van Gageldonk-Lafeber Arianne B, van der Hoek Wim, Borlée Floor, Heederik Dick J J, Mooi Sofie H, Maassen Catharina B M, Yzermans C Joris, Rockx Barry, Smit Lidwien A M, Reimerink Johan H J
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, IRAS, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
BMC Infect Dis. 2017 Jan 5;17(1):21. doi: 10.1186/s12879-016-2160-4.
Recent serological studies indicate that hepatitis E virus (HEV) is endemic in industrialised countries. The increasing trend in the number of autochthonous cases of HEV genotype 3 in Western European countries, stresses the importance to get insight in the exact routes of exposure. Pigs are the main animal reservoir, and zoonotic food-borne transmission of HEV is proven. However, infected pigs can excrete large amounts of virus via their faeces enabling environmental transmission of HEV to humans. This might pose a risk for of neighbouring residents of livestock farming.
Within a large study on the health of people living in the vicinity of livestock farming we performed a cross-sectional population-based serological survey among 2,494 non-farming adults from the general population in a livestock-dense area in the south of the Netherlands. Participants completed risk factor questionnaires and blood samples of 2,422 subjects (median age 58 years, range 20-72) were tested for anti-HEV IgG using an enzyme immune assay (Wantai). The aim of this study was to determine the HEV seroprevalence and to assess whether seropositivity in adults was associated with living in the vicinity of pig farms.
The average seroprevalence of HEV was 28.7% (95% CI: 26.9-30.5). Determinants associated with an increased risk for HEV seropositivity were male gender and low level of education. There was a clear trend of increasing prevalence with increasing age (Chi-square test for linear trend, X = 83.1; p < 0.001). A high number of pigs within 1,000 m of the residential address was not a risk factor for seropositivity.
This study confirmed the high HEV seroprevalence (29%) in the general population of the Netherlands, but presence of antibodies was not associated with residential proximity to pig farms. The prevalence increased with age from 10% in adolescents to 33% among those aged 50 and above, supporting the assumption of a cumulative lifetime exposure to HEV in the Netherlands as well as a higher infection pressure in the past. Our findings cannot refute the assumption that transmission is primarily food-borne.
近期血清学研究表明,戊型肝炎病毒(HEV)在工业化国家呈地方性流行。西欧国家戊型肝炎病毒3型本土病例数量呈上升趋势,这凸显了深入了解确切暴露途径的重要性。猪是主要的动物宿主,并且戊型肝炎病毒通过食物进行人畜共患传播已得到证实。然而,受感染的猪可通过粪便排出大量病毒,从而使戊型肝炎病毒能够在环境中传播给人类。这可能给畜牧业附近的居民带来风险。
在一项关于生活在畜牧养殖附近人群健康状况的大型研究中,我们对荷兰南部畜牧密集地区2494名来自普通人群的非养殖成年人进行了基于人群的横断面血清学调查。参与者填写了风险因素问卷,并使用酶免疫法(万泰)对2422名受试者(中位年龄58岁,范围20 - 72岁)的血液样本进行了抗HEV IgG检测。本研究的目的是确定戊型肝炎病毒血清阳性率,并评估成年人血清阳性是否与居住在猪场附近有关。
戊型肝炎病毒的平均血清阳性率为28.7%(95%置信区间:26.9 - 30.5)。与戊型肝炎病毒血清阳性风险增加相关的因素是男性和低教育水平。随着年龄增长,患病率呈明显上升趋势(线性趋势卡方检验,X = 83.1;p < 0.001)。居住地址1000米范围内猪的数量较多并非血清阳性的风险因素。
本研究证实荷兰普通人群中戊型肝炎病毒血清阳性率较高(29%),但抗体的存在与居住在猪场附近无关。患病率随年龄增长而增加,从青少年中的10%增至50岁及以上人群中的33%,这支持了荷兰人群一生中累计接触戊型肝炎病毒的假设以及过去更高的感染压力。我们的研究结果不能反驳传播主要通过食物的假设。