Epidemiology and Control of Hepatitis Viruses
A special issue of Life (ISSN 2075-1729). This special issue belongs to the section "Epidemiology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (29 February 2024) | Viewed by 18644
Special Issue Editors
Interests: viral diagnostic technics; virus evolution; host pathogen interaction; molecular epidemiology
Interests: point-of-care viral diagnostics assays; virus evolution; high throughput and NGS data analysis; laboratory automation; molecular epidemiology; linkage to care
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Five hepatitis viruses—hepatitis A (HAV), hepatitis B (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV), hepatitis D (HDV), and hepatitis E (HEV)—have a huge impact on human health with their ability to cause acute and often chronic infection. Although HAV and HEV are mainly transmitted by contaminated water and food, and HBV and HCV are transmitted by blood, all of them can share common transmission routes such as close contact with a case within a household, transfusion of contaminated blood, transplantation of infected allograft, vertical transmission from a pregnant woman to her child, sex with an infected person, and injection drug use. This is the reason for distinguishing high-risk groups and developing measures related to limiting the spread of the viruses. At the same time, for all hepatitis viruses, recombination events have been exhaustively described, which is the reason for changing epidemiology patterns, the occurrence of different zoonotic vectors, and the evolution of vaccine and immune escape mutants. Vaccines exist for HAV, HBV, and HEV, a very efficient treatment is in place for HCV, and a viral control treatment is available for HBV and HDV. To meet the goals set by the World Health Organization for the elimination of viral hepatitis by 2030, it is essential that access to testing is vastly improved and novel diagnostic approaches are developed to facilitate and streamline linkage to care. This involves the development of inexpensive diagnostic tools that are administered at or near point-of-care settings. Another important part of the elimination and transmission control strategies is the improved understanding and identification of transmission networks in high-risk populations and communities and the opportunities this knowledge provides for efficient use of limited resources, by targeting parts of these networks that would have an optimal impact on the outcome.
This Special Issue, “Epidemiology and Control of Hepatitis Viruses”, calls for papers that address the following topics:
- Global prevalence of the different viral hepatitis;
- Routes of transmission and control opportunities;
- Prevalence by risk groups;
- Changing molecular epidemiology patterns;
- Available screening tools and identified screening needs;
- Gaps and missed opportunities in the surveillance, prevention and control.
Dr. Elitsa Golkocheva-Markova
Dr. Lilia Milkova Ganova-Raeva
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- hepatitis A
- hepatitis B
- hepatitis C
- hepatitis D
- hepatitis E
- prevalence
- molecular epidemiology
- reservoirs
- key populations
- vaccination
- POC assays
- hepatitis control strategies
- transmission clusters
- transmission network analysis
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