was exclusively found in regions bordering Vietnam. S gene mutants of HBV were found in 24.29% of mothers and 16.67% of children with HBV DNA positive sera. Full-length genome analysis revealed the homology of 99.62–100% in each mother-child pair. Genotype B was clarified to recombinant genotype B4/C2 and B2/C2. Double (48.39%) and combination mutation (32.26%) were observed in core promoter region of HBV C1 strains. Conclusions This study showed the capable of DBS for large-scale molecular epidemiological study of HBV in resource limited countries. Full-genome sequences yield the better understanding of sub-genotypes, their variants and the degree of homology between strains isolated from mother-child pairs calls for effective strategies on prevention, control and surveillance of mother-to-child HBV transmission in Cambodia.

Funder

Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Japan

Project Research Centre for epidemiology and prevention of viral hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma, Hiroshima University, Japan

World Health Organization: The Expanded Programme on Immunization

Viral hepatitis Research Foundation of Japan

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases

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