International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 13, Issue 1 , Pages 9-19, January 2009

Hepatitis B and hepatitis C in Pakistan: prevalence and risk factors

  • Syed Asad Ali

      Affiliations

    • Institute for Global Health, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 2525 West End Ave., Suite 750, Nashville, Tennessee, 37203-1738, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 615 322 9374; fax: +1 615 343 7797.
  • ,
  • Rafe M.J. Donahue

      Affiliations

    • Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA
  • ,
  • Huma Qureshi

      Affiliations

    • Pakistan Medical Research Council, Islamabad, Pakistan
  • ,
  • Sten H. Vermund

      Affiliations

    • Institute for Global Health, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 2525 West End Ave., Suite 750, Nashville, Tennessee, 37203-1738, USA

Received 16 January 2008; accepted 20 June 2008. published online 03 October 2008.

Corresponding Editor: William Cameron, Ottawa, Canada

Summary 

Background

Pakistan carries one of the world’s highest burdens of chronic hepatitis and mortality due to liver failure and hepatocellular carcinomas. However, national level estimates of the prevalence of and risk factors for hepatitis B and hepatitis C are currently not available.

Methods

We reviewed the medical and public health literature over a 13-year period (January 1994–September 2007) to estimate the prevalence of active hepatitis B and chronic hepatitis C in Pakistan, analyzing data separately for the general and high-risk populations and for each of the four provinces. We included 84 publications with 139 studies (42 studies had two or more sub-studies).

Results

Methodological differences in studies made it inappropriate to conduct a formal meta-analysis to determine accurate national prevalence estimates, but we estimated the likely range of prevalence in different population sub-groups. A weighted average of hepatitis B antigen prevalence in pediatric populations was 2.4% (range 1.7–5.5%) and for hepatitis C antibody was 2.1% (range 0.4–5.4%). A weighted average of hepatitis B antigen prevalence among healthy adults (blood donors and non-donors) was 2.4% (range 1.4–11.0%) and for hepatitis C antibody was 3.0% (range 0.3–31.9%). Rates in the high-risk subgroups were far higher.

Conclusions

Data suggest a moderate to high prevalence of hepatitis B and hepatitis C in different areas of Pakistan. The published literature on the modes of transmission of hepatitis B and hepatitis C in Pakistan implicate contaminated needle use in medical care and drug abuse and unsafe blood and blood product transfusion as the major causal factors.

Keywords: Hepatitis, Hepatitis B virus, Hepatitis C virus, Pakistan, Injection

 

 This work was presented in part at the St. Jude/PIDS Pediatric Microbial Research Conference, February 9–10, 2007, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.

PII: S1201-9712(08)01420-3

doi:10.1016/j.ijid.2008.06.019

International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume 13, Issue 1 , Pages 9-19, January 2009