New Page 2 Afro-Egypt J Infect Endem Dis 2018 December ; 8(4):189
Risk Factors of Hepatitis C in the Suez Canal Region, Egypt
Hesham El-Sayed1, Sohair Mehanna2, Adel Hassan3, Mahmoud Sheded4, Shaimaa Sahmoud1, Samar Elfiky1, Zeinab Khadr2
1Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal University, Egypt.
2Social Research Center, American University in Cairo, Egypt.
3Department of Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Suez Canal University, Egypt. 4Department of Endemic and Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, Suez University, Egypt.
ahadel2001@yahoo.com
ABSTRACT
Background and study aim: Egypt has very high prevalence of Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection Aim: To identify possible risk factors of HCV in Suez Canal region of Egypt.
Materials and Methods: HCV positive individuals in 5 different hospitals and control blood donors were subjected to anti HCV tests and interview questionnaire to identify risk factors.
Results: A total of 1176 subjects were studied for HCV, of which 539 were HCV-positive and637 HCV-negative donors. Subjects who achieved less than university education, unemployed or gaining less than 600 Egyptian pounds monthly had an increased risk of HCV (OR= 4.18, CI3.28-5.34, p 0.000), (OR= 3.26, CI 2.55-4.16, p 0.000), and (OR= 3.32, CI 2.59-4.26, p 0.000). Informal male circumcision doubled the risk of HCV (OR= 2.08, CI 1.53-2.83, p 0.000). Shaving at a barber and sharing razors increased HCV risk 2 times, while sharing tooth brushes increased it 7 times (OR = 7.23, CI 2.74-18.79, p 0.000). HCV risk increased after endoscopy (OR =3.62, CI2.02-6.52, p 0.000), blood transfusion (OR 3.47, CI 2.18-5.54, p 0.000), and injection treatment(OR= 1.41, CI 1.02-1.95, p 0.040). Any delivery and dental care in governmental clinic were independent risk factors (OR 2.57, CI 1.25-5.30, 0.011), (OR 1.46, CI 1.08-1.97, p 0.014). Schistosomiasis parenteral treatment doubled the HCV risk (OR= 2.09, CI 1.35-3.23, p 0.001) and chronic kidney disease patients were more at risk (OR= 2.95, CI 1.40-6.24, p 0.005).
Conclusion: Infection control in medical practice and behavioral modifications in this region is essential to prevent HCV transmission.