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Prevalence of GBV-C infection among dental personnel. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Healthcare workers, especially those in dentistry, may be at risk for infections from blood-borne viruses like GB virus C (GBV-C), which is linked to hepatitis C.
  • A study found that 11.1% of dental healthcare workers had GBV-C antibodies and 4.6% tested positive for GBV-C RNA, leading to a total prevalence of 15.7%.
  • Interestingly, age and occupation influenced exposure rates, showing younger dental nurses/hygienists had higher exposure compared to dentists, while older dentists had more exposure, suggesting sexual transmission plays a larger role than occupational exposure in GBV-C infections.

Article Abstract

Healthcare workers who carry out exposure-prone procedures are theoretically at increased risk of acquiring blood-borne virus infections. GB virus C (GBV-C) is a recently described blood-borne virus that is related distantly to hepatitis C virus. The occupational risk of GBV-C infection to healthcare workers is unknown. This study collected detailed occupational and personal risk data in parallel with a blood specimen, to establish the prevalence and determinants of GBV-C infection among dental healthcare workers. The presence of GBV-C antibodies was detected using commercially available ELISA; GBV-C RNA was detected by nested PCR using primers from the conserved 5' noncoding region. The overall prevalence of GBV-C antibodies among the study population was 11.1% (98/880, 95% confidence interval [CI], 9.1-13.4%) and 4.6% were positive for GBV-C RNA (46/879, 95% CI, 2.5-5.1%), resulting in a cumulative prevalence of 15.7%. These figures are similar to those described in other populations. There was no significant difference in lifetime exposure to GBV-C between dentists (17.7%) and dental nurses/hygienists (14.3%). Significantly more dental nurses/hygienists aged 16-30 years had been exposed to GBV-C compared to dentists of the same age (chi(2) = 13.75; P < 0.001). Conversely, significantly more dentists 46 years or older had evidence of exposure to GBV-C compared to dental nurses/hygienists (chi(2) = 6.79; P = 0.009). The high prevalence of GBV-C infection did not seem to be related to past parenteral exposure, and the data suggest that sexual transmission, rather than occupational transmission, was a more important route for GBV-C infection among this population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmv.10365DOI Listing

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