Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/ir.unikl.edu.my/34660
Title: Occult hepatitis B virus infection and current perspectives on global WHO 2030 eradication
Authors: Saravanan, Shanmugam
Shankar, Esaki M
Vignesh, Ramachandran
Ganesh, Pitchaipillai Sankar
Sankar, Sathish
Velu, Vijayakumar
Smith, Davey M
Balakrishnan, Pachamuthu
Viswanathan, Dhivya
Govindasamy, Rajakumar
Venkateswaran, Arcot R
(UniKL RCMP)
Keywords: HBV cure
HBV in India
HBsAg negative
CccDNA
occult HBV
viral hepatitis eradication
Issue Date: Jul-2024
Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Inc
Citation: Saravanan S, Shankar EM, Vignesh R, Ganesh PS, Sankar S, Velu V, et al. Occult hepatitis B virus infection and current perspectives on global WHO 2030 eradication. Journal of Viral Hepatitis [Internet]. 2024 Apr 5;31(7):423–31. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1111/jvh.13928
Abstract: The current World Health Organization (WHO) Hepatitis Elimination Strategy suffers from lack of a target for diagnosing or expunging occult HBV infection. A sizable segment of the global population has an undetected HBV infection, particularly the high-risk populations and those residing in countries like India with intermediate endemicity. There is growing proof that people with hidden HBV infection can infect others, and that these infections are linked to serious chronic hepatic complications, especially hepatocellular carcinoma. Given the current diagnostic infrastructure in low-resource settings, the WHO 2030 objective of obliterating hepatitis B appears to be undeniably challenging to accomplish. Given the molecular basis of occult HBV infection strongly linked to intrahepatic persistence, patients may inexplicably harbour HBV genomes for a prolonged duration without displaying any pronounced clinical or biochemical signs of liver disease, and present histological signs of moderate degree necro-inflammation, diffuse fibrosis, and hence the international strategy to eradicate viral hepatitis warrants inclusion of occult HBV infection.
URI: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jvh.13928?msockid=2e87ef7d75ee6f0f0cbef85274076e8
https://ir.unikl.edu.my/jspui/handle/ir.unikl.edu.my/34660
ISSN: 13520504
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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