Unveiling the Hidden Reservoir: High Prevalence of Occult Hepatitis B and Associated Surface Gene Mutations in a Healthy Vietnamese Adult Cohort
Huynh Hoang Khanh Thu, Yulia V. Ostankova, Alexander N. Shchemelev, Elena N. Serikova, Vladimir S. Davydenko, Tran Ton, Truong Thi Xuan Lien, Edward S. Ramsay, Areg A. Totolian

TL;DR
This study reveals a high rate of hidden hepatitis B virus infection in healthy adults in Vietnam, linked to specific genetic mutations that evade standard detection methods.
Contribution
The study identifies a high prevalence of occult HBV infection and associated S gene escape mutations in a healthy Vietnamese cohort.
Findings
Occult HBV infection was found in 9.3% of HBsAg-negative individuals.
Escape mutations like sG145R and sK141R were significantly more common in occult infections.
A LASSO-logistic model predicted occult infection with 83% accuracy based on mutational profiles.
Abstract
Vietnam faces a hyperendemic burden of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, but the prevalence of occult HBV infection (OBI) and its underlying molecular mechanisms in healthy populations remain poorly understood. This study aimed to characterize the serological and molecular HBV profile of a healthy Vietnamese adult cohort in Southern Vietnam. We assessed the prevalence of occult HBV infection (OBI) and HBsAg-positivity (serving as a proxy for probable chronic infection). In this cross-sectional study, 397 healthy adults from Southern Vietnam underwent serological screening for HBsAg, anti-HBs, and anti-HBc. All participants were screened for HBV DNA using a high-sensitivity PCR assay (LOD ≥ 5 IU/mL). For all viremic cases, the full Pre-S/S region was sequenced to determine genotype and characterize escape mutations. We uncovered a high prevalence of both HBsAg-positivity (17.6%) and OBI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis B Virus Studies · Hepatitis C virus research · Hepatitis Viruses Studies and Epidemiology
