• Medicine · Jan 2021

    Hepatitis C virus genotype and subtype distribution among ethnic minorities in Liaoning Province of China.

    • Rongkuan Li, Ying Xie, Wenzhi Liu, and Yu Ma.
    • Department of Infectious Disease, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Dalian Medical University, Dalian.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2021 Jan 15; 100 (2): e24137e24137.

    AbstractTo provide information and a basis for improved hepatitis C prevention and treatment, we aimed to determine the distribution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotypes among patients with hepatitis C from 4 ethnic minorities in Liaoning Province of China over the past 8 years and analyze and explore the virus' genotype evolution and possible clinical significance.For gene-sequencing, we collected peripheral blood samples of HCV-infected patients belonging to the Korean, Hui, Mongol, and Manchu ethnic minorities in Liaoning Province who were diagnosed at the Second Hospital of Dalian Medical University, Anshan Central Hospital, and the Second People's Hospital of Fuxin City between November 2011 and November 2019. To analyze genotype evolution and possible influencing factors, we determined the ratio of various genotypes. Among the 102 HCV-infected patients from 4 ethnic minorities in Liaoning Province, 46 had gene typing (GT)1b (45.10%), 15 had GT2a (14.71%), 14 had GT3a (13.73%), 13 had GT6a (12.75%), 3 had GT1a (2.94%), and 11 had an unclassified genotype (10.78%). The distribution of various genotypes in the Korean, Mongol, and Manchu ethnic minorities was significantly different (χ2 = 10.788, P = .029; χ2 = 7.846, P = .049; and χ2 = 22.400, P = .000, respectively). All ethnic minorities exhibited >40% of GT1b. In the Korean (14/33) and Manchu (14/30) ethnic minorities, the proportion of GT1b was significantly higher than those of other genotypes (P < .05). The ethnic Koreans had a high proportion of GT3a (18.18%, 6/33), whereas the ethnic Mongolians had a high proportion of GT6a (23.08%, 6/26). GT1a was only found in the Korean (6.06%, 2/33) and Manchu (3.33%, 1/30) ethnic minorities; in the Hui ethnic minority, only 3 genotypes were prevalent: GT1b, GT2, and GT3a. The ethnic minorities in Liaoning Province currently have diverse HCV genotypes; the most prevalent genotype is GT1b, followed by GT2a and GT3a, and the prevalence of GT3 and GT6 has increased. The distribution of HCV genotypes varies across different ethnic minorities. The Korean and Manchu ethnic minorities have the most prevalent genotypes, whereas the Hui ethnic minority has a relatively single distribution of the HCV genotype.Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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