1. Prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus Antibodies in Italian Blood Donors
- Author
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A. Parravicini, G. Sirchia, A. Bellobuono, D. Almini, F. Mercuriali, A. M. Giovanetti, Maurizio Marconi, F. Zanuso, M. N. Pizzi, and F. Mozzi
- Subjects
Hepatitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,biology ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hepatitis C ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,digestive system diseases ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Immunology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Seroprevalence ,Viral disease ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
11,117 blood donors from 24 blood transfusion services evenly distributed throughout the various Italian regions were tested for the presence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies in the serum and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level. The results are as follows: (1) anti-HCV seroprevalence in Italy was 0.87% with a difference between Northern and Southern regions (0.68 vs. 1.37%) and between younger and older subjects (0.62 vs. 1.21%); (2) prevalence of elevated ALT levels was 4.74% without a North-South effect (except than for markedly elevated ALT levels); (3) anti-HCV seroprevalence was higher in subjects with elevated ALT (5.0%), with a North-South effect (2.2 vs. 9.9%) and particularly high (19.2%) in subjects with markedly elevated ALT; (4) ALT levels were elevated in 26.2% of anti-HCV positive subjects, with a North-South effect (14 vs. 40.5%).
- Published
- 1990
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