Prevalence of Hepatitis B and C Viruses among Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infected Children Attending an Antiretroviral Therapy Clinic in Lafia, Nigeria

Authors

  • Pennap GR Department of Microbiology, Nasarawa State University Keffi, Nigeria
  • Yahuza AJ Department of Microbiology, Nasarawa State University Keffi, Nigeria
  • Abdulkarim ML Department of Microbiology, Nasarawa State University Keffi, Nigeria
  • Oti VB Department of Microbiology, Nasarawa State University Keffi, Nigeria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18488/journal.33/2016.3.4/33.4.38.43

Abstract

Nigeria has the largest burden of children living with HIV in the world but because of antiretroviral therapy, they are living longer. However, hepatitis B and C viruses are emerging important co-morbidities to consider especially for management decisions. This study set out to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B and C viruses among these children and to identify possible risk factors associated with the infections. Two hundred HIV-infected children at an antiretroviral treatment center were screened for Hepatitis B and C seromarkers using rapid test kits (ABCON Laboratories Hangzhou China). Informed written consent was obtained from their parents/guardian and information on their sociodemographics and exposure to some possible risk factors were obtained. A general prevalence of infection with hepatitis B and C virus in the study population was 14.0%. The prevalence of HBV was 3.0% while HCV was 11.0% and no child was coinfected with all 3 viruses. The HIV/HBV and HIV/HCV coinfection prevalence of 3.0% and 11.0% respectively is a cause for alarm. It is therefore pertinent that HIV infected children are screened for these viruses before commencement and during antiretroviral therapy.

Keywords:

HBV, HCV, HIV, Seroprevalence, Children

Abstract Video

Published

2017-01-09

How to Cite

GR, P. ., AJ, Y. ., ML, A. ., & VB, O. . (2017). Prevalence of Hepatitis B and C Viruses among Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infected Children Attending an Antiretroviral Therapy Clinic in Lafia, Nigeria. The Asia Journal of Applied Microbiology, 3(4), 38–43. https://doi.org/10.18488/journal.33/2016.3.4/33.4.38.43

Issue

Section

Articles