Markers of Viral Infection in Haemophiliacs
Keywords:
People with haemophilia (PWH), Blood borne viruses, HBV, HCV, HIV.Abstract
Seroprevalence of Hepatitis B surface antigen (HbsAg), anti-HCV IgG and anti-HIV IgG was determined in 100 people with
Haemophilia (PWH), registered with Haemophilia Patient Welfare Society (HPWS), Lahore Zone, Pakistan. The study shows
that none of the PWH were infected with HIV whereas a modest 4% were positive for HbsAg. However, there was a high
level of anti-HCV seropositivity (56%) in our PWH, including many patients in younger age groups. When compared with
figures from PWH in other regions of Asia like 23% in Western India, 33% in Sri Lanka and 15% of those in Iran, this figure
is one of the highest. This rate is a reflection of the same rising trend in our population that is now exceeding 10%. The
practice of unscreened blood/blood-products transfusions in the backdrop of high prevalence of HCV in our population is
responsible for high figures seen in PWH. The need is to increase awareness level amongst the patients, health care worker
and policy makers about these transfusion associated viral infections in a group of patients who already had a hereditary
disorder of severe nature.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Readers may “Share-copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format” and “Adapt-remix, transform, and build upon the material”. The readers must give appropriate credit to the source of the material and indicate if changes were made to the material. Readers may not use the material for commercial purpose. The readers may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.