10 resultados para GB virus C

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Objective. The aim of this study was to assess the independent risk of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The independent risk of hepatitis B virus (HBV), its interaction with hepatitis C virus and the association with other risk factors were examined.^ Methods. A hospital-based case-control study was conducted between January 1994 and December 1995. We enrolled 115 pathologically confirmed HCC patients and 230 nonliver cancer controls, who were matched by age ($\pm$5 years), gender, and year of diagnosis. Both cases and controls were recruited from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center at Houston. The risk factors were collected through personal interviews and blood samples were tested for HCV and HBV markers. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed through conditional logistic regression.^ The prevalence of anti-HCV positive is 25.2% in HCC cases compared to 3.0% in controls. The univariate analysis showed that anti-HCV, HBsAg, alcohol drinking and cigarette smoking were significantly associated with HCC, however, family history of cancer, occupational chemical exposure, and use of oral contraceptive were not. Multivariate analysis revealed a matched odds ratio (OR) of 10.1 (95% CI 3.7-27.4) for anti-HCV, and an OR of 11.9 (95% CI 2.5-57.5) for HBsAg. However, dual infection of HCV and HBV had only a thirteen times increase in the risk of HCC, OR = 13.9 (95% CI 1.3-150.6). The estimated population attributable risk percent was 23.4% for HCV, 12.6% for HBV, and 5.3% for both viruses. Ever alcohol drinkers was positively associated with HCC, especially among daily drinkers, matched OR was 5.7 (95% CI 2.1-15.6). However, there was no significant increase in the risk of HCC among smokers as compared to nonsmokers. The mean age of HCC patients was significantly younger among the HBV(+) group and among the HCV(+)/HBV(+) group, when compared to the group of HCC patients with no viral markers. The association between past histories of blood transfusion, acupuncture, tattoo and IVDU was highly significant among the HCV(+) group and the HBV(+)/HCV(+) group, as compared to HCC patients with no viral markers. Forty percent of the HCC patients were pathologically or clinically diagnosed with liver cirrhosis. Anti-HCV(+) (OR = 3.6 95% CI 1.5-8.9) and alcohol drinking (OR = 2.7 95% CI 1.1-6.7), but not HBsAg, are the major risk factors for liver cirrhosis in HCC patients.^ Conclusion. Both hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus were independent risk factors for HCC. There was not enough evidence to determine the interaction between both viruses. Only daily alcoholic drinkers showed increasing risk for HCC development, as compared to nondrinkers. ^

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Introduction. A vast majority of studies conducted in both developed and developing nations have focused on the epidemiology of HBV (Hepatitis B virus) and HCV (Hepatitis C virus) in high-risk populations; low-risk populations have been neglected. Recently Hwang et al conducted a unique large cross-sectional study in American university students that focused on cosmetic procedures and drug use for acquiring these infections among a low-risk young adult population In Houston. ^ Methods. This study is a secondary data analysis of the cross-sectional study conducted by Hwang et al. Data for this anonymous study were collected from 7,960 college students, among whom were the 2,561 non US/Canadian born students included in this study. All students completed a self-administered questionnaire and provided a blood sample. The epidemiology of HBV/HCV and risk factors for acquiring HBV/HCV infection was studied by comparing those with HBV/HCV infection versus those without. Both univariate and multivariate logistic regression was used to analyze the data. ^ Results. Overall prevalence of HBV and HCV infections were 22% and 0.8% respectively. By multivariable analysis, the factors that were independently associated with increased prevalence of HBV infection were increasing age per year (OR=1.06, 95% C.I=1.04-1.08), Black or Asian race (OR=6.21, 95% C.I=3.14-12.27), history of household contact with hepatitis (OR=1.87, 95% C.I=1.15-3.05), and having sexual partner with hepatitis (OR=5.20, 95% C.I=1.5-18.00). For HCV these factors included increasing age per year (OR= 1.08, 95% C.I=1.03-1.14), history of blood transfusion prior to 1991 (OR=25.45, 95% C.I=7.58-85.40), and Injection drug use. (OR=78.15, 95% C.I=12.19-500.85). Cosmetic procedures like tattooing were not significant risk factors for either HBV or HCV infection. ^ Conclusions. In a low-risk adult foreign born population, cosmetic procedures are not significant risk factors for HBV or HCV infection. The prevention strategies of these infections in this population should focus on safe sexual practices/abstinence and HBV vaccination should be provided to adolescents and sexually active adults. ^

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Background. There are 200,000 HIV/HCV co-infected people in the US and IDUs are at highest risk of exposure. Between 52-92% of HIV infected IDUs are chronically infected with HCV. African Americans and Hispanics bear the largest burden of co-infections. Furthermore HIV/HCV co-infection is associated with high morbidity and mortality if not treated. The present study investigates the demographic, sexual and drug related risk factors for HIV/HCV co-infection among predominantly African American injecting and non-injecting drug users living in two innercity neighborhoods in Houston, Texas. ^ Methods. This secondary analysis used data collected between February 2004 and June 2005 from 1,889 drug users. Three case-comparison analyses were conducted to investigate the risk factors for HIV/HCV co-infection. HIV mono-infection, HCV mono-infection and non-infection were compared to HIV/HCV co-infection to build multivariate logistic regression models. Race/ethnicity and age were forced into each model regardless of significance in the univariate analysis. ^ Results. The overall prevalence of HIV/HCV co-infection was 3.9% while 39.8% of HIV infected drug users were co-infected with HCV and 10.7% of HCV infected drug users were co-infected with HIV. Among HIV infected IDUs the prevalence of HCV was 71.7% and among HIV infected NIDUs the prevalence of HCV was 24%. In the multivariate analysis, HIV/HCV co-infection was associated with injecting drug use when compared to HIV mono-infection, with MSM when compared to HCV mono-infection and with injecting drug use as well as MSM when compared to non-infection. ^ Conclusion. HIV/HCV co-infection was associated with a combination of sexual and risky injecting practices. More data on the prevalence and risk factors for co-infection among minority populations is urgently needed to support the development of targeted interventions and treatment options. Additionally there should be a focus on promoting safer sex and injecting practices among drug users as well as the expansion of routine testing for HIV and HCV infections in this high risk population.^

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Background. Injecting drug users (IDUs) are at risk of infection with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). Independently, each of these viruses is a serious threat to health, with HIV ravaging the body’s immune system, and HCV causing cirrhosis, liver cancer and liver failure. Co-infection with HIV/HCV weakens the response to antiretroviral therapy in HIV patients. IDUs with HIV/HCV co-infection are at a 20 times higher risk of having liver-related morbidity and mortality than IDUs with HIV alone. In Vietnam, studies to ascertain the prevalence of HIV have found high rates, but little is known about their HCV status. ^ Purpose. To measure the prevalence of HCV and HIV infection and identify factors associated with these viruses among IDUs at drug treatment centers in northern Vietnam. ^ Methods. A cross-sectional study was conducted from November 2007 to February 2008 with 455 injecting drug users aged 18 to 39 years, admitted no more than two months earlier to one of four treatment centers in Northern Vietnam (Hatay Province) (response rate=95%). Participants, all of whom had completed detoxification and provided informed consent, completed a risk assessment questionnaire and had their blood drawn to test for the presence of antibody-HCV and antibody-HIV with enzyme immuno assays. Univariate and multivariable logistic regression models were utilized to explore the strength of association using HIV, HCV infections and HIV/HCV co-infection as outcomes and demographic characteristics, drug use and sexual behaviors as factors associated with these outcomes. Unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated. ^ Results. Among all IDU study participants, the prevalence of HCV alone was 76.9%, HIV alone was 19.8%. The prevalence of HIV/HCV co-infection was 92.2% of HIV-positive and 23.7% of HCV-positive respondents. No sexual risk behaviors for lifetime, six months or 30 days prior to admission were significantly associated with HCV or HIV infection among these IDUs. Only duration of injection drug use was independently associated with HCV and HIV infection, respectively. Longer duration was associated with higher prevalence. Nevertheless, while HCV infection among IDUs who reported being in their first year of injecting drugs were lower than longer time injectors, their rates were still substantial, 67.5%. ^ Compared with either HCV mono-infection or HIV/HCV non-infection, HIV/HCV co-infection was associated with the length of drug injection history but was not associated with sexual behaviors. Higher education was associated with a lower prevalence of HIV/HCV co-infection. When compared with HIV/HCV non-infection, current marriage was associated with a lower prevalence of HIV/HCV co-infection. ^ Conclusions. HCV was prevalent among IDUs from 18 to 39 years old at four drug treatment centers in northern Vietnam. Co-infection with HCV was predominant among HIV-positive IDUs. HCV and HIV co-infection were closely associated with the length of injection drug history. Further research regarding HCV/HIV co-infection should include non-injecting drug users to assess the magnitude of sexual risk behaviors on HIV and HCV infection. (At these treatment centers non-IDUs constituted 10-20% of the population.) High prevalence of HCV prevalence among IDUs, especially among HIV-infected IDUs, suggests that drug treatment centers serving IDUs should include not only HIV prevention education but they should also include the prevention of viral hepatitis. In addition, IDUs who are HIV-positive need to be tested for HCV to receive the best course of therapy and achieve the best response to HIV treatment. These data also suggest that because many IDUs get infected with HCV in the first year of their injection drug career, and because they also engaged in high risk sexual behaviors, outreach programs should focus on harm reduction, safer drug use and sexual practices to prevent infection among drug users who have not yet begun injecting drugs and to prevent further spread of HCV, HIV and co-infection. ^

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Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous human herpesvirus associated with many malignant and nonmalignant human diseases. Life-long latent EBV persistence occurs in blood-borne B lymphocytes, while EBV intermittently productively replicates in mucosal epithelia. Although several models have previously been proposed, the mechanism of EBV transition between these two reservoirs of infection has not been determined. In this study, we present the first evidence demonstrating that EBV latently infects a unique subset of blood-borne mononuclear cells that are direct precursors to Langerhans cells and that EBV both latently and productively infects oral epithelium-resident cells that are likely Langerhans cells. These data form the basis of a proposed new model of EBV transition from blood to oral epithelium in which EBV-infected Langerhans cell precursors serve to transport EBV to the oral epithelium as they migrate and differentiate into oral Langerhans cells. This new model contributes fresh insight into the natural history of EBV infection and the pathogenesis of EBV-associated epithelial disease.

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Lautropia mirabilis, a pleomorphic, motile, gram-negative coccus, has been isolated from the oral cavities of 32 of 60 (53.3%) children infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and 3 of 25 (12.0%) HIV-uninfected controls; the association of L. mirabilis isolation with HIV infection is significant (P < 0.001). All children in the study, both HIV-infected children and controls, were born to HIV-infected mothers. The presence of this bacterium was not associated with clinical disease in these children. The HIV-infected children with L. mirabilis did not differ from the HIV-infected children without L. mirabilis in immunological status, clinical status, or systemic medications. The role of HIV infection itself or concomitant factors in the establishment of L. mirabilis in the oral cavity remains to be elucidated.

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Productive Epstein‐Barr virus (EBV) replication characterizes hairy leukoplakia, an oral epithelial lesion typically occurring in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Serial tongue biopsy specimens were obtained from HIV‐infected subjects before, during, and after valacyclovir treatment. EBV replication was detected by Southern hybridization to linear terminal EBV genome fragments, reverse‐transcriptase polymerase chain reaction amplification of EBV replicative gene transcripts, immunohistochemical detection of EBV replicative protein, and in situ hybridization to EBV DNA. EBV replication was detected in both hairy leukoplakia and normal tongue tissues. Valacyclovir treatment completely abrogated EBV replication in vivo, resulting in resolution of hairy leukoplakia when it was present. EBV replication returned in normal tongue epithelial cells after valacyclovir treatment. These data suggest that normal oral epithelium supports persistent EBV infection in individuals infected with HIV and that productive EBV replication is necessary but not sufficient for the pathogenesis of oral hairy leukoplakia.

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The shuttle vector plasmid pZ189 was used to find the kinds of mutations that are induced by herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1). In cells infected by HSV-1 the frequency of mutation in supF gene, the mutagenesis marker, was increased over background by from two- to seven-fold, reaching 0.14-0.45%. No increase was induced by infection by vaccinia virus under the same conditions. Mutagenesis was an early event, showing a four-fold increase in mutation frequency at only two hours after infection, and peaking at a seven-fold increase at four hours after infection. DNA sequencing and gel electrophoresis analysis were performed on 105 HSV-1 induced mutants and 65 spontaneous mutants and provided the following information: (1) A change in plasmid size was seen in 54% of HSV-1 related mutants, compared with only 37% of spontaneous mutants. (2) Among point mutations, the predominant type was G:C to A:T transition, which accounted for 51% of point mutations in mutants isolated from cells infected with HSV-1, and 32% of point mutations in spontaneous mutants. (3) Deletions of DNA were seen in HSV-1 related mutants at a frequency of 40%, compared with 29% in spontaneous mutants. The HSV-1 related deletions were about half the length of spontaneous mutants and three contained short filler sequences. (4) Fifteen (15%) of HSV-1 induced mutants revealed the altered restriction patterns on agarose gel electrophoresis analysis and were due either to rearrangements of plasmid DNA, and/or to insertion of sequences derived from chromosomal DNA (seven plasmids). No insertions of DNA from HSV-1 were detected. Among spontaneous mutants, only 5 (7.7%) were rearrangements and none had inserted chromosomal DNA. (5) DNA sequence analysis of seven plasmids with inserted chromosomal DNA revealed that four cases had repetitive DNA sequences integrated and the other three were unidentified sequences from the GenBank database. Three repetitive DNA included $\alpha$ satellite, Alu and KpnI family sequences. The other sequence was identified as tRNA-like component. The observed mutations have implications for the mechanism of malignant transformation of cells by HSV-1. ^

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Rubella virus (RV) typically causes a mild childhood illness, but complications can result from both viral and immune-mediated pathogenesis. RV can persist in the presence of neutralizing antibodies, suggesting that cell-mediated immune responses may be necessary for viral clearance. However, the molecular determinants recognized by RV-specific T-cells have not been identified. Using recombinant proteins which express the entire RV structural open reading frame in proliferation assays with lymphocytes of RV-immune individuals, domains which elicit major histocompatibility complex class II-restricted helper T-cells were identified. Synthetic peptides representing these domains were used to define specific epitopes. Two immunodominant domains were mapped to the capsid protein sequence C$\sb1$-C$\sb{29}$ and the E1 glycoprotein sequence E1$\sb{202}$-E1$\sb{283}.$ RV-specific MHC class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) were identified using a chromium-release assay with infected fibroblasts as target cells. An infectious Sindbis virus vector expressing each of the RV structural proteins identified the capsid, E2 and E1 proteins as targets of CTLs. Specific CTL epitopes were mapped within the previously identified immunodominant domains. This study identified domains of the RV structural proteins that may be beneficial for development of a synthetic vaccine, and provides normative data on RV-specific T-cell responses that should enhance our ability to understand RV persistence and associated complications. ^

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The origin and structure of P55$\sp{\rm gag},$ a gag encoded polyprotein lacking the nucleocapsid protein, NCp10, have been explored. Evidence shows that P55$\sp{\rm gag}$ is formed by non-viral proteolytic cleavage of the Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMuLV)gag precursor protein, Pr65$\sp{\rm gag}.$ P55$\sp{\rm gag}$ is produced in cells infected by a viral protease deletion mutant and by a recombinant murine sarcoma virus known to lack the protease gene, implying that a cellular protease is responsible for the cleavage. Structural and immunological studies show that the protein cleavage site is upstream of the CAp30-NCp10 viral proteolytic junction, implying that P55$\sp{\rm gag}$ lacks the carboxy-terminal residues of CAp30. During the course of studying P55$\sp{\rm gag},$ another protein was discovered, which I named nucleocapsid-related protein(NCRP). NCRP possesses the portion of CAp30 that is lacking in P55$\sp{\rm gag}.$ NCRP possesses antigenic epitopes present in CAp30 and NCp10. NCRP was observed in virus lysates and in nuclear lysates of MoMuLV infected cells; it was not detected in the cytoplasmic fractions of MoMuLV infected cells. Our results indicated that NCRP originates from Pr65$\sp{\rm gag},$ resulting from the same cellular proteolytic cleavage event that produces the viral cellular protein P55$\sp{\rm gag}.$ P55$\sp{\rm gag}$- and NCRP-like proteins also were observed in AKV murine leukemia virus (AKV MuLV) and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) infected cells and in their respective virus particles. The site of cleavage that yields P55$\sp{\rm gag}$ and NCRP is within the carboxy terminus of CAp30, likely within a motif highly conserved among mammalian type C retroviruses. This new motif, called the capsid conserved motif (CCM), overlaps a region containing both a possible bipartite nuclear targeting sequence and a region homologous with the U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein 70-kD protein. This domain, when intact, may act as a nuclear targeting sequence for the gag precursor proteins Pr65$\sp{\rm gag}$ and CAp30. Nuclei of cells infected with MoMuLV were examined for the presence of gag proteins. Both Pr65$\sp{\rm gag}$ and CAp30 were detected in the nuclear fraction of MoMuLV, AKV MuLV and FeLV infected cells. P55$\sp{\rm gag}$ was never detected in the nucleus of MoMuLV, AKV MuLV and FeLV infected cells or in their respective virus particles. I propose that NCRP may be involved in sequestering viral genomic RNA for the purposes of encapsidation and intracellular viral genomic RNA dimerization. ^