Koroglu Mehmet, Jacobsen Kathryn H, Demiray Tayfur, Ozbek Ahmet, Erkorkmaz Unal, Altindis Mustafa
Department of Medical Microbiology, School of Medicine, Sakarya University, Sakarya, Turkey.
Department of Global and Community Health, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA.
J Infect Public Health. 2017 Sep-Oct;10(5):513-517. doi: 10.1016/j.jiph.2016.09.020. Epub 2017 Feb 2.
The goal of this analysis was to examine the association between age-specific hepatitis A virus (HAV) seroprevalence rates and various socioeconomic indicators within the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. We conducted a systematic review of all recently published studies on HAV conducted in the MENA region and identified the highest quality studies for inclusion in our analysis. We calculated the age at midpoint of population immunity (AMPI) for each study and estimated seroprevalence rates at the ages of 5, 10, and 15 years. Next, we identified the correlations between these metrics and several socioeconomic variables. HAV data collected in or after 2000 were available for 14 of the 19 countries in the MENA region. Four of the 14 included countries had intermediate HAV endemicity (Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and UAE), five had high endemicity (Iran, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia), and five had very high endemicity (Egypt, Iraq, Palestine, Syria, and Yemen). Water and sanitation were not significant predictors of AMPI or seroprevalence, most likely because most countries in this region have high rates of access to these utilities. However, gross domestic product (GDP), gross national income (GNI), and the human development index (HDI) were all highly associated with AMPI and prevalence. The observed correlations suggest that of the MENA countries without recent HAV data, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar most likely have low endemicity, Oman likely has intermediate endemicity, and Libya likely has high endemicity. While it is unlikely that a single correlation model would be suitable for use in all world regions, the approach utilized in this analysis might provide a simple but accurate method for using economic data to impute the endemicity profiles of countries without recent data in regions where at least several neighboring countries have conducted recent serostudies.
本分析的目的是研究中东和北非(MENA)地区特定年龄的甲型肝炎病毒(HAV)血清流行率与各种社会经济指标之间的关联。我们对MENA地区最近发表的所有关于HAV的研究进行了系统综述,并确定了纳入我们分析的质量最高的研究。我们计算了每项研究的群体免疫中点年龄(AMPI),并估计了5岁、10岁和15岁时的血清流行率。接下来,我们确定了这些指标与几个社会经济变量之间的相关性。MENA地区19个国家中有14个国家提供了2000年或之后收集的HAV数据。纳入的14个国家中有4个国家HAV流行程度中等(阿尔及利亚、沙特阿拉伯、土耳其和阿联酋),5个国家流行程度高(伊朗、约旦、黎巴嫩、摩洛哥和突尼斯),5个国家流行程度非常高(埃及、伊拉克、巴勒斯坦、叙利亚和也门)。水和卫生设施不是AMPI或血清流行率的显著预测因素,很可能是因为该地区大多数国家这些公用事业的普及率很高。然而,国内生产总值(GDP)、国民总收入(GNI)和人类发展指数(HDI)都与AMPI和流行率高度相关。观察到的相关性表明,在没有近期HAV数据的MENA国家中,巴林、科威特和卡塔尔很可能流行程度低,阿曼很可能流行程度中等,利比亚很可能流行程度高。虽然单一的相关模型不太可能适用于世界所有地区,但本分析中使用的方法可能提供一种简单而准确的方法,利用经济数据来推断在至少有几个邻国进行了近期血清学研究的地区中没有近期数据的国家的流行特征。