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Changing molecular epidemiology of Hepatitis A virus in Santiago, Chile from 2010 to 2021

Hepatitis A (HAV) virus causes asymptomatic to life-treating fulminant hepatitis. During infection, patients show large viral excretion in their stools. Resistance of HAV to environmental conditions, allows us to recover viral nucleotide sequences from wastewater and trace its evolutionary history....

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Published in:Infection, genetics and evolution genetics and evolution, 2023-07, Vol.111, p.105428-105428, Article 105428
Main Authors: Levican, Jorge, Ampuero, Manuel, Rabello, Camila, Venegas, Ignacio, Quarleri, Jorge, Gaggero, Aldo
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Hepatitis A (HAV) virus causes asymptomatic to life-treating fulminant hepatitis. During infection, patients show large viral excretion in their stools. Resistance of HAV to environmental conditions, allows us to recover viral nucleotide sequences from wastewater and trace its evolutionary history. We characterize twelve years of HAV circulation in wastewater from Santiago, Chile, and conducted phylogenetic analyses to decipher the dynamics of circulating lineages. We observed the exclusive circulation of the HAV IA genotype. The molecular epidemiologic analyses showed a steady circulation of a dominant lineage with low genetic diversity (d = 0,007) between 2010 and 2017. An outbreak of Hepatitis A associated with men who have sex with men, in 2017 was associated with the irruption of a new lineage. Remarkably, a dramatic change in the dynamic of HAV circulation was observed in the period post-outbreak; between 2017 and 2021 when 4 different lineages were transiently detected. Exhaustive phylogenetic analyses indicate that these lineages were introduced and possibly derived from isolates from other Latin American countries. The HAV circulation in recent years in Chile is rapidly changing and suggests that this phenomenon could be a consequence of massive population migrations in Latin America caused by political instability and natural disasters. •The detection and quantification of viruses in wastewater allows monitoring disease outbreaks•Nucleotide sequences of the hepatitis A virus can be detected in wastewater•Long-term phylogenetic characterization shows an increase diversity of HAV lineages
ISSN:1567-1348
1567-7257
DOI:10.1016/j.meegid.2023.105428